Nelson Eddy

Active - 1933 - 2020  |   Born - Jun 29, 1901 in Providence, Rhode Island, United States  |   Died - Mar 6, 1967   |   Genres - Musical, Music, Romance

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Biography by AllMovie

Nelson Eddy was an actor and singer noted for his rich baritone voice and wooden acting. He sang soprano in church choirs as a boy. He moved to Philadelphia as a teenager, and after a number of odd jobs won a competition in 1922 to join the Philadelphia Civic Opera; he went on to perform frequently with the group, and played Tonio in Pagliacci at the New York Metropolitan Opera in 1924. In the early '30s Eddy began appearing on radio and had a successful concert tour; this led to a movie contract with MGM, and he debuted onscreen in 1933. In 1935 he and Jeanette MacDonald were teamed together, going on to appear in a series of sentimental operettas beginning with Naughty Marietta (1935); billed as "America's Sweethearts" or the "Singing Sweethearts," the team became extraordinarily popular, and for a time they were the screen's most popular duo, appearing in one box office smash after another. After their last film, I Married an Angel (1942), Eddy's career quickly went into decline, and he made no films after 1947. He continued to appear in concerts and nightclubs and made some recordings; in March 1967, he died of a stroke.

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Factsheet

  • Took his first full-time job as a teenager, working as a telephone operator at the Mott Iron Works plant in Philadelphia.
  • Starred with famed soprano Jeanette MacDonald in eight MGM-produced films.
  • Considered an early "crossover" star, as he appealed to opera fans as well as teen "bobby-soxers."
  • Worked as an intelligence agent (under the cover of being a singer) during the second World War.
  • Earned three stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame: one for film, one for radio and one for recording.
  • Was a painter and sculptor.