Eddie Cantor - My Baby Just Cares For Me (1930)

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  • čas přidán 3. 09. 2014
  • "My Baby Just Cares For Me"
    I'm so happy since the day
    That I fell in love in a great big way,
    And the big surprise is someone loves me too.
    Guess it's hard for you to see
    Just what anyone could see in me,
    But it only goes to prove what love can do.
    My baby don't care for shows,
    My baby don't care for clothes,
    My baby just cares for me,
    My baby don't care for furs and laces,
    My baby don't care for high-toned places,
    My baby don't care for rings
    Or other expensive things,
    She's sensible as can be,
    My baby don't care who knows it,
    My baby just cares for me.
    My baby's no Gilbert fan,
    Ronald Colman is not her man,
    My baby just cares for me,
    My baby don't care for Lawrence Tibbett's
    She'd rather have me around to kibitz,
    Bud Rogers is not her style,
    And even Chevalier's smile
    Is something that she can't see,
    I wonder what's wrong with baby,
    My baby just cares for me, me, only me.
    My baby don't care for shows,
    My baby don't care for clothes,
    My baby just cares for me,
    My baby just loves those consultations
    And how she enjoys my operations.
    After our honeymoon
    In April, May, or June
    I'll get my nursing free,
    Then I can feel good for nothing,
    My baby just cares for me.
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 322

  • @mconesa52
    @mconesa52 Před 5 lety +48

    He had an amazing high pitch, harmonious and clear tenor voice...

  • @harrylangdon491
    @harrylangdon491 Před 4 lety +37

    This song contains the greatest rhyme any lyric ever had: Tibbets and kibbitz.

    • @brucer9572
      @brucer9572 Před 3 lety +2

      You got that straight Mister Langdon!

    • @roycejaziel8958
      @roycejaziel8958 Před 2 lety

      I guess Im randomly asking but does someone know a trick to get back into an Instagram account??
      I stupidly forgot the login password. I would appreciate any help you can offer me

    • @jamisonfelix8138
      @jamisonfelix8138 Před 2 lety

      @Royce Jaziel instablaster =)

    • @antikytheramechanism7909
      @antikytheramechanism7909 Před 2 lety

      The most Jewish lyric ever.

    • @rjtwigg1
      @rjtwigg1 Před rokem +1

      Tibbett and kibitz

  • @mconesa52
    @mconesa52 Před 5 lety +18

    He had a very strong and melodious voice. He was quite an entertainer.

  • @bonanzajoe
    @bonanzajoe Před 3 lety +16

    Eddie Cantor and Al Jolson were the absolute best of the best. They were also the best of friends.

  • @deborahmonbleau4982
    @deborahmonbleau4982 Před 2 lety +13

    Eddie had some voice! He really hit those high notes!

  • @BaltoJoey
    @BaltoJoey Před 9 lety +24

    One of my favorite movies from the early sound era!

  • @user-oq3qf7im6x
    @user-oq3qf7im6x Před 4 měsíci +5

    ¡Great, The Performance!

  • @osocool1too
    @osocool1too Před 2 lety +5

    We are so lucky to be able to watch these surviving snippets from 90+ years ago, as acetate films deteriorated with 20 years, especially so with Technicolor examples like this. 👍🤗

    • @moldyoldie7888
      @moldyoldie7888 Před rokem +2

      I believe the whole film exists and in color.

    • @robertprochko6331
      @robertprochko6331 Před rokem

      Not only does the entire picture exist, it is easily available on DVD

  • @harrylangdon491
    @harrylangdon491 Před 4 lety +6

    The Broadway cast was put on a train to California, so this film may be the best preservation of 1920 stage musicals in existence.

  • @errolfan
    @errolfan Před 6 lety +7

    That's all there is (what an understatement). Beautiful 2-Strip Technicolor that showcases Eddie Cantor in his prime.

    • @artshifrin3053
      @artshifrin3053 Před 5 lety

      SEE THE "KING OF JAZZ" STARTLING COLOR RESTORATIONS
      DONE A FEW YEARS AGO. ONLY SOME ORIGINAL SEGMENTS
      OF THE COLOR PORTIONS ARE SO FAR KNOWN TO HAVE
      SURVIVED. THE THEN - AS - YET - TECHNICOLOR PROCESS
      WAS 'BLIND' TO BLUE HUES. THEREFORE, THE COLOR SEEMS
      TO BE ' UNBALANCED'. LOOK AT "KINEMACOLOR" SHOT
      SILENT ABOUT 20 YEARS BEFORE.

  • @joybreeden366
    @joybreeden366 Před 6 lety +7

    I appreciate Eddie....
    Can understand every word...great song too.
    Wonderful songwriting...part of the GREAT AMERICAN SONGBOOK..

  • @duggiewuggie3210
    @duggiewuggie3210 Před 9 lety +25

    If an old film's negative still exists (film that photographed the actual scene) scanning and digitizing to process back to positive film stock or to Blu-Ray will make the movie as clear and rich, with all tonal qualities, as the day it was first screened. It's not all as simple as all that but you get the idea.

    • @harrylangdon491
      @harrylangdon491 Před 4 lety

      Warner Brothers Archive brought out a very good print of this a few years ago.

    • @scotpens
      @scotpens Před 4 lety

      This movie was in two-color Techinicolor, which means the original camera negatives were actually color separations recorded on black-and-white film stock. I doubt those negatives still exist.

    • @jeremynv89523
      @jeremynv89523 Před 4 lety

      scotpens I am asking you because you know the process pretty well: how did they get the blue sky? Even “King of Jazz” couldn’t get a true blue like that.

    • @scotpens
      @scotpens Před 4 lety

      @@jeremynv89523 Can't really help you there. You'd need to ask a movie geek who knows more about early Technicolor than I do.

  • @joybreeden366
    @joybreeden366 Před 6 lety +5

    Great song...great songwritters... great performer. ...

  • @johnrussell6602
    @johnrussell6602 Před 9 lety +19

    Amazing singing and great picture quality for 1930

    • @johnrussell6602
      @johnrussell6602 Před 9 lety +3

      ***** en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technicolor
      Apparently this was not Eddie Cantor, but they did have color in 1930.

    • @Grundsau47
      @Grundsau47 Před 8 lety +7

      +John Russell This IS Eddie Cantor...

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines Před 8 lety +4

      Technicolor, however, was not QUITE perfected yet. This was "two-strip" Technicolor, which could only emulate red and green images. "Three-strip" Technicolor, which could visualize the entire color spectrum, was perfected by 1932, and initially used in Walt Disney's animated "Silly Symphonies" [other studios would have to wait until his exclusive contract to use the "three-strip" process ended in 1935]. Live-action use of "three-strip" Technicolor began in earnest, in 1934.

    • @scotnick59
      @scotnick59 Před 7 lety +1

      I'll say = and how!

    • @jeremynv89523
      @jeremynv89523 Před 4 lety +1

      Barry I. Grauman but there are blue skies in this print?

  • @joybreeden366
    @joybreeden366 Před rokem +2

    Thanks for Eddie...
    Great song....

  • @Grundsau47
    @Grundsau47 Před 7 lety +6

    "My Baby don't care for clothes"...that's why my neighbor built a patio...!

  • @eretzoum
    @eretzoum Před 2 lety +1

    Absolutely amazing singer and dancer!!

  • @user-jo9uq9vi6m
    @user-jo9uq9vi6m Před 5 lety +3

    素敵なものはいつまでも鮮やかな色を放ち、私達を魅了する。素敵な歌声と映像ありがとう。

  • @danielgatchell871
    @danielgatchell871 Před 6 lety +4

    Love Eddie Cantor! Hilarious comedian!!!

  • @Grithron2
    @Grithron2 Před 3 lety +12

    1. The song only makes complete sense in the context of the show - where you know he's a hypochondriac and she's his devoted nurse, and there's The Reprise and that punchline!
    2. I have to say it again, of course - when the sherriff confronts him, he's just pulled his head out of the oven, hence the "coloration"!

  • @585michael
    @585michael Před 9 lety +2

    True Classic! Thanks!

  • @jeffreybrosman
    @jeffreybrosman Před 7 měsíci

    Mr Cantor was a cousin to my mom's mother. A great pioneer in the entertainment industry from Burlesque all the way to the birth of TV. And if that isn't enough, a true humanitarian of the highest order. I only wish I could have gotten to know him.

  • @stichtingokapi
    @stichtingokapi Před 7 lety +9

    Great to hear the introducing lyrics. I had it only on sheet music.

  • @yelloworangered
    @yelloworangered Před 2 měsíci

    What a great song! And a great performance!

  • @timmartin3927
    @timmartin3927 Před rokem +1

    STRIKE ME PINK IS ONE HIS BEST MOVIES. LAUGHED SO HARD I WAS CRYING.

  • @petitelapin60
    @petitelapin60 Před 4 lety +13

    Eddie Cantor is SO adorable! What an entertainer! Terrific song that he put over wonderfully Thanks so much for this treasure!!! I want to see the whole film now!

    • @GlennMillers-qo7zh
      @GlennMillers-qo7zh Před 11 měsíci +1

      I wish I could find the full movie as well and palmy days. If I find them I'll let you know

  • @Shelton1967
    @Shelton1967 Před 8 lety +2

    Great number!

  • @Muertes-tf2oj
    @Muertes-tf2oj Před 2 lety +2

    I love this so much!

  • @davetoffen7944
    @davetoffen7944 Před 4 lety +1

    simply wonderful

  • @davetoffen7944
    @davetoffen7944 Před 4 lety +9

    simply wonderful....I love Jolson but I like Cantor's voice more...

    • @JC57515
      @JC57515 Před 5 měsíci

      It's very hard to choose between them. Jack Buchanon was another great star, check out "Thats Entertainment"

  • @mainaccount131
    @mainaccount131 Před 5 lety

    Super excellent with very good interesting video

  • @fonso1030
    @fonso1030 Před 4 lety +5

    For those who may be thrown off by some of the references in the lyrics:
    Furs and laces
    High tone places- fancy and elegant
    John Gilbert- American actor of the silent screen, “the great lover”
    Ronald Colman- British actor in American cinema from the 20s to the 40s
    Lawrence Tibbett(s)-American opera, cinema and radio performer
    Kibbitz- to joke around or make wisecracks
    Buck Rogers- science fiction newspaper comics character hero
    Maurice Chevalier- popular french singer active from the 1920s until 1970.

  • @joybreeden366
    @joybreeden366 Před 4 lety +1

    Great...no body does it better!

  • @MrJoseoz
    @MrJoseoz Před 10 dny

    Love this❤

  • @brucer9572
    @brucer9572 Před 4 lety

    Thank you! I am grateful.

  • @davetoffen7944
    @davetoffen7944 Před 2 lety +1

    Outstanding

  • @j.c.8149
    @j.c.8149 Před 4 lety +1

    Great!

  • @johnllewlyndavies222
    @johnllewlyndavies222 Před 8 měsíci

    Priceless🎉

  • @vertxxgg
    @vertxxgg Před 10 lety +4

    lovely film thanx for sharing...try 'Keep young and beautiful 'from Roman Scandals

  • @deborahmonbleau4982
    @deborahmonbleau4982 Před 2 lety +2

    He really could hit those high notes!

  • @jamesrobertson6065
    @jamesrobertson6065 Před 6 lety +15

    Wonderful song great singing they don't make them like that any more

    • @Women_Rock
      @Women_Rock Před 4 lety +2

      Haha they might get their venue firebombed if they did

  • @kiajulian4619
    @kiajulian4619 Před 3 měsíci

    Just wonderful theatrics and chord changes!

  • @paperboxcutter
    @paperboxcutter Před 7 lety +12

    Eddie Cantor isn't singing in a minstrel dialect style. but as himself. Close your eyes.

  • @duggiewuggie3210
    @duggiewuggie3210 Před 9 lety +17

    Two color Technicolor process number three. "Toll of The Sea" 1922 (in process number two) is the oldest surviving Technicolor feature. Read the new book The Dawn of Technicolor 1915-1935. Kinema Colour was the first viable color process 1906 to 1915 but had fringing. The history of the first forty years of cinema history is not all black and white. Read about it and watch some films on CZcams. Also, that is Eddie Cantor in black face! It's not right but I'm sure malice was not his intent. We all know he didn't work in a vacuum as there were producers, directors, playwrights, scriptwriters, managers and all those that put these films together. Yes he was a minsteral and stage performer. Nevertheless, these young talents were urged to perform before the cameras to become film stars in order to make money as it is today. These old films are time capsules and the only time machine you'll ever find. Although times have changed these movies are a priceless heritage and once lost...

    • @Aeonterbor
      @Aeonterbor Před 7 lety +1

      I have to ask how the sky in the background of the first scene is blue when technicolour back then used Red & Green

    • @ddkoda
      @ddkoda Před 6 lety +2

      From what I've come to understand the green in the two color Technicolor process was actually a blue-green. So one would expect to see some elements of blue in the final print but not a real true blue with all its varied shadings. I've also heard that the reason that a three color Technicolor process wasn't used from the beginning was because in the 1920's it was very difficult to find a stable blue dye to be used to be used in one of the three separate film strips. Toward the end of its use in the two color Technicolor process the blue part of the spectrum was enhanced with some sort of masking technique that really made the blues look more natural and realistic. That was about as good as it got for the two strip Technicolor system.

  • @GatlinMoviesChannel
    @GatlinMoviesChannel Před 4 lety +9

    ♪ ♫ ♬"...I'll get my nursing free
    Then I can feel good for nothing...."♪ ♫ ♬
    LOL

  • @williamheyman5439
    @williamheyman5439 Před 5 lety +2

    The Royal Society Jazz Orchestra of San Francisco does a very great reproduction of this. And everything else that they do.

  • @Fernandez212
    @Fernandez212 Před 2 lety +3

    I'm so happy since the day
    That I fell in love in a great big way
    And the big surprise is someone loves me too
    Guess it's hard for you to see
    Just what anyone could see in me
    But it only goes to prove what love can do
    My baby don't care for shows
    My baby don't care for clothes
    My baby just cares for me
    My baby don't care for furs and laces
    My baby don't care for high-toned places
    My baby don't care for rings
    Or other expensive things
    She's sensible as can be
    My baby don't care who knows it
    My baby just cares for me
    My baby's no Gilbert fan
    Ronald Colman is not her man
    My baby just cares for me
    My baby don't care for Lawrence Tibbett's
    She'd rather have me around to kibitz
    Bud Rogers is not her style
    And even Chevalier's smile
    Is something that she can't see
    I wonder what's wrong with baby
    My baby just cares for me, me, only me
    My baby don't care for shows
    My baby don't care for clothes
    My baby just cares for me
    My baby just loves those consultations
    And how she enjoys my operations
    After our honeymoon
    In April, May, or June
    I'll get my nursing free
    Then I can feel good for nothing
    My baby just cares for me

  • @z94720
    @z94720 Před 6 měsíci

    BRAVO!

  • @globalman
    @globalman Před 6 lety +2

    Thank you! Wish someone would post the entire film.

    • @harrylangdon491
      @harrylangdon491 Před 4 lety

      Get the Warner Bros Archive DVD -- terrific transfer as you can see

    • @veronicahaney6005
      @veronicahaney6005 Před 8 měsíci

      It’s available for free on Amazon Prime

  •  Před 4 lety

    This was Ethel Shutta's finest hour in films. And her husband George Olsen played the music. Perhaps the best of all the surviving early musicals.

  • @kirbywaite1586
    @kirbywaite1586 Před 3 měsíci

    You have to admit he had rhythm and a voice, and could hit every note.

  • @BixLives32
    @BixLives32 Před 2 lety +3

    I'll be darned if I can tell if this is TWO strip, bonded, dye-transfer Technicolour (Magenta and Cyan, in this example), or VERY early THREE strip, dye-transfer, bonded Technicolour (RGB or Magenta, Cyan, Yellow). I suspect that the credits were done in 2 strip Magenta. Green, and the rest was done in two strip Magenta, Cyan, but I am just guessing. The shirt colour is the indication that it is probably Magenta and Cyan.
    Two Strip Magenta and Green was most common, but I suppose it depended upon the set designers. I think Magenta and Cyan works much better than Magenta and Green.
    Why not the THREE strip dye-transfer, bonding process? If you knew how difficult the TWO strip process was, you would instantly understand!
    In 1931-32 Kodachrome was invented, but NOT used in commercial photography! It was (and still is) a 25 step development process without a negative. Temperature sensitive in the extreme. A 1/4th degree off, and the process goes south. Still, Kodachrome. was sold for home movies (c. 1935).
    In 1982, whilst working as a custom darkroom engineer, a customer came in one day with thousands of feet of 8mm Kodachrome home movies made from 1936 to 1939! (a rich family!) The celluloid was fragile in the extreme, but the images were colour and resolution perfect! Not a hint of fade or colour shift. No blur or loss of image in anyway! Fortunately, the family did not play the movies much. I had to bake the celluloid (low temp) and slowly alter the environment of the film for a few days, before I could begin the slow process of making restoration dupes to 16 mm. In the end, the film projected as if it was truly modern 16 MM and not a dupe. The resolution of Kodachrome is that good. . I did not have to do anything but clean each frame -no colour-corrections or other image restoration. The final film looked as if it had been shot yesterday, except for the people and clothing in the films were obviously from another time! -All out door shots as it was very slow film. There was no way to shoot Kodachrome with artificial light. Kodachrome has three emulsion layers and was even more expensive in 1932 than 3 strip Technicolour! Another major reason Kodachrome was not used in Hollywood was that making nightly rushes available was impossible. It took too long to develop the raw film stock. Even by the 1950s, processing took too long for use in Hollywood. Too bad, as Kodachrome remains the best choice of analogue colour film today. It's ASA is higher (64) since about 1960. However, if you want to shoot colour analogue film today and do not want to see ANY grain, regardless of enlargement, Kodachrome is your best bet. The E6 process has gotten awfully good, but Kodachrome remains superior.
    Eddie was a great Vaudevillian and all-round stage performer of professional merit. He could sing, dance and act. Even Groucho liked Eddie.
    God bless Eddie Cantor.
    Eddie Cantor was an unusually decent show business cat. -Really, -a prince of a gentleman.
    Eddie Cantor practically, single handedly, promoted The March of Dimes, and put it on the map. Cantor's efforts probably raised more money than any other single person. Eddie also gave a lot of his own bread to the cause. No one after The War believed that we'd beat Polio that fast, but Eddie knew about Salk and his research, and put his entire heart and soul into the enterprise. Afrt all, what everage joe can't spare a DIME?!! (c. 1946 a dime was worth about 2 bucks in today's money). It was a brilliant fundraising idea and it surely saved many lives. Maybe I was allowed to walk because of Jonas Salk and Eddie Cantor?
    I am a First Generation Salk Vaccine Baby. I was amongst the first newborns to receive the Salk vaccine as a baby (I still have traces of the scar). It was a round-ish multi-needle injection with several boosters in the following weeks /months.
    Today, I think it is simply a liquid -one gulp and your're good to go?! I dunno, but it is a lot simpler for kids these days. The only polio that remains on the Earth is frozen somewhere in a petri dish. Such contagions are not destroyed as they still can help us with other diseases.
    I am not sure exactly how old I was, but I was vaccinated before my memories began (at 2-1/2 years). Anyway, I have that old round scar on my left arm to prove it.
    Few Americans knew that President Roosevelt was crippled from polio, and that The President spent a lot of his own bread in the previous years on a rehabilitation center in Warm Springs, AK.
    -Hey, all of you Americans out there; would you elect a cripple as President today? I fear not. Sociopaths traitors are okay, but not the disabled! Go figure. Americans today, need to read more and watch TV less.
    God bless Eddie Cantor.

  • @RedSkeletonGames
    @RedSkeletonGames Před 5 měsíci

    Molto bello

  • @addisyn4433
    @addisyn4433 Před 4 lety

    Help, where do you watch this movie

  • @BuckyBrown-lt4ry
    @BuckyBrown-lt4ry Před 6 lety +3

    Under rated comedian. Great all around entertainer.

  • @johnmonkus4600
    @johnmonkus4600 Před 4 lety +2

    It would be interesting to know how they got blue to appear in two strip Technicolor. Maybe in the modern version they took the red and green channels to create a black and white luminence channel and then did some subtraction of both green and red to get a blue channel. The same technique used for analog compatible color television. The ending western scene is missing blue. The first full spectrum technicolor was a Disney cartoon in 1933. It was actually one strip, for they shot the RGB in sequence on the same reel.

    • @steveliveshere
      @steveliveshere Před 3 lety +1

      My understanding is that technical made adjustments in the prints. The best example I know of was the Rhapsody in Blue number from King of Jazz. The prints dyes had to be recast to turn green into blue. But yes this example of recasting is amazing!

  • @rozsasimon7119
    @rozsasimon7119 Před 8 lety +2

    wery interesting.

  • @richarddean4763
    @richarddean4763 Před rokem +1

    This is history

  • @bobcowan4188
    @bobcowan4188 Před 3 lety +3

    Please correct the printed lyrics: Cantor doesn't say "Bud Rogers." There wasn't any Bud Rogers at that time. He's saying "But Rogers is not her style," a reference to the great Will Rogers who was at the height of his popularity, with movie roles and a syndicated newspaper column. Will Rogers also happened to be a buddy of Cantor's from their Ziegfeld Follies days.

    • @postscript67
      @postscript67 Před 2 lety

      It's "Buck Rogers", the science fiction hero who appeared in a syndicated comic strip from January 1929. Besides, "but" makes no sense in the context.

    • @Cats-pk5zu
      @Cats-pk5zu Před rokem +2

      You are both wrong… he is referring to Buddy Rogers …or Charles Buddy Rogers … who was known at that time as America’s Boyfriend.

  • @CAboy
    @CAboy Před 8 lety +1

    It is indeed Eddie!

  • @hootiehootiehoo
    @hootiehootiehoo Před 7 lety +7

    Oh, 1930.

  • @BlakeGildaphish76
    @BlakeGildaphish76 Před rokem +2

    Well. .. the thumbnail was quite misleading.

  • @sirorblegasse-payne2944
    @sirorblegasse-payne2944 Před 6 lety +7

    Thank you for keeping this up!
    It's a gift, not only for me, but also for children.

  • @MyNameIsChristBringsASword
    @MyNameIsChristBringsASword Před 11 měsíci

    great stuff no matter what they say

  • @manidig
    @manidig Před 7 lety

    Original "Exit music" starts at 4:01. Most broadcast versions of the film have it cut.

  • @KennethSloan
    @KennethSloan Před rokem +3

    Love these old movies, hate the blackface, though.

  • @jazzguy1927
    @jazzguy1927 Před rokem

    The greatest actor of all time. Way better than Gable, Spencer Tracy, Gary Cooper or any other actor. Eddie Cantor was an actor without equal.,

  • @susanlloyd7395
    @susanlloyd7395 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I've seen this without blackface and now, I'm looking for it.

  • @Matt78collector
    @Matt78collector Před rokem +1

    this is the colorized version

  • @cedricpeabody265
    @cedricpeabody265 Před 2 lety

    There's something very surreal about this. The black face and that dance, reminds me of Spike Milligan.

  • @gregorypalmer5403
    @gregorypalmer5403 Před 9 měsíci

    Who was the girl

  • @TobyRossFun
    @TobyRossFun Před 2 lety

    He was cute

  • @scotpens
    @scotpens Před 8 lety +40

    "My baby don't care for clothes . . ."
    So she's a nudist, then?

    • @Musikkoffer
      @Musikkoffer Před 8 lety +1

      Hahahaha :DD

    • @NuisanceMan
      @NuisanceMan Před 7 lety +3

      One can always hope!

    • @stuartlee6622
      @stuartlee6622 Před 6 lety +3

      scotpens No. She's Hillary Clinton caring only for POWER.

    • @rufust.firefly2474
      @rufust.firefly2474 Před 5 lety

      P well if she doesn't care about clothes then she wouldn't be allowed in any shows.

    • @Top_Hat_Man
      @Top_Hat_Man Před 5 lety +4

      Trump: my country doesn't care for mexico, my country doesn't care for russia, my country just cares for walls, my country just cares for nukes, and also so many troops, and so many, bing bongs, my country just cares for me, because i am trump!

  • @jennbeth1
    @jennbeth1 Před 4 lety +7

    Wow, this is tough to watch in 2020.

    • @kirbywaite1586
      @kirbywaite1586 Před 3 měsíci

      Then don't. Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.

  • @jomarsantos3229
    @jomarsantos3229 Před 2 lety

    Anyone washing this on 2021

  • @munkypark2560
    @munkypark2560 Před rokem +3

    Nina Simone's choice to cover this has a hidden irony that most will miss. No wonder she got sick of singing it.

    • @atqui
      @atqui  Před rokem +1

      The original version is still the best one though.

    • @davegoren9978
      @davegoren9978 Před rokem

      All these years of hearing the modern version and unaware of the original, which I like better!

  • @sheikhkenneh9182
    @sheikhkenneh9182 Před 2 lety +4

    Lmaooo so nobody gonna speak on the black face?

  • @moldyoldie7888
    @moldyoldie7888 Před 3 lety

    At 1:49, I think Eddie should have sung Buddy Rogers, not Bud Rogers.

  • @alhassant9204
    @alhassant9204 Před 10 měsíci +1

    We're just gonna ignore the elephant in the room then...

    • @kirbywaite1586
      @kirbywaite1586 Před 3 měsíci

      It has nothing to do with the quality of his performance.

  • @Top_Hat_Man
    @Top_Hat_Man Před 5 lety +1

    0:36
    The song begins

  • @fung6
    @fung6 Před 4 lety

    colored 1930 movie?

    • @claudiov5554
      @claudiov5554 Před 4 lety +1

      wu terrance technicolor

    • @moldyoldie7888
      @moldyoldie7888 Před 3 lety +2

      Nice little joke there. Seriously, combinations of green and red only.

  • @gynack
    @gynack Před 5 lety +1

    Very interesting to hear the original form of the song. Nina Simone transformed it. Haley Reinhart and Jeff Goldblum have done another take on it, also brilliant.

    • @scotpens
      @scotpens Před 4 lety

      Julie London did a sultry, bluesy version of the song in her TV concert recorded in Japan in 1964.
      Link: czcams.com/video/htNqf-vp0-U/video.html

    • @gynack
      @gynack Před 4 lety

      @@scotpens
      That'a a real torch version too. Very much Julie London. I hugely like Haley Reinhart's version with Jeff Goldblum. She's made it into a very whimsical song, playing up to Goldblum in a live recording, and great in its own different way. There's some good jazz with Goldblum's band as well.

    • @michaelmckinney7324
      @michaelmckinney7324 Před 2 lety +1

      Mel Torme and Tony Bennett had versions of it too

    • @rachelle_banks
      @rachelle_banks Před rokem +1

      I just finished the show Simply Simone and that was the first I had heard of the song.
      Nina Simone's version is something entirely different in a way.
      I do want to check out the other versions you mentioned here.
      I am intrigued by Jeff Goldblum being associated with this song at all.

    • @gynack
      @gynack Před rokem

      @@rachelle_banks
      I hope you enjoyed the other versions, or at least found them interesting. Haley Reinhart is a particularly talented and also hugely versatile singer. Look her up singing with Postmodern Jukebox who specialise in giving completely different treatments to comparatively recent pop songs. Creep and Seven Nation Army are two of her best. She has also written a lot of her own songs and recorded wit her own groups.

  • @jojoflap
    @jojoflap Před 6 lety +1

    I like Simone's rendition of this song, but I personally prefer the original because of how upbeat it feels.

    • @gynack
      @gynack Před 5 lety

      ++Jojoflap
      Haley Reinhart has a version with Jeff Glodblum that is whimsical and as well as being done superbly, also manages to inject humour into it. It's amazing what fine musicians can do with songs.

  • @bretschueneman1222
    @bretschueneman1222 Před 9 lety +5

    Color in 1930?? Was this a show?

    • @corvus1374
      @corvus1374 Před 8 lety +4

      +Gareth But this song was written for the film, it wasn't in the stage play.

    • @devinbell4816
      @devinbell4816 Před 7 lety +4

      Color films have been around since the 1890s, though the first full natural 2 strip technicolor film was "The Toll of the Sea" in 1922.

    • @39717
      @39717 Před 6 lety +1

      Das Kinophile ENTP no the first one was The Gulf Between in 1917 though only a few frames survive

    • @michaelramos810
      @michaelramos810 Před 4 lety

      No it was a movie

  • @Oggaboggahallo
    @Oggaboggahallo Před 8 lety +35

    does nobody want to address the blackface. ???

    • @camcostello4744
      @camcostello4744 Před 8 lety +1

      +Angel Vera LOL right?

    • @choachug
      @choachug Před 8 lety +23

      +Angel Vera
      Pretty disgusting, but obviously times were different. Oddly. if you read up on Cantor, you'd see he was profoundly anti-racist, and very proactive in defending human rights across the board, at some risk to himself. It's a shame that whole societies--including those with good intentions--can be so blind. In that way, times are not so different after all.

    • @DanielIKing
      @DanielIKing Před 8 lety +6

      +Angel Vera Kind of a wow moment that. Just, whoa. Kinda charmingly ironic that it took Ms. Simone to bring the song back.

    • @Susan-md6nd
      @Susan-md6nd Před 7 lety +12

      Why Angel, not a problem, until leftie political correct people like you, made it a problem. Get over it.

    • @misterwhitman4368
      @misterwhitman4368 Před 7 lety +2

      Yes....I like Black Face, and You can watch Me do it in an Episode of the You Tube Show "KEEPERCAST" and Ill do it AGAIN! hahaha!

  • @marcopoggioli8202
    @marcopoggioli8202 Před 5 lety +1

    marco poggioli salutare voltare la lega

  • @AimeeColeman
    @AimeeColeman Před rokem

    In the second clip, you can really see the facial expressions copying Groucho Marx. Makes you think, those eyebrows and thay moustache must have been to help with rhe expression clarity on rhe old picture's

  • @username172
    @username172 Před 4 lety +1

    I clicked the video and once i saw eddie , i almost spat out my coffee and nearly fell back in my chair laughing XD

  • @michaelmcgee8543
    @michaelmcgee8543 Před 6 lety

    This is the DVD version that been semi enhanced.I got it.This is the reason why I bought a VHS leftover cause it not enhanced.My digital VHS version sound started making a noise, so I got the Dvd version.Disappointed I got an old embassy video analog copy.Not as sharp but remain the limited palette.Modern distributors d are ignorant about film history cause they are putting profit before history and all diverse classic film fans.If they put all classic film fand first and history, they would still make money, but not greedy profit.

  • @Jotaemesg
    @Jotaemesg Před 4 lety

    Spot Betty Grable

    • @EJP286CRSKW
      @EJP286CRSKW Před 4 lety

      José Manuel Sánchez Gómez Ha. Spot Virginia Bruce, 3rd from left with her killer smile. Paulette Goddard is in there somewhere too.

    • @Martive_Led
      @Martive_Led Před 3 lety

      And Ann Southern

  • @postatility9703
    @postatility9703 Před rokem

    After seeing the obviously offensive version of this tune, it's funny to think that years later this was a hit for none other than Nina Simone.

  • @davetoffen7944
    @davetoffen7944 Před 4 lety

    he came from nuthin......

  • @davetoffen7944
    @davetoffen7944 Před 2 lety

    I'd love Gaga to do a cover

  • @gilliankroger5220
    @gilliankroger5220 Před 8 lety +6

    And I thought that Nina Simone wrote this one!!

    • @corvus1374
      @corvus1374 Před 8 lety +5

      +Gillian Kroger Walter Donaldson and Gus Kahn wrote it.

    • @DanielIKing
      @DanielIKing Před 8 lety +2

      +Gillian Kroger I did a double take. This version turns up in closing credits music to the Phryne Fischer Mysteries. Almost missed the lyric going by.

    • @jefdarcy
      @jefdarcy Před 4 lety +3

      I knew it was not her song originally, but I never knew her version was so completely different. This is not a cover, its a total makeover.

    • @Satans_Legion_of_Evil
      @Satans_Legion_of_Evil Před rokem

      The melody is different, and it's also much slower than this one. Jazz in the 1920's and early 30's was fast and used various instruments, but modern Jazz is slow and uses mostly pianos and saxaphones. Cantor's version is something you'd hear in parties during the 1920's, Nina's version is something you'd hear in an expensive restraunt.

  • @misterwhitman4368
    @misterwhitman4368 Před 7 lety +10

    I first saw "Whoopee" in the 1970's Eddie is GREAT and evean more so in BLACKFACE! Have You seen Eddie Cantor in "Roman Scandals"? say, THAT is a fine Musical Show fore SURE! it even has Lucille Ball NUDE (under a Blond Wig)

  • @yrvanmichel1446
    @yrvanmichel1446 Před 4 lety +9

    So no one is going to mention the black face ?

    • @rmmichael95
      @rmmichael95 Před 4 lety +2

      What? How hilarious it is? Or how it shows that modern black face is harmless in comparison?

    • @rhuephus
      @rhuephus Před 4 lety +1

      GFYS

    • @joesmoe8983
      @joesmoe8983 Před 3 lety

      Are you suprised? Shouldn’t be, nothing changes.

  • @richardsleep2045
    @richardsleep2045 Před 5 lety +13

    er.. Wow! How did THAT happen!? I mean, leaving aside the astonishing of-its-time racism etc, how did a fairly dull song get transformed int the brilliant jazz classic as sung by say, Nina Simone?

    • @atqui
      @atqui  Před 5 lety +9

      It's a matter of taste. Others would say that Nina Simone just ruined the lively and upbeat original song.

    • @richardsleep2045
      @richardsleep2045 Před 5 lety +2

      @@atqui Hah yes I guess so. I mean I like this version too.. kind of. Hard to ignore the "black" guy and the cowboy though.. lol

    • @aeichler
      @aeichler Před 4 lety +4

      It wasn't meant to be racist at the time, just comedy and sung in vaudeville style.

    • @joettaharris4230
      @joettaharris4230 Před 2 lety +2

      @@aeichler , nope it WAS racist and they knew it. They didn’t care. Don’t go rewriting history, dear.

    • @joettaharris4230
      @joettaharris4230 Před 2 lety +2

      Because black people put soul into it. Dude is in blackface and is obviously nowhere close to black artistry. A disgrace, really.

  • @comedylover623
    @comedylover623 Před 2 lety +1

    Too bad the scene is marred by the black face.

  • @waldolydecker8118
    @waldolydecker8118 Před 11 měsíci +1

    How is it that he sang better "when he was black"..go figure.

    • @wozza2942
      @wozza2942 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Because black singers are the best. Everybody knows that!

  • @joettaharris4230
    @joettaharris4230 Před 2 lety +4

    So, we are all gonna ignore the black face in the room. Geez.

    • @LerafoLuap
      @LerafoLuap Před 2 lety +4

      This is from 92 years ago. What should we do, write into the studio to complain? 😂😂