Monday, August 3, 2015

The Rise and Fall of Mario Lanza



When I was growing up, in the 1940s and 1950s, the tenor Mario Lanza was all over the place.
He had his own national radio program.
His record, “Be My Love,” in 1951, was a million-dollar hit.
His movies for MGM,  like “Toast of New Orleans,” made tons of money … in particular, “The Great Caruso.” It was the top-grossing film of 1951. Someone joked that the film company should be re-named Metro-Goldwyn-Mario.
Movie magazines were forever writing about him.
Maria Callas allegedly called him “Caruso’s successor.”
Toscanini allegedly said that his was “the voice of the century.” (I doubt he really said it.)
When he was introduced to Queen Elizabeth, she said, “Mr. Lanza, I didn’t know that such big sounds could come out of the human throat.”

And he did have a big, thrilling voice, effortlessly hitting high notes. Caruso himself sometimes had trouble with high notes.
But Lanza never sang at the Met—although he was interested and although the Met, at one time, was interested. La Scala actually wanted him to open a season!
             Still, near the end of his short life—he died at 38-- he owed $200,000 in taxes…MGM fired him—his wife, going off the deep end herself, was ready to divorce him (she died at age 36)—he became angry and paranoid. Here’s what he said about one of his co-stars in the movie “That Midnight Kiss”:  “That old bitch, Ethel Barrymore, she’s trying to steal my scenes! I’ll tell her where to get off!”

     The author of the best biography of Lanza (subtitled “Tenor in Exile”), Roland L. Bessette, put it this way: “His was a glorious and natural voice, with one of the broadest and most powerful ranges ever recorded. The worlds of music and film had not seen his like before. If he ultimately failed or disappointed, it was only when measured against his own dazzling potential.”
      The essential question is: What went wrong? He was dealt four aces and a king, and still  managed to get wiped out.
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His birth name was Alfred Arnold Cocozza (“Lanza” was his mother’s maiden name), and he lived from 1921 to 1958. He was born in the year Enrico Caruso, his idol, died.
     His parents indulged him, and for the rest of his life he seemed to think he was someone special, someone who needn’t obey the rules, someone privileged. As a young man, he would drive without a license. In the army, he sometimes wouldn’t salute officers; his excuse: he hadn’t seen them. He was expelled from high school for misconduct and never went to college.
     After Serge Koussevistsky, the conductor, heard him sing, he arranged for Lanza to study music at Tanglewood. Later Lanza joined a famous singing trio, with George London and Frances Yeend. He was the star, but both of them--unlike  Lanza--managed to sing at the Met later in life. His big break came after singing at the Hollywood Bowl; Louis B. Mayer heard him and promptly offered him a contract. Mayer said that he hoped Lanza would become a singing Clark Gable.
      For a tenor, after all, he wasn’t bad looking--although he had a terrible tendency to become bloated from overeating and overdrinking. He was 5 feet 7 or almost 5 feet 9.
           
            His arrogance and sense of superiority were one handicap. Another was his  vulgarity. A book about him, “Lanza: His Tragic Life,” by Raymond Strait and Terry Robinson, published in 1980 by Prentice-Hall, contains so much that is coarse and gross that I can give only a few examples.
        While he was making “That Midnight Kiss” with Kathryn Grayson, he”occasionally relieved himself on the set, choosing a potted plant, a bucket, a corner on a stage where Kathryn Grayson was rehearsing. Louis B. Mayer was furious” when he learned about the complaints and gave him a talking to.
        As for Doretta Morrow, a young singer who had been educated in a convent, he used such “vile” language toward her during the filming of “That Midnight Kiss” that she would leave the set in tears. (He told her she should be so close to him in the film that he could feel her sex organ.)
         He boasted of his sexual conquests…in front of his wife! Among them: Judy Garland, Inger Stevens.
       Another time he got mad at one of his film’s directors, so—to get even—he drove over to the director’s house in Hollywood at night and…pooped on his lawn.
      Another time…no, I better skip the tale about Inger Stevens. But get the book and read pages 78 and 79.

      He wasn’t well educated. He read mainly fan magazines and body-building magazines. He couldn’t read music, and learned songs by listening to recordings. Frances Yeend, who sang with him, said, “He provided a great treat for the ear, but there was nothing for the mind.”

      He didn’t associate with the best people. He did associate with gangsters. Rocky Marciano, the heavyweight champion, introduced him to some Mafia types. Like Lucky Luciano.

     Lanza gained prodigious amounts of weight. He went up to 260 at one time. When he made movies, the people who made the costumes  had to have two or three sets for him. Fat, not-so-fat, and very, very fat. To lose weight, he had himself injected with urine from pregnant women. He was put to sleep—and lost weight presumably while he slept.
   I’ll pass along his diet:
 A grapefruit for breakfast, a hard-boiled egg and a cup of coffee (no sugar) for lunch,
And some fresh shrimp for dinner. Yes, he lost weight when he followed the diet.

He became somewhat paranoid, talking about quote “all those fuckers who are out to get me.” Here’s a memorable quote: “That old bitch, Ethyl Barrymore, she’s trying to steal my scenes! I’ll tell her where to get off!” Bessette, who consulted with a psychiatrist, concluded that Lanza was bipolar.

Among all his woes later in life, the IRS hit him with a bill for $200,000 for back taxes.
He had trouble with MGM – which fired him because he repeatedly didn’t show up for work. MGM sued for almost $700,000 in special damages and $4.5 million in general damages.

    Lanza did so much damage at hotels when he was angry and drunk that some hotels would no longer rent to him--and some restaurants would not serve him.

      Ed Sullivan wrote in the New York Daily News, “Temperamental antics of Mario Lanza driving MGM daffy. The studio never having met a performer so incapable of handling success.”

His death was sudden, and there were rumors that the Mafia had done him in because he didn’t show up at a performance that Lucky Luciano had arranged for him. But his health wasn’t good. Bessette believes that Lanza died of acute phlebitis.

Today, some critics dismiss Lanza as  singer. He overdid it. There was no subtlety, no gradations.  He tended to sing everything the same. Loud and louder. Bessette the biographer put it well: “He leaned toward Pagliacci on arias that called for Rodolfo….”
     Rudolf Bing,  manager of the Met  from 1950 to 1972,  felt that  Lanza’s films and his singing had cheapened opera, and regarded the idea of Lanza singing at the Met as as joke. (He also despised Beverly Sills.)
     But when Lanza was young, his voice was powerful and beautiful. And as a human being, he was sometimes kind—as in his genuine concern for a child dying of cancer, a child he had befriended.
      His biographer, Bessette, seems to have two primary feelings about Lanza: (1) dislike and (2) utter loathing. But he does finally admit that “There was much that was genuinely good about the man.”
      And Bessette was grateful to Lanza for his singing. Music can be therapeutic, and whenever Bessette had trouble in his own life—the death of a son , the death of a brother—“the antidote was … a voice that could reach me like no other: that of Mario Lanza.“
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His Worst Recording?

Little Known Lanza Recordings:

A Pretty Girl Is like a Melody (Berlin)

On the Street Where You Live (Loewe)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98xxI-RAOvk&list=PL6ACBB8D2D1AC5881

Trees

Charmaine

Donkey Serenade (Friml)

Roses of Picardy

Ah sweet mystery (Herbert)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-MezcPUe3-Y&index=3&list=PLdOiqur1qGkrW2z3JtVhoSOI7gkV1-oGM

Lord’s Prayer
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=mario+lanza+lord%27s+prayer

Bill Murray mocking Mario Lanza singing “Be My Love”