Helen Traubel "Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home" on The Ed Sullivan Show
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- Опубликовано: 11 дек 2021
- Helen Traubel "Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home" on The Ed Sullivan Show, April 15, 1956. Subscribe now to never miss an update: ume.lnk.to/EdSullivanSubscribe
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The Ed Sullivan Show was a television variety program that aired on CBS from 1948-1971. For 23 years it aired every Sunday night and played host to the world's greatest talents. The Ed Sullivan Show is well known for bringing rock n' roll music to the forefront of American culture through acts like Elvis Presley, The Beatles, and The Rolling Stones. The entertainers each week ranged from comedians like Joan Rivers and Rodney Dangerfield, to Broadway stars Julie Andrews and Richard Burton, to pop singers such as Bobby Darin and Petula Clark. It also frequently featured stars of Motown such as The Supremes, The Temptations, Stevie Wonder and The Jackson 5. The Ed Sullivan Show was one of the only places on American television where such a wide variety of popular culture was showcased and its legacy lives on to this day.
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She’s having such a good time here. And then she could go to the Old Met the next day and sing Wagner just as idiomatically. Amazing.
I agree that she’s having a great time here, but depending on when this was filmed Rudolf Bing, the general manager of the Met canceled her contract around 1953 because he did not approve of her TV appearances. Such a shame! He deemed it inappropriate for an opera singer to find and spread joy and to be doing exactly what she’s doing in this clip. So she expanded her work in other areas such as film and TV!
Helen Traubel was quite a gal. She was a formidable talent in opera and I think she raised a few eyebrows for singing popular music. This was fantastic!
I don't usually care for the song "Bill Bailey", but this is actually really good! I love the opera stars! The arrangement is fantastic too! Thanks so much for posting this!
What a lady!
Helen was a jewel
Damn that voice could shatter that place down if she tried 😅
She must have been WONDERFUL in PIPE DREAM! What fun! And what a voice! Talk about a game girl!
Wow too much fun and NO AUTOTUNE! Thanks!
If you like her here, you will love her in the movie deep in my heart.
Always thought her and Kate Smith had very similar voices. If Kate sang opera, she'd probably sound like Traubel.
I didn't know who Kate Smith was until I looked her up after this comment....wow. I'm glad I did! What a voice! One of the few worthy of being compared to the likes of Helen Traubel.
@@jasonblack4208 Wonderful singer indeed. A heavy soprano who never got any training yet was clear as bell live without any microphone. Could sing classical too. Performed arias from Samson and Dalila, Carmen and even... Aida live. Phenomenal. Shame those never turned up sadly.
She sure was having fun with this. I wonder what Ed Sullivan was doing that she laughed?
Again with this song?
Here because Comment on Johnny Carson about opera singers singing pop songs on the ESS..
She looks like she would’ve been hilarious in a movie role of an opera diva who ends up getting a pie in the face!
57 years and no wobble. She omits high notes and sings more in contralto key, but her middle voice is just magnificent. You won t her the same Isolde and Brunhilde.
She sings a lot of this in FULL VOICE! This key is a soprano key for full voice. For one the belted high Eb in the intro.
@@KajiVocals She sang always songs in a lower key
@@XlikeZero Yes, I am talking about something else though. The coordinations she used here would place the full voiced section in the soprano range and tessitura, head voice used here is more within the mezzo-soprano tessitura.
Helen recorded this for RCA Victor in 1953 in an album of "Gay Nineties Favorites" including After The Ball and Take Me Out To The Ball Game...Waiting For The Robert E Lee ...etc
Real dramatic sopranos who are properly trained have huge chest voices and usually have quite deep speaking voices.
To think that the Met (Bing) dumped her because she also sang pop. What a jerky time at the Met.