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85 of 91 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars We All Have Flaws - Embrace the Flaws
As a music historian in general, and as a performer of many of the pieces that Jolson made famous (piano for my part), and also as the son of an actor from radio and film that worked in Hollywood during Jolson's reign there, and as a collector of ancient recordings from the pre-vinyl era plus sheet music, I have had a lot of exposure to Jolson and his personna outside of...
Published on September 29, 2004 by William G. Edwards

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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Jolson Story
The Al Jolson Story is very well done as a movie. The sad thing is that it is obvious that his wife did not want to accept the fact that she would have to live for the rest of her life with a man who was obsessed with himself and notoriety. The story brought out clearly that Mr. Jolson loved entertaining better than his wife or a family. Whether or not this was true...
Published on March 19, 2009 by Gwendolyn Wehage


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85 of 91 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars We All Have Flaws - Embrace the Flaws, September 29, 2004
This review is from: The Jolson Story (DVD)
As a music historian in general, and as a performer of many of the pieces that Jolson made famous (piano for my part), and also as the son of an actor from radio and film that worked in Hollywood during Jolson's reign there, and as a collector of ancient recordings from the pre-vinyl era plus sheet music, I have had a lot of exposure to Jolson and his personna outside of these films. The view from inside is a bit sanitized, but not horrid.

Larry Parks is more than adequate for the role. Unfortunately, due to the limitations of the film media from 1946 (lack of widescreen and loss of ambience without surround sound and fx), the true essence of how BIG Jolson was on stage is lost to a degree. Jolson was not the best singer. He was not the best of lyricists. He was not the most humble of people. He had flaws that were both visible and invisible. But... HE WAS A GREAT ENTERTAINER. My Sheet Music Collection, which currently numbers over 7000 pieces, will validate that. Jolson saw his face on more sheet music covers than the bulk of many smaller publishers total output. You don't get there through simple coercion - it was his magnitude as a STAGE (not film) entertainer that got him there and kept him on top for two decades.

To some degree, while there is whitewashing and Hollywood sanitizing (such as the odd omission of Ruby Keeler's name in conjunction with her character), some of the personal flaws of Jolson are most certainly presented on screen. A more personal look from this decade would show a very troubled man with blatant insecurities, yet still quite likable. At the very least, this biopic was certainly better than some of that time, including the nearly totally fictitious Cole Porter mishap (discussed in D'Lovely). Note also that only Jolson and Fanny Brice have had no less than two consecutive biopics made about them. The incidents are otherwise not totally contrived, but some are a bit out of sequence, as is the music. I would guess the use of Rainbow On My Shoulder as a piece from the Jazz Singer (it was actually in The Singing Fool) was to get around Warner copyright issues.

Going back to the Ruby Keeler thing, the character in this movie is called Julie Benson. This is not only historically inaccurate but downright confusing, since there is no Benson in 42nd Street or Dames, which are among her movies prominently mentioned in The Jolson Story. What is more confusing is that Keeler often referred to herself as Mrs. Jolson long after their marriage was over. Maybe it was another copyright issue with Warner, possibly since they may have owned her name at the time. If she objected, in spite of how obvious it was to the public that it was her character on screen, I don't know why.

Other omissions among this and the accompany film (Jolson Sings Again) include two missing wives, the mention that Jazz Singer was originally a vehicle for Georgie Jessel, then later stolen from Eddie Cantor, the making of the Vitaphone - A Plantation Act - a year before The Jazz Singer, the lawsuit over the plagiarism of Avalon, etc. I prefer to think of these as omissions more so than inaccuracies, but they do add a certain bias to the story when these things are known.

For all the good, there are a few flaws. Parks is NOT Jolson, but he manages to overcome that so much that he becomes Jolson part way into the film. They could have minimized his hair a bit more than was done to give a closer appearance, but his synchronization with Jolson's recorded tracks is exemplary. But... the switch between Parks' speaking voice and Jolson's singing voice is jarring at times. Further, the arrangements being played during the "ragtime era" are really the swing era arrangements used for his Decca recordings. Anybody who has heard Jolson's work on Columbia or Victor knows that he was in much better voice with a timbre closer to Parks back in the 1910s and 1920s. I suppose now that his voice could be extracted from those recordings and laid over new recorded orchestrations. Stylistically the newer arrangements for older songs don't work, but appealed to the audience of the time (my mother saw the thing four times when it came out!).

The DVD box is misleading. The film is in limited scope 2.0 stereo, not mono (is this an original or redone - knowing Sony it was contrived). There is good separation between the underscore and the center channel voices through most of it, except when Jolson's recorded tracks are used, and those are mostly mono. The color is quite beautiful and not oversaturated. Chroma correction for this restoration is fairly accurate.

Even though the film can't fully capture Jolson (you need some CDs of his early work to even approach that), it helps to explain why the "mammy factor" worked so well for him and why he is still discussed a full century after he got his start on the stage. Since the second film, Jolson Sings Again, literally starts within an hour of when the first film ends, you really need the set. It also displays Parks as a talent of his own, albeit one that was sadly taken down during the McCarthy hearings, and whose career never recovered from the association.

In any case, walk a million miles and get some smiles. Buy the films!
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49 of 51 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The greatest Hollywood film musical biography ever, December 29, 2000
By 
C. Roberts "movie buff" (Halifax, Yorkshire, United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Jolson Story [VHS] (VHS Tape)
The young Asa Yoelson (Scotty Beckett) runs away from home to join Steve Martin (William Demarest) in vaudeville against the wishes of his parents. They find him and realising how much he wants to get into show business they reluctantly agree for him to join Martin on tour. As he grows up he changes his name to Al Jolson (now played by Larry Parks) and becomes a big Broadway star. He meets Julie Benson (Evelyn Keyes) and they get married. However, all that Jolson really cares about is to get in front of an audience and sing so his marriage suffers because of it. He stars in one successful Broadway show after another and then is invited to go to Hollywood to take the lead in the first ever talking picture "The Jazz Singer". In later years his popularity declines and he finds it harder to get work. He does in fact make a sensational comeback and is in even bigger demand than ever which was portrayed in the sequel "Jolson Sings Again".

When I first saw "The Jolson Story" I had never heard of its star Larry Parks although I had bought a few Jolson records prior to seeing the film. Parks gave a magnificent portrayal but apart from appearing in "Jolson Sings Again" three years later he made very few films after that due to the McCarthy communist "witch hunt" which was a shame.

Some favourite lines from the film:

William Demarest: "Give that boy a spotlight!".

Tamara Shayne (to Ludwig Donath): "Papa, Asa isn't Asa any more!".

Larry Parks (to orchestra leader): "Oscar, what are you doing with that phone - this is no time to call up women!".

Parks (to audience in theatre): "Settle back folks - you ain't heard nothin' yet!".

Parks (to audience in theatre): "I'm going into what they call talking pictures - don't know what's going to happen to me - but er, if I come back you'll let me - won't you?".

"The Jolson Story" is one of those rare movies that you can enjoy over and over again and has a high place in my Top Ten films of all time. Wonderful acting, superb colour, fascinating story (even though not entirely accurate), and how about those memorable old songs - "California Here I Come", "April Showers", "Swanee", "Rockabye Your Baby", "Robert E. Lee", "Mammy", "You Made Me Love You", "I'm Sitting On Top of the World", "About a Quarter to Nine", etc. This film is worth seeing just to hear the real Al Jolson belting out the songs that made him famous. Jolson was often billed as "the world's greatest entertainer" and I'm sure that was a title well deserved. Clive Roberts.

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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Greatest of All Time, January 7, 2002
This review is from: The Jolson Story [VHS] (VHS Tape)
There are few words that can accurately describe the magnificent performance of Larry Parks in "THE JOLSON STORY". With Larry's performance, Morris Stoloff's Orchestra, and the great Al Jolson's voice, this movie is easily hands down, the best musical biography ever made. Along with it's sequel, "JOLSON SINGS AGAIN", it stands in a class of it's own. Sure reviewers of today have deemed it a little hoaky, but that is how wartime Hollywood movies were. In addition, although the movie is obviously fictionalized, the facts of Jolson's accomplishments are TRUE, and cannot and should not be denied with regard to their historical importance as it relates to the evolution of American Entertainment and the great American Songbook. Jolson was the KIng of Showbusiness for more than four decades, and his accomplishments are legendary. For those who have not yet seen this movie, take note of some of Al Jolson's achievements: 1st million selling record; 1st million selling album; 1st to take a Braodway show on the road; 1st to go overseas and entertain the troops in the USO; and the list goes on and on. Do yourself a favor...watch this movie...see history...discover America's Greatest Entertainer.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Blackface in context, December 23, 2005
By 
Barbara W. Goulter "barbarawg" (Werribee, Victoria Australia) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Jolson Story (DVD)
This comment is for those so offended by blackface that they would like to see it edited out of The Jolson Story. It will never happen, of course. Aside from rewriting history, it would sacrifice half the songs and make nonsense of the plot. Still, there's good reason to feel repelled. Jolson put on blackface and sang Dixie nostalgia at a time when lynching and the Ku Klux Klan were in revival and blacks were fleeing the South for their lives. Yet there is another side to it.
Imitation is still the sincerest form of flattery. Artists don't copy styles they despise, only those they admire. We can see how that works when it comes to more recent performers. We don't think of Eminem, or white gospel singers, as denigrating African-Americans. Elvis' first record, It's All Right, had such a black sound that many assumed he was black. Elvis was born and raised in the segregated Mississippi of the 1930's and 40's, yet his imitation of black sound was homage, not mockery.
But blackface was different, right? Or was it?
To understand Jolson, you have to go back to Stephen Foster. America's first great writer of popular songs, born in the 1830's, Foster was a northerner who visited the South, very briefly, only once in his life. Yet he was steeped in minstrel music and would black up as a child to perform it. In his day, black and white songs styles were perceived as different in kind. If you were trying to sound black, it made sense to try to look black. Foster wrote only two hits in white "parlor" style: Jeannie with the Light Brown Hair and Beautiful Dreamer. But he wrote dozens in black styles ranging from tragic laments to comic ditties.
Jolson's songs abound in allusions to Foster: Weep no more, my lady, Old Black Joe, Old Folks at home, Swannee River. But what could such songs have meant to an immigrant Jewish youth of the early 20th century?
Like blacks, immigrants were also uprooted. They also knew hard times and relied on humor to survive. Also, by then, Foster had become folk music. Black or white, everyone knew his songs from the cradle. Yet they were still seen as black-style songs, clearly different from white-style ones such as Banks of the Wabash and When You Were Sweet Sixteen. So white entertainers still blacked up to sing them, and anything at all like them.
Irrational? Absurd? Sure. But in a society so segregated by race, how else could whites hear black-style music? Look at the audiences in The Jolson Story. Entirely white. The entertainers too.
Fortunately, change was coming and a new black music would drive it. With the triumph of blues and jazz, black music became everyone's music. Blacks and whites were freed to sing the same songs. Backface vanished.
Jolson's career coincided with that transition. The Jolson Story captures his life-changing discovery of jazz and his attempt to marry it to the Foster tradition. Let us be grateful that his superb film biographies were made exactly when and how they were, preserving both his amazing voice and one of the weirdest moments in American cultural
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Larry and Al, December 26, 2002
By 
J JARVIS "Nostalgia Fan" (HOLT, NORFOLK United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Jolson Story [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This movie will always be in my top ten list of favourites. I was five years old when i was first saw it. It was the evening of Sept 22 1947. I went with my mother and aunt to our local cinema which happened to be opposite my grandparents house in Holt,Norfolk. U.K. The movie changed my life from then on i wanted to sing and to this day i still make my living as a vocalist. In the days before TV and only having the Radio to listen to i grew up thinking Larry Parks really was Al Jolson and the shock in later years to find that he really did`nt look like him and the story was pure Hollywood hoakam. It was almost as big as the shock i had learning Bing Crosby wore a toupee.
After all these years i don`t care its a wonderful movie that still brings a tear to the eye when i think of that small boy going to the movies with his mother and aunt. Larry Parks was brilliant ( can anyone name any other movies he was in ) The great Al was still in top form singing the songs that he made famous sadly leaving us just as part two was released. I urge anyone who hasnt seen this movie to give it a viewing. Hollywood at its best. And please please please a DVD release. Even better with Jolson Sings Again on the same disc....
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Hard To Repeat On This One", January 2, 2005
By 
This review is from: The Jolson Story (DVD)
Growing up in Canada this DVD, The Jolson Story and Jolson Sings Again were always a favorite of mine. When I was young both these films played every New Year's Eve on television, but this stopped about 30 years ago. Film classics even in their own time, these DVD's do justice to the way they used to make them.

Even if you are not entertained by all the Hollywood make believe in these films, you will be introduced to one of the greatest voices of the last century. "Boy" could Al Jolson ever belt them out, considering he performed live most of the time without the support of a microphone. In our times the only other entertainer to reach such vocal highs would have been Roy Orbison.

So if you want an eveing of pure entertainment with out sex or violence, I recommend you purchase both The Jolson Story and Jolson Sings Again and brace yourself for a splendid time.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Music from The World's Greatest Entertainer, January 1, 2000
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This review is from: The Jolson Story [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Here he is, the original Elvis. Larry Parks gives a first rate performance and mimics the Jolson classics that will always be with us. Whether you're familiar with Al Jolson or not, give yourself a treat an buy the movie.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best, August 10, 2003
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This review is from: The Jolson Story [VHS] (VHS Tape)
I have watched this movie literally hundreds of times, and it gets better all the time. Larry Parks is phenomenal as the incomparable Al Jolson, flawless in lip synching the great songs. The entire cast is terrific, as are the story and music. Not so patiently waiting for it to come out on DVD!
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Jolson Story Still A Hit!, January 11, 2007
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This review is from: The Jolson Story (DVD)
I saw the original Jolson Story 18 times as a youngster and went on to emulate the "Larry Parks" dead-on portrayal in school events and in my parlor. This DVD is exceptional in terms of color quality and sound. A wonderful restoration of a truly classic film that traces Asa Yolsen's rise from a young lad singing in the synogogue to the world's greatest entertainer. The Jolson songs and voice are still thrilling and there are lots of favorites to enjoy..Mammy, Rosie, California Here I Come! and more. As Jolson used to say, if you havent seen this video "You ain't heard nothing yet!"
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great music and a startling performance by Larry Parks, December 13, 1998
By 
Steve Schuman (Williamsburg, VA US) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Jolson Story [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This is the type of movie that you hate to see end. The story, albeit mostly made up of jumbled facts from Jolson's life, takes you on a magical ride and gives you a true taste of what the entertainer must have been like. Larry Park's performance, which earned him an academy award nomination, is incredible. His lip-syncing to the songs of Jolson is beyond compare. The closeups of his face while "Rockabye-ing" or "Mammy-ing" show the preciseness with which he took on the role. The movie also was nominated for best picture of 1946. I can't wait to see this (and it's sequel, Jolson Sings Again) on the DVD format. Don't miss this classic musical... a real treat!
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