Jeannine, I Dream of Lilac Time sung by Gene Austin.
The
lilacs finally came into bloom on one of the two new small bushes Kathy and I planted last
year. Elsewhere hereabouts there are spectacular displays on mature
bushes. I celebrated by posting a shot of
a glorious row of bushes blooming
along the railroad embankment in Woodstock
a few years back as the cover on
my Facebook page. It’s something to gladden the heart and senses in these doleful days. That got me to recall another of sentimental popular ballad—Jeannine,
I Dream of Lilac Time.
Lilacs in Woodstock are my Facebook cover today. |
Lilac
Time
was a 1928 silent romantic war film starring
Colleen Moore and Gary Cooper following up his role in Wings
as yet another pilot, this time as a Yank flying for Britain in the Great War. The film was produced by Moore’s husband John McCormick and distributed
by First National Pictures. It was
based on a 1917 Broadway play
written by my distant cousin Jane Murfin
and
actress Jane Cowl, who adapted
the story from a novel by Guy Fowler.
Lilac Time movie poster. |
Lilac Time was released
with a Vitaphone score and music effects, featuring the song Jeannine,
I Dream of Lilac Time, but there was no spoken dialogue. The song
was written by L. Wolfe Gilbert and Nathaniel
Shilkret and sung by tenor Gene Austin whose record of it was a #1
hit that year. Also scoring hits with it
were Nat Shilkret and the Victor
Orchestra in 1922 reaching #2, and for John
McCormack—the Irish tenor not Moore’s
husband in 1929 at #15.
Gene
Austin was a singer and songwriter, former vaudevillian, and one of the first crooners. His recording of My Blue Heaven sold over
five million copies and was then the largest
selling record of all time. His 1920’s
compositions When My Sugar Walks Down the Street and The Lonesome Road became pop and jazz standards. He also wrote How Come You Do Me Like You Do and
scored big hits with songs by others including Bye, Bye Blackbird, Ramona, and
Yes
Sir That’s My Baby.
Gene Austin, one of the first of the crooners, was one of the biggest recording stars of the 1920's. |
When
the Great Depression put a huge dent
into the record business, Austin
launched a successful movie career
including a stint as one of the first singing
cowboys, a natural for the Texan and
friend and mentor of Jimmie Rodgers. He appeared in several films, including Belle
of the Nineties, Klondike Annie, Sadie McKee—all 1934
releases and My Little Chickadee in1940,
at the request of his friend, Mae West. He successfully toured through the 1940’s and
into the ‘50’s before retiring in comfort to Palm Springs, California. He
died of lung cancer in 1971 at age 71.
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