Eileen Farrell is blessed with two voices. A classically-trained dramatic soprano who also loves to belt pop songs and torch the blues, she successfully conquered the worlds of opera and popular music over the course of her whirlwind career. Now, Farrell shares reminiscences about her remarkable professional and personal life. With candor, humor, and affection, she recalls her New England childhood, her overnight success at age twenty as star of her own CBS radio show, her big break dubbing vocals for Eleanor Parker in the MGM movie Interrupted Melody, and her many guest appearances on television shows. Farrell discusses her rise to fame as an opera star, from her highly acclaimed performance in Medea in 1955, to her historic debut at the Metropolitan Opera in Alceste in 1960. She also fondly recollects her marriage of forty years to New York police officer Robert Reagan and her life outside the limelight, including her frustrating tenure as a faculty member at Indiana University. Farrell speaks frankly about her tumultuous years at the Met, where her head-to-head confrontations with Sir Rudolph Bing brought her promising operatic career to an abrupt close after five seasons. While she loved singing the music of Verdi, Mascagni, and Giordano, Farrell reveals that she never reconciled herself to the life of a diva, preferring the friendliness of show business to the aloofness of the opera world. Populated with such figures as Leonard Bernstein, Arturo Toscanini, Maria Callas, Ethel Merman, Mabel Mercer, and Carol Burnett, this engaging memoir takes the reader from backstage at the Met to behind-the-scenes of the Ed Sullivan Show, providing a fascinating view of opera and the entertainment industry. Eileen Farrell's legion of fans will delight in her inviting story of a career that was like no other singer's.
Thank you, Eileen Farrell, for a wonderful career and for your candor in telling your very personal and inspiring story. I couldn't put the book down! As a professional singer myself, I found your experiences from your innocence at the first audition to your regular radio show moving and encouraging. Your book is as honest and refreshing as your performances and a must-read for even those with no interest in opera.
A marvelous biography of an outstanding performer.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Eileen Farrell is one of the most gifted and celebrated American singers of the twentieth century. She is both a classically trained dramatic soprano and a talented songstress of pop songs and the blues. Can't Help Singing: The Life Of Eileen Farrell is a superbly crafted memoir in which she shares candid reminiscences about her professional career and her personal life. With humor and affection she surveys her New England childhood, her sudden success at the age of twenty starring in her own CBS radio show, dubbing for Eleanor Parker in the MGM movie "Interrupted Melody", her many guest appearances on television, and her operatic work, including an historic debut at the Metropolitan Opera in Alceste in 1960. Eileen also recollects her sometimes troubled marriage of forty years to New York police officer Robert Reagan and her frustrating tenure as a faculty member at Indiana University. In this wonderful memoir we meet the famous figures of music who were her contemporaries, fellow performers, and associates from Leonard Bernstein to Maria Callas, from Ethel Merman to Carol Burnett. Can't Help Singing is a marvelous biography that will hold great interest and appeal for her many fans and for students of 20th Century American music.
For Those of Us Who AREN'T Opera Fans...
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
This book is tremedously fun to read. I am a fan of the pop singer Eileen Farrell -- but I'm not an opera fan -- so I was thrilled to discover it reads more like a romp through the history of entertainment in America than a libretto. I'm not sure how Brian Kellow did it, but the writing makes me feel as if Eileen Farrel was calling me up to dish about anything and everything. Her sense of humor and (delicious!) candor are a treat!
Just plain fun
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
It's like sitting across the table from the great Farrell, over a cup of coffee and listening to her tell you stories of her career. She is honest, self-deprecating and funny. While this book was neither deep nor insightful, it was a great read and enjoyable. It is also well-written, keeping the story moving in an interesting, readable way. Highly recommended to anyone who enjoys Farrell's singing (in whatever genre).
Fabulous singer becomes great storyteller
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
Eileen Farrell is the only opera star to date who can sing pop songs and not sound like an opera singer. Just listen to her dazzing CD THE EILEEN FARRELL ALBUM where she sounds like a red hot mama. Her biography is well done. She tells it like it was. She never starved along the way for quite soon after arriving in New York she had her own radio show. The book is delightful throughout as she talks about TV, the Met and her family. She grinds no axes nor does not paint the world through rose colored glasses. It is a great read by a delightful lady.
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