South Pacific (1958)

  • South Pacific (1958)
  • South Pacific (1958)
  • South Pacific (1958)
Who's Dated Who feature on South Pacific including trivia, quotes, cast, crew, photos, pics, news, reviews, soundtracks, commentary, fans and pictures.
 

South Pacific Cast

 

Movie Highlights

Other Information

Awards

Best Written American Musical Writers Guild of America, USA [1959] (Won/Nominated: Nominated)

Best Soundtrack Album, Dramatic Picture Score or Original Cast Grammy Awards [1959] (Won/Nominated: Nominated)

Best Motion Picture Actress - Comedy/Musical Golden Globes [1959] (Won/Nominated: Nominated)

Best Motion Picture - Musical Golden Globes [1959] (Won/Nominated: Nominated)

Best Music, Scoring of a Musical Picture Academy Awards [1959] (Won/Nominated: Nominated)

Best Cinematography, Color Academy Awards [1959] (Won/Nominated: Nominated)

Best Sound Academy Awards [1959] (Won/Nominated: Won)

Top General Entertainment Laurel Awards [1958] (Won/Nominated: Nominated)
Plot Summary

Can a girl from Little Rock find happiness with a mature French planter she got to know one enchanted evening away from the military hospital where she is a nurse? Or should she just wash that man out of her hair? Bloody Mary is the philosopher of th...
Tagline

In the thrilling tradition of "Around The World In 80 Days"...

Discography

Singles

This Nearly Was Mine

(You`ve Got to Be) Carefully Taught

My Girl Back Home

Honey Bun

Younger Than Springtime

A Wonderful Guy

I`m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair

Dites Moin

Some Enchanted Evening

Twin Soliloquies (Wonder How It Feels)

A Cock-Eyed Optimist

Bali Ha`i

There is Nothin` Like a Dame

Bloody Mary
 

Full Cast and Crew

 

Awards

South Pacific (1958) was nominated for the following awards:

Golden Globes

1.
Golden Globe
1959
Best Motion Picture Actress - Comedy/Musical
Nominated  
 

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Snapshot

 

Photo Gallery

 

Fans

 

Trivia

Trivia and Quotes

Quotes
  • Emile de Becque: When all you care about is here, this is a good place to be.
    Trivia
  • Three of the numbers are strung together on the soundtrack album to create a finale that does not actually exist in the movie. These numbers are the reprise of "Ditte-Moi," "Some Enchanted Evening," and a duet between Emile and Nellie called "Two Different Sides of the World."
  • Mary Martin did not play Nellie Forbush in the movie because the man who had portrayed Emil de Becque on the stage, Ezio Pinza, had already died and the producers considered it to be a hopeless task to find anybody who could match her in the movie. Mitzi Gaynor was eventually cast in the role.
  • Rossano Brazzi`s singing voice was dubbed by Giorgio Tozzi, Ken Clark`s by Thurl Ravenscroft, and John Kerr`s by Bill Lee.
  • South Pacific opened at the Majestic Theater on April 7, 1949 and ran for 1925 performances starring Mary Martin as Nellie Forbush and Ezio Pinza as Emile de Becque. Juanita Hall reprises her role as Bloody Mary in the movie.
  • The soundtrack album for the film was the first Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II film soundtrack to be issued in stereo the same year that the mono version was issued. (Because stereo LP`s were not possible until 1958, the movie soundtrack albums of Oklahoma! (1955), Carousel (1956) and The King and I (1956) were issued in mono between 1955 and 1956, the stereo versions in 1958.)
  • South Pacific won the Pulitzer Prize in Drama in 1950--it premiered on Broadway in April of 1949. Only six musicals have won the Pulitzer Prize in drama--one per decade from the 1930s to the 1990s. They are as follows: "Of Thee I Sing" (1931), "South Pacific" (1949), "Fiorello" (1959), "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" (1961), "A Chorus Line" (1975), "Sunday in the Park with George" (1984), and "Rent" (1996).
  • This is the only theatrical film adaptation of a Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II stage show to have all the songs intact, with the addition of the song "My Girl Back Home," which was cut from the play before it opened.
  • France Nuyen had not yet learned English when playing the role of "Liat". Fortunately, she was able to converse in her native language (French) with co-star Rossano Brazzi, who spoke French as well as his native Italian.
  • Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II were also pressured to eliminate the song "You`ve Got To Be Carefully Taught", but they resisted.
  • The love scenes between characters Joe Cable and Liat were considered shocking by the still conservative standards of the late 1950s.
  • Joshua Logan considered virtually every top actress of the day for the role of Nellie Forbush, including Judy Garland, Elizabeth Taylor, Doris Day, Audrey Hepburn and even Ginger Rogers.
  • Partially restores the song "Loneliness of Evening", which had been deleted from the stage version before opening in New York. The lyrics turn up in the form of a poem sent by Emile de Becque to Nellie Forbush (the full song was used in the 2001 television version, produced by ABC). The song was also used in the second TV production of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II`s Cinderella (1965) (TV), sung by Stuart Damon as the Prince.
  • Juanita Hall, who played Bloody Mary in the original Broadway production, sang her own songs onstage, but was dubbed in the film version at the request of composer Richard Rodgers. Rodgers and musical director Alfred Newman brought in Muriel Smith (who played the Bloody Mary role in London).
  • Concerned that the film`s lush tropical settings would appear unnatural in Technicolor, Director Joshua Logan hoped to soften the effect by filming several scenes through the newly available colored filters. He later indicated he considered this to be the biggest mistake he had made in his filming career.
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