Catalog Number: UTS-115

Condition Details:

Vinyl plays with crackles and some clicks (play-graded). Cover looks great; light scuffing and discoloration with darker discoloration spots (front/back); heavier scuffing on back. Inner-sleeve is original (generic white); two sides partially split. Spine is split. Minor shelf-wear along bottom-edge; top-edge has large split at right side. Corners show wear. Opening is crisp with signs of use and a few divots. Back cover variation.


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About The Record:

In contrast to the experiences of many Broadway songwriters, the team of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II had a large say in how their shows came to the big screen. South Pacific did not arrive in movie theaters until nine years after its Broadway opening, and when it did on March 19, 1958, its two-hour, 70-minute running time allowed for the full Rodgers & Hammerstein score. In addition to preserving their songs, the songwriters saw to it that the songs were sung by people they approved of, most of whom were not the same people seen on the screen. Mitzi Gaynor sang her own songs in the lead female role of nurse Nellie Forbush, and Ray Walston, who had played the supporting part of rowdy marine Luther Billis in the first national tour and in London, also got to sing. But Rossano Brazzi, as male lead Emile de Becque, was dubbed by opera singer Giorgio Tozzi (who was given screen credit), John Kerr as second male lead Lt. Cable was replaced by Bill Lee, and Juanita Hall, who had originated the role of Bloody Mary on Broadway, was voiced by Muriel Smith, who had played the part in London.