Showing posts with label Six Bridges To Cross. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Six Bridges To Cross. Show all posts

January 11, 2022

20,000 vinyl LPs 326: Gerald Fried ~ Dino & Sal Mineo

 ~   
 vinyl LP front cover 
cover photographer unknown 
photo of album cover by Styrous®


Today is the birthday of Sal Mineo, who was born on January 10, 1939. He was an American actor, singer, and director. He is best known for his role as John "Plato" Crawford in the 1955 drama film Rebel Without a Cause, which earned him a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, making him the fifth-youngest nominee in that category. He was seventeen when he made the film.             


photo: Michael Ochs Archive


Mineo's biographer, Paul Jeffers, recounted that Mineo received thousands of letters from young female fans, was mobbed by them at public appearances, and further wrote: "He dated the most beautiful women in Hollywood and New York City."        

Mineo had several television appearances before he made his screen debut in 1955 with the Joseph Pevney film Six Bridges to Cross which also starred George Nader (link below).     
 
Two years later, in 1957, Mineo starred in the film Dino which was directed by Thomas Carr, written by Reginald Rose, with music by Gerald Fried. The film also starred Brian Keith and Susan Kohner.             

 

Dino movie poster 
     
 
In Dino, Mineo plays a juvenile delinquent with Brian Keith) as his case worker after he spent several years for taking part in a murder of a night watchmen when he was 13 years old. (links to complete plot and cast below).                     
 
 
film still


The score for Dino, written by Gerald Fried, is a great, overlooked work. I found it fascinating that he utilized a tuba for some of the cuts, Death In A Warehouse, Defiance & Meditation, for a truly unique effect. There is a motif used throughout the film that references a piece of music by Frank Loesser, Joey Joey Joey, which was originally sung by Art Lund in the Broadway musical, The Most Happy Fella.     
 
Fried composed music for well-known television series of the 1960s and 70s, including Mission: Impossible, Gilligan's Island, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Shotgun Slade, Roots, and Star Trek.        
 
On February 12, 1976, Mineo returned home from a rehearsal for the play P.S. Your Cat Is Dead. After parking his car in the carport below his West Hollywood apartment, he was stabbed in the heart by a mugger who later claimed not to have known who Mineo was. Sal Mineo was buried at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York.        
 


 vinyl LP, side 1
photo by Styrous®




 vinyl LP, side 2
photo by Styrous®

   
Tracklist:
       
Side 1:
        
A1 - Death In A Warehouse
A2 - Reform School
A3 - Homecoming
A4 - Nightmare
A5 - Saturday Night
       
Side 2:
       
B1 - Little Jazz
B2 - Meditation
B3 - First Love
B4 - Defiance
B5 - Waiting And Conclusion
       
Companies, etc.
       

       
Credits:
       
    Composed By, Conductor – Gerald Fried
    Coordinator – Bobby Helfer
    Edited By – Eve Newman
    Trombone – Frank Rosselino*
    Trumpet – Maynard Ferguson
       
Notes:
       
Soundtrack from The Allied Artists Movie Starring Sal Mineo.
       
Gerald Fried – Dino (The Original Sound Track Recording)
Label: Epic – LN 3404
Format:    Vinyl, LP, Album, Mono
Country:    US
Released: 1957
Genre: Stage & Screen
Style: Soundtrack       

         
Viewfinder links:        
         
James Cagney            
Sammy Davis Jr. – Six Bridges To Cross & George Nader              
Sal Mineo        
George Nader        
all things Star Trek        
         
        
Net links:        
        
Cast        
Plot        
        
         
        
        
YouTube links:        
        
Gerald Fried: Dino ~         
           Death in a Warehouse    
           Defiance         
           First Love 
           Homecoming       
           Little Jazz      
           Meditation      
           Nightmare         
           Reform School             
           Saturday Night
           Waiting/Conclusion           
       Roots ~ Racines wedding song           Art Lund ~ Joey Joey Joey       
        
        
         

Happy Birthday, Sal!
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Monday, January 10, 2022       
       
 
 
















October 19, 2021

45 RPMs 65: Sammy Davis Jr. – Six Bridges To Cross & George Nader

 ~      
45 RPM record 
photo by Styrous®


Today is the birthday of George Nader who was an American actor and writer. He appeared in a variety of films from 1950 to 1974, including Sins of Jezebel (1953), Congo Crossing (1956), and The Female Animal (1958). During this period, he also did episodic television and starred in several series, including NBC's The Man and the Challenge (1959–60). In the 1960s he made several films in Germany, playing FBI agent Jerry Cotton. He is remembered for his first starring role, in the low-budget black-and-white 3D Sci-Fi film, film Robot Monster (1953), known as "one of the worst films ever made".       
 
 

Robot Monster poster
 
 
I remember seeing Robot Monster and was wowed by the 3D effects but even though I was only thirteen, I realized the acting of the cast, including Nader, was pretty sketchy and the special effects and costume of the "Monster" was really cheesy, so, it's in pretty stiff competition with Plan 9 from Outer Space, which was directed by Ed Wood and starred Bela Lugosi, for the number one spot.             
 
 
          
The film, Six Bridges To Cross is a 1955 American film noir crime film directed by Joseph Pevney and starring Tony Curtis as Jerry Florea, George Nader and Julie Adams. It is based on the famous 1950 Great Brink's Robbery of Boston, Massachusetts in which the thieves made off with roughly $2.5 million.    
 
 
 
It was a pretty good film (link to plot below) with decent writing and acting by the cast, which included Sal Mineo as Jerry Florea as a boy in his first film role; he would appear in the film classic, Rebel Without a Cause, later that same year. Both Tony Curtis and Clint Eastwood made screen tests for the major male role; it was Eastwood's first test but Curtis got the part.          
 
 
 
 
    



The title song, which is sung by Sammy Davis Jr. is a ballad in the fifties tradition and Davis does a really nice job on it with his typical lyric phrasing. Dinah Washington did a cover of the song in 1961; hers is a bit slower and more lush but her staccato phrasing makes it her very own (links below). The music was written by Henry Mancini and actor Jeff Chandler wrote the lyrics. Chandler had been considered for the main role but turned it down.     







Sammy Davis Jr. ~ All of You 
45 RPM record sleeve
photo by Styrous®




Sammy Davis Jr. ~ All of You 
45 RPM record sleeve
photo by Styrous®
 

    
 
        
Tracklist:

Side 1:

A - Six Bridges To Cross, written by Henry Mancini, Jeff Chandler (5) - 2:59

Side 2:

B - All Of You, written by Cole Porter - 2:39

Companies, etc.

    Manufactured By – Decca Records, Inc.

Notes:

Variant labels include, but not limited to, label matrices

A Side: From the Universal-International Pictures "Six Bridges To Cross"
B Side: From the Musical Production "Silk Stockings"

Barcode and Other Identifiers
        
        
    Matrix / Runout (Side A Runout): 45 8065 5 3
    Matrix / Runout (Side B Runout): 45 8066 5 3
    Matrix / Runout (Center label, side A): 8065
    Matrix / Runout (Center label, side B): 8066
 
Sammy Davis Jr. – Six Bridges To Cross / All Of You
Label: Decca – 9-29402
Format: Vinyl, 7", 45 RPM
Country: US
Released: 1955
Genre: Jazz, Stage & Screen
Style: Theme     
      
      
      
  
Viewfinder links:       
         
Jeff Chandler           
Tony Curtis        
Sammy Davis Jr,          
Clint Eastwood        
Bela Lugosi        
Sal Mineo          
George Nader         
Cole Porter        
Ed Wood       
     
Net links:       
         
Cast        
Plot        
     
YouTube links:      
         
Sammy Davis Jr. ~         
      All of You         
      Six Bridges To Cross        
Joseph Pevney               
Dinah Washington ~ Six Bridges To Cross                
        
        
        
        
        

Styrous® ~ Tuesday, October 19, 2021  






      

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

October 18, 2021

Jeff Chandler articles/mentions

 ~       
     
     
Sammy Davis Jr. – Six Bridges To Cross     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
Jeff Chandler - late 1940's
photographer unknown
     
     
     
      
     















August 23, 2020

Sal Mineo articles/mentions

~      
       

mentions:
Sammy Davis Jr. – Six Bridges To Cross  
Miss Barbara Eden Bends It!          
Elvis Presley ~ All Shook Up & Otis Blackwell   

     
     
 
 
 
 
Sal Mineo    
date & photographer unknown    
     
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






December 3, 2017

Cole Porter articles/mentions

~     
  
Sammy Davis Jr. – Six Bridges To Cross      
High Society & Grace Kelly         
Enoch Light ~ Musical Explorations In Sound   
Verve Records ~ The inner sleeve & Norman Granz   
    
    
     
    
    
    
         

photographer unknown