Libby Holman - Am I Blue (1929)

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Libby Holman sings “Am I Blue?” on Brunswick 4445, recorded on July 10, 1929.

Libby Holman helped popularize songs that that became standards, such as "Body and Soul."

This singer was born Elizabeth Lloyd Holzman at home in Cincinnati, Ohio, on May 23, 1904, to middle-class parents of German Jewish descent.

Libby was not raised in the Jewish faith. Her parents--Alfred Holzman (a lawyer/stockbroker) and Rachel (Workum) Holzman, a schoolteacher--had converted to the Christian Science church.

In 1923, after completing a major in French in three years, Libby Holman was the youngest woman to graduate from the University of Cincinnati.

At nineteen, she moved to New York with with a goal of making it on Broadway.

In 1925, she landed her first significant role in the play The Sapphire Ring and soon after joined the road company of The Greenwich Village Follies. Her big break came in Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart’s musical revue, The Garrick Gaieties (1925), which ran over 211 performances.

Her nearsightedness provided an unexpectedly alluring stage persona, while her palate, an eighth of an inch askew, helped produce her throaty sound.

Holman, a celebrity, landed roles in Merry-Go-Round (1927), Rainbow (1928), and Gambols (1929).

In 1929, she sang “Moanin’ Low” in Clifton Webb’s The Little Show.

During this period, Clifton Webb introduced Holman to Louisa Carpenter, a millionaire member of the du Pont family. By the time Howard Dietz and Arthur Schwartz’s Three’s a Crowd opened at the Selwyn Theater on October 15, 1930, Carpenter and Holman had become inseparable lovers (her bisexuality became the talk of Broadway, only the first of many tabloid scandals she inspired in the thirties). Costarring with Fred Allen, Holman sang “Give Me Something to Remember You By” and “Body and Soul.”

Zachary Smith Reynolds, heir to the R.J. Reynolds tobacco fortune, began, followed Holman’s career. An aviator, he flew from city to city courting her attentions until November 16, 1931, when, just days after his divorce from Anne Cannon was finalized, the two were married by a justice of the peace in Monroe, Michigan. The famously ill-fated marriage ended tragically at the Reynolds estate, “Reynolda,” near Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

On July 5, 1932, Reynolds was shot in his bedroom. He died the next morning in the hospital, a coroner declaring the death a suicide.

Two grand juries approved murder charges against Holman, who had been with Reynolds at the time of the shooting, and against Ab Walker, Reynolds’s best friend.

Category

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Music
Transcript
00:00En el próximo episodio
00:30En el próximo episodio
01:00En el próximo episodio
01:30Yo era su único
01:37Pero ahora soy
01:41El único triste
01:45¡Dios mío! ¿Era gay?
01:50Hasta hoy
01:55Ahora se ha ido
01:57¿Soy azul?
02:03¿Soy azul?
02:08¿Soy azul?
02:10Sólo pregúntame, ¿soy azul?
02:12¿No hay lágrimas en los ojos
02:16contándote una historia?
02:21¿Soy azul?
02:26Sería tan desagradable
02:30si tu plan con tu hombre
02:34sucediera
02:39Era el momento
02:43Yo era su único
02:48Pero ahora soy
02:51El único triste
02:55¡Dios mío! ¿Era gay?
03:01Hasta hoy
03:05Ahora se ha ido
03:07Y nos pasamos
03:09Soy azul

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