Rhonda Fleming (August 10, 1923 – October 14, 2020) was an American film and television actress and singer. She acted in more than 40 films, mostly in the 1940s and 1950s, and became renowned as one of the most glamorous actresses of her day, nicknamed the "Queen of Technicolor" because she photographed so well in that medium.
Rhonda Fleming was a stage name: she was born Marilyn Louis in Los Angeles, the younger of two daughters of Harold Cheverton Louis, an insurance salesman, and his wife, Effie Graham, an actor and model. A lyric soprano, She took lessons in light opera for ten years as a child and was trained in voice by an aunt and entered singing contests. She grew up in Hollywood, and while attending Beverly Hills high school was spotted by the talent agent Henry Willson, who went on to discover Rock Hudson.
She went straight into films, at first as an extra. Her first substantial supporting parts came in her early 20s in Spellbound and in Robert Siodmak’s Hitchcockian thriller The Spiral Staircase (1946). In Abilene Town (1946), marshal Randolph Scott is torn between Fleming, the grocer’s daughter, and saloon singer Ann Dvorak, predictably settling respectably for the former.
After playing the voluptuous and dangerous lover of hoodlum Kirk Douglas in Jacques Tourneur’s Out of the Past, Paramount claimed her, and did not allow her to be much more than decorative. Two aristocratic roles came in 1949: the English heroine with whom Bing Crosby falls in love in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, a musical after the novel by Mark Twain – she was a fine singer – and a duchess who fascinates Scoutmaster Bob Hope in The Great Lover.
The studio also co-starred Fleming with Ronald Reagan and John Payne in a number of minor action pictures. She was given better material when loaned out to other studios: RKO for Cry Danger in which she is a match for ex-con Dick Powell seeking revenge. When told to expect an extra guest for dinner, she replies: “OK, I’ll put more water in the soup.”
At Columbia, in The Golden Hawk (1952), she had fun as a pirate called Rouge, actually a rich woman pirating in order to recover a stolen fortune, and as Cleopatra to Raymond Burr’s Antony in Serpent of the Nile (1953). For Fox, she appeared in 3D in Inferno (1953), as millionaire Robert Ryan’s faithless wife.
Back at Paramount, Fleming became part of the decor again, opposite Charlton Heston as Buffalo Bill in Pony Express (1953) and Jeff Chandler, who rescues her from a harem in Yankee Pasha (1954). The exception was Gunfight at the OK Corral (1957), in which she played the long-suffering girlfriend of Wyatt Earp (Burt Lancaster). In the Western spoof Alias Jesse James (1959), Fleming was the singer at The Dirty Dog Saloon who gets entangled (literally) with Hope.
She, Jane Russell, Connie Haines and Beryl Davis were once part of a travelling gospel quartet at their church called "The Four Girls" and made an album called "Make a Joyful Noise" that sold over a million copies. A one-time Las Vegas showroom singing act at the Tropicana, she also performed at the Hollywood Bowl in a one-woman concert of Cole Porter and Irving Berlin songs. Also did a ten-week tour with Skitch Henderson that focused on the music of George Gershwin. She recorded an album in 1958 for Columbia Records.
As the 1960s dawned, Fleming was more often to be seen on television, with some stage work: in 1973 she had a Broadway run in Clare Boothe Luce’s comedy The Women. Her final TV appearance came in a half-hour drama, Waiting for the Wind (1990), as the religious wife of a farmer, Robert Mitchum (whom she had played alongside in Out of the Past), confronting terminal illness. Her last full movie was The Nude Bomb (1980), as an international fashion designer alongside Don Adams’s spoof spook Maxwell Smart.
Her last film before her move into TV had been the Italian epic The Revolt of the Slaves (1960), and that year she married her co-star in it, Lang Jeffries. He was her third husband, after Thomas Lane, an interior decorator, with whom she had a son, Kent, from 1940 to 1948; and Lew Morrill, a physician, from 1952 to 1958. Her marriage to the producer-director Hall Bartlett in 1965 lasted for seven years until, like the previous three, it ended in divorce. Fleming’s fifth husband, from 1978, was Ted Mann, the owner of the Mann Theatres cinema chain.
Two years after Mann’s death in 2001, Fleming married Darol Carlson; he died in 2017. Rhonda died from aspiration pneumonia on October 14, 2020, in Saint John's Health Center, Santa Monica, California, at the age of 97.
(Edited mainly from Ronald Bergman @ The Guardian & IMDb)
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For “Rhonda Fleming – Sings Just For You (Sepia 2008)” go here;
https://krakenfiles.com/view/i9sU97KzZz/file.html
1 Don't Take Your Love From Me 3:05
2 Around The World In Eighty Days 2:36
3 Love Me Or Leave Me 2:29
4 The End Of A Love Affair 3:53
5 Under Paris Skies 2:49
6 Baby, Baby All The Time 3:12
7 With The Wind And The Rain In Your Hair 2:17
8 When I Fall In Love 2:55
9 I've Got You Under My Skin 2:21
10 Then I'll Be Tired Of You 3:02
11 Love 2:30
12 They Can't Take That Away From Me 2:30
13 Gershwin Medley : Embraceable You / I've Got A Crush On You / But Not For Me / The Man I Love 6:52
14 Jacob's Ladder * 3:04
15 Give Me That Old Time Religion* 1:46
16 This World Is Not My Home* 2:07
17 Somewhere List'nin* 2:18
18 Cold Rain 2:26
19 My Heart Cries For You 2:40
20 Once And For Always (Featuring Bing Crosby) 3:11
21 When Is Sometime ? 3:12
22 42nd Street 2:17
*Rhonda Fleming, Beryl Davis, Connie Haynes & Jane Russell.
Although Rhonda Fleming has starred in over 40 films, countless television shows and stage productions, what most people don't realise is that she is also an extremely talented singer. Rhonda had trained as a classical singer but once her film career had taken off the singing she loved took a back seat although every so often she was given the chance to sing in a film.
This was the case in 1949 when Bing Crosby cast her opposite him in "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" that she got a chance to show her musical side to movie audiences. In the film she sang the lilting duet "Once and For Always" with Bing along with a stunning solo number, "When is Sometime?". Thankfully both were recorded and are included here for your listening pleasure.
Her recording career picked up speed in 1954 when she joined Jane Russell, Connie Haines and Beryl Davis on an album of spirituals entitled "Make A Joyful Noise Unto the Lord". For this CD Sepia have chosen all four of Rhonda's contributions from that LP collection for listeners who appreciate well-blended harmonies.
In 1957 Rhonda was invited to record an album of standards. Entitled simply "Rhonda", the release was championed by critics and fans alike and proved once and for always that she could add song stylist to her long list of accolades. The twelve songs on that album form the bulk of her recording career and are included here. Together they illustrate her great versatility and warmth as a singer; qualities that well deserve to be revisited. Rounding out this release are other favourites including the buoyant "My Heart Cries For You," a moody interpretation of "Cold Rain," a rhythmic jaunt down "42nd Street" and a "Gershwin Medley" to end all medleys!
This CD was issued with the full support of Rhonda thus enabling listeners today the opportunity to enjoy her beautiful and beguiling singing voice once again.(Sepia notes)
Thank you for posting this. I never knew her work.
Si la voz es como su belleza, será perfecto. Gracias.
I knew she could sing but not that well. Thank you for this cd.
thank you so very much
Many th
Many thanks for sharing this album
Alan
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