Marni Nixon

Actor

Born: Altadena, California, USA

BIOGRAPHY

Loverly soprano Marni Nixon has ensured herself a proper place in film history although most moviegoers would not recognize her if they passed her on the street. But if you heard her, that might be a horse of a different color. Marni is one of those unsung heroes (or should I say much sung heroes) whose incredible talents were given short shrift at the time. For those who think film superstars such as Deborah Kerr, Natalie Wood, and Audrey Hepburn possessed not only powerhouse dramatic talents but amazing singing voices as well...think again. Kerrs Anna in The King and I (1956), Natalies Maria in West Side Story (1961), and Audreys Eliza in My Fair Lady (1964) were all dubbed by the amazing Marni Nixon, and nowhere in the credits will you find that fact. Born Marni McEathron in Altadena, California, she was a former child actress and soloist with the Roger Wagner Chorale in the beginning. Trained in opera, yet possessing a versatile voice for pop music and easy standards as well, she not only sang for Arnold Schönberg and Igor Stravinsky but also recorded light songs. Marni made her Broadway musical debut in 1954 in a show that lasted two months but nothing came from it. In 1955, the singer contracted to dub Deborah Kerr in The King and I (1956) was killed in a car accident in Europe and a replacement was needed. Marni was hired...and the rest is history. Much impressed, the studios brought her in to ghost Ms. Kerrs voice once again in the classic tearjerker An Affair to Remember (1957). From there she went on to make Natalie Wood and Audrey Hepburn sound incredibly good with such classic songs as Tonight and Wouldnt It Be Loverly.She finally appeared on screen in a musical in The Sound of Music (1965) starring Julie Andrews, who physically resembles Marni. The role is a small one, however, and she is only given a couple of solo lines in How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria? as a singing nun. Marnis vocal career in films dissolved by the mid 1960s, but she continued on with concerts and in symphony halls, while billing herself as The Voice of Hollywood in one-woman cabaret shows. Throughout the years, she has played on the legit stage, including the lead roles in The King and I and The Sound of Music, and in her matronly years has been seen as Fraulein Schneider in Cabaret, and in the musicals Follies and 70 Girls 70. Her last filmed singing voice was as the grandmother in the animated feature Mulan (1998) in the 1990s. Married three times, twice to musicians; one of her husbands, Ernest Gold, by whom she had three children, was a film composer and is best known for his Academy Award-winning epic Exodus (1960).Marni Nixon died July 24, 2016 (age 86), in New York City, New York, USA

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