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Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald in Rose-Marie (1936)

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Rose-Marie

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Hunted killer Robert Miller Barr--whose companion was lynched in Yreka, California, the year before for killing two cops while he himself escaped--got a job as an extra in this movie while on the run. He appears in eight scenes. See "The Spokesman-Review", Sept 16, 1936.
Many reference books erroneously state that this film was shot in Jasper, Alberta, Canada. In fact, it was the remake of this movie, Rose Marie (1954), that was partially shot in Canada.
MGM's original intention was to film in Technicolor and to star Grace Moore. If these plans had gone through, this would have been MGM's first feature-length Technicolor film. However, Moore decided to pass on the film, Jeanette MacDonald was cast, photography switched to black-and-white, and this film became one of the biggest musical successes in MGM's history.
Adapted from a Broadway play that opened on September 2, 1924, at the Imperial Theatre in New York and ran for 557 performances.
When MGM released its remake of Rose Marie (1954), the studio ceased further distribution of its earlier film versions so as not to compete with the remake's box office take. The 1928 silent film disappeared entirely, and is now considered lost. The 1936 version turned up on television with a new title, Indian Love Call (1936), to minimize confusion, as the more recent 1954 version was also leased to local television stations.

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