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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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1990-10-27
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36 lines
My Man
(DECEMBER 31, 1928)
My Man. In 1921 Fannie Brice worked into her act in the Ziegfeld
Follies a Channing Pollock translation of the French tune "Mon
Homme." She knew that if her man got another chance, he would go
straight. "No matter what he is," she sang, "I am his..." and the
song, sung well enough to be effective even if it had not had any
particular significance, moved her hearers to an extraordinary
pitch of sentiment because they knew that her husband, Jules W.
("Nicky") Arnstein, was serving sentence at the federal
penitentiary at Leavenworth. Now, in her first picture, she sing
"My Man" again and also her other famous songs, "I'm an Indian" and
"Second Hand Rose"; she recites "Mrs. Cohen at the Beach." The plot
is what it has to be to give her a chance to do her stuff. As a
sewing-machine girl in a costume factory, she sings for the other
girls at lunch, sings at the annual picnic, sings for the famed
theatrical a hit.
Born Borach, daughter of a French Jew who ran saloons in Newark,
Brooklyn and Manhattan, Fannie Brice was romantic partly because
she was homely and awkward. When she got a job in a department
store she pretended she was starving and her father was blind; when
the girls and the floor superintendent gave her presents and money,
she laughed and said that she was only fooling. At Keeney's
Vaudeville House in Brooklyn when she was 13 she won $10 on amateur
night singing "When You Know You're Not Forgotten by the Girl You
Can't Forget." She danced in Cohan and Harris' chorus; in burlesque
she sang some of Irving Berlin's first songs; when she was 17
Ziegfeld headlined her in the Follies of 1910; two years ago she
made her debut as a dramatic actress in Fanny. She had an operation
on her hooked nose to make her better looking, but she said; "I'd
rather not be beautiful. It's hard to get a line on yourself if
you're beautiful."