Main Page | Alphabetical index | English Encyclopedia

The Jazz Singer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
{}
{}
Produced by {}
Directed by {}
Written by {}
Starring {}
Music by {}
Cinematography {}
Editing {}
Distributed by {}
Release date {}
Runtime {}
Language {
{} ({})
Spoken in: {}
Region: {
Regions of the World
Antarctica | East Asia | Central Asia | Southeast Asia | South Asia | North Asia | Middle East | Levant | Arabia | North Africa | Central Africa | Great Lakes | Congo | Guinea | Sahel | Sudan | West Africa | East Africa | Southern Africa | North America | Great Plains | Central America | Caribbean | Andean States | Eastern South America | Northern South America | Western Europe | Eastern Europe | Northern Europe | Scandinavia | Southern Europe | Central Europe | Balkans | Australasia or Australia | Micronesia | Melanesia | Polynesia
(For more, visit subcontinent and subregion)
}
Total speakers: {}
Ranking: {}
Genetic classification: {}
Official status
Official language of: {}
Regulated by: {}
Language codes
ISO 639-1 {}
ISO 639-2 {}
SIL {}
}
IMDb Page

The Jazz Singer is a 1927 U.S movie notable for being the first 'talking motion picture' to be widely commercially distributed. Released by Warner Bros, it was directed by Alan Crosland and starred Al Jolson, who performed two songs in blackface.

The stage production of the show had been a hit on Broadway in 1925 and a second production in 1927 with George Jessel in the lead role. When Warner Brothers refused to meet Jessel's salary demands, Jessel turned the part down and Warner Brothers chose Jolson for the role. The movie opened on October 6, 1927 and was a sensational box-office hit, proving to Hollywood (and to the world) that "talkies" were profitable.

The film opened the door to the evolution of sound film and signaled the end of the era of the silent film. The movie was the first of a series of "talkies" starring Jolson; other films in the series included The Singing Fool (1928), Say It With Songs (1929), and Mammy (1930).

Table of contents
1 Primary cast
2 Award nominations
3 Quotes

Primary cast

Up-and-coming cast member:

Award nominations

Despite becoming famous for introducing sound, the movie contains only a few minutes' worth of actual singing and dialogue. Jolson sings the famous standard "Mammy" twice during the film, with a couple of lines of dialogue. The rest of the film's soundtrack is instrumental musical accompaniment, with most of the dialogue presented through the standard caption cards prevalent in silent movies of the era. The song was enough, however, to create a sensation among moviegoing audiences of the day and prompt an immediate revolution in the Hollywood movie industry.

in The Jazz Singer, 1927.
The movie is one of those selected for preservation by the American National Film Registry as culturally significant.

The Jazz Singer has been remade twice. A 1953 remake starred Danny Thomas and Peggy Lee, and a 1980 remake starred Neil Diamond, Lucie Arnaz and Laurence Olivier.

Quotes



Limit search to: Body and Title Deutsche Seiten Path

Websites for The
Showing page 1 (1 - 10 of 972849 hits) Next »
Permanent Representative of the Russian Federation to the United Nations Office and other International Organizations in Geneva, including the United Nations Office at Geneva (UNOG), the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development ( ...
The most easterly of the three great peninsulas of Southern Asia, is bounded on the north by the mountains of Assam, the Plateau of Yun-nan, and the mountains ...
A review of the 3M Bookshelf Game Events (1974). Events is a historical trivia game. One player is the "historian" and selects a specific event from history. The event can be something the historian knows about or it can be one of the 300 events in the included booklet. The ...
The Fawcett Library, the National Research Library for Women's Studies is based at the London Guildhall University in London. The library includes materials on the following subjects: feminism, work, education, health, the ...
In the Holy Bible the term heaven denotes, in the first place, the blue firmament, or the region of the clouds that pass along ...
"When it comes to the graphical elements, this game is easily head-and-shoulders above others in the genre. From the spark of a parried attack, to the whirr of a blurred blade slashing through the air and a kick that knocks opponents ...
The railroad town that survived the death of its railroad. It was established by the now defunct Kansas City, Wyandotte and Northwestern Railroad. The town was named after the chief operations manager of the railroad, Elias ...
Those bodies of men in the Church who by the very nature of their institute unite the perfection of the religious state to the priestly office, i.e. who while being ...
An international organization dedicated to the promotion and the maintenance of high professional standards in the subject of mathematical programming. It publishes the journals Mathematical Programming A and B, consisting of technical articles on all aspects of the subject; the MPS/SIAM Series on Optimization, ...
The paintings in the catacombs permit the belief that the early Christians simply followed the fashion of their time. The short hair ...

Next »

Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor
Free thumbnail preview by Thumbshots.org

Search for products at amazon.com:
Search:
Keywords:
amazon.com books on 'The Jazz Singer':
Search at Google.com:
Google
WebCalSky.com Encyclopedia

Suchresultate aus unserem günstigen CalSky-Shop