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- My Man
-
-
- (DECEMBER 31, 1928)
-
- My Man. In 1921 Fannie Brice worked into her act in the
- Ziegfeld Follies a Channing Pollock translation of the French
- tune "Mon Homme." She knew that if her man got another chance,
- he would go straight. "No matter what he is," she sang, "I am
- his..." and the song, sung well enough to be effective even if
- it had not had any particular significance, moved her hearers
- to an extraordinary pitch of sentiment because they knew that
- her husband, Jules W. ("Nicky") Arnstein, was serving sentence
- at the federal penitentiary at Leavenworth. Now, in her first
- picture, she sing "My Man" again and also her other famous
- songs, "I'm an Indian" and "Second Hand Rose"; she recites "Mrs.
- Cohen at the Beach." The plot is what it has to be to give her
- a chance to do her stuff. As a sewing-machine girl in a costume
- factory, she sings for the other girls at lunch, sings at the
- annual picnic, sings for the famed theatrical a hit.
-
- Born Borach, daughter of a French Jew who ran saloons in
- Newark, Brooklyn and Manhattan, Fannie Brice was romantic partly
- because she was homely and awkward. When she got a job in a
- department store she pretended she was starving and her father
- was blind; when the girls and the floor superintendent gave her
- presents and money, she laughed and said that she was only
- fooling. At Keeney's Vaudeville House in Brooklyn when she was
- 13 she won $10 on amateur night singing "When You Know You're
- Not Forgotten by the Girl You Can't Forget." She danced in Cohan
- and Harris' chorus; in burlesque she sang some of Irving
- Berlin's first songs; when she was 17 Ziegfeld headlined her in
- the Follies of 1910; two years ago she made her debut as a
- dramatic actress in Fanny. She had an operation on her hooked
- nose to make her better looking, but she said; "I'd rather not
- be beautiful. It's hard to get a line on yourself if you're
- beautiful."
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