BROADWAY MUSICAL OPENED ON THIS DAY

Dave's Music Database: April 7, 1949: South Pacific opened on Broadway

On April 7, 1949, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical South
Pacific
opened at the Majestic Theatre on Broadway in New
York City. The romantic musical about World War II, which
touches on controversial racial themes, went on to run for
almost five years, becoming one of the most popular musicals
of the 1950s.

The show won 10 Tony Awards, and six decades later, its
Lincoln Center revival would earn another seven, making
it the most Tony Award-winning show in New York theater
history.

South Pacific 1949 Original Broadway Production Pictures - South Pacific 1949 Original Broadway ...

South Pacific (Musical) | South Pacific 1949 Original Broadway Production Picture #35462584 ...

SECOND LP VINYAL OF THE CAST ALBUM TO SOUTH PACIFIC | South Pacific 1949 Original Broadway ...

Once On This Island on Broadway - Everything you need to know!

posted by Bob Karm in ANNIVERSARY,Awards,Broadway Musical Opening,HISTORY,Musical,Opening and have No Comments

HISTORIC FIND MADE BY ARCHAEOLGISTS

Roman mass grave split

(AP) – Archaeologists recently made a colossal discovery: They
found an ancient Roman mass grave, dating back to the first-
century A.D., underneath a soccer field in Vienna.

The necropolis was found by construction crews working in the
Vienna neighborhood
of Simmering last October. The discovery
was unknown to the world until the Vienna Museum announced
it on Apr. 2.

The 129 bodies, which were likely a mix of Roman soldiers and
Germanic tribesmen, were found in total.
Dislocated bones were
also found at the site, meaning that as many as 150 victims’
remains were found.

Roman mass grave

Roman mass grave

Roman mass grave
Artifacts, including an armored shield, were discovered
among the bodies.

posted by Bob Karm in Archaeologists,CURRENT EVENTS,Discovery,Grave,HISTORY,Roman empire and have No Comments

POPULAR BAND’S DRUMMER HAS DIED

Clem Burke — Controlled Craziness - Modern Drummer Magazine

Clem Burke
Clem Burke (Bozewski)  (November 24, 1954 – April 6, 2025)

Clem Burke, famed drummer for Blondie, died on Sunday, April 6.
following a private battle with cancer. He was 70 years old.

The band’s official social media shared on
Monday…“Clem was not just a drummer; he
was the heartbeat of Blondie.”

(Hollywood reporter)

The First Pressing CD Collection: Blondie - The Best of Blondie

posted by Bob Karm in Album,Band,Cancer,CURRENT EVENTS,HISTORY,MUSIC,Musician and have No Comments

ACTOR WON HIS FIRST AND ONLY OSCAR

The 42nd Academy Awards Memorable Moments | Oscars.org | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

On April 7, 1970, the legendary actor John Wayne won his
first—and only—acting Academy Award, for his star turn
in the director Henry Hathaway’s Western True Grit.

Wayne appeared in some 150 movies over the course of
his long and storied career. He established his tough,
rugged, uniquely American screen persona most vividly
in the many acclaimed films he made for the directors
John Ford and Howard Hawks from the late 1940s into the
early 1960s.

He earned his first Oscar nomination, in the Best Actor
category, for Sands of Iwo Jima (1949). The Alamo (1960),
which Wayne produced, directed and starred in, earned a
Best Picture nomination.

Wayne’s Oscar for True Grit at the 42nd annual Academy
Awards in 1970 was generally considered to be a largely
sentimental win, and a long-overdue reward for one of
Hollywood’s most enduring performers.

The Academy had failed to even nominate Wayne for any
of his most celebrated performances, in films such as
Stagecoach (1939), Red River (1948), The Quiet Man (1952),
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962) and especially
Ford’s The Searchers (1956), considered by many to be
the greatest Western ever made.

True Grit Movie Poster 1969 1 Sheet (27x41)

Mes affiches ciné: True Grit

Home [www.the-iowa.com]

Exploring John Waynes True Grit Colorado Filming Locations Then and Now - ByteZest

posted by Bob Karm in Academy awards,Actors,ANNIVERSARY,HISTORY,MOVIES and have No Comments

PRESIDENT INAUGURATED ON THIS DAY IN 1841

John Tyler - Presidency, Children & Facts

On April 6, 1841, John Tyler was sworn in as president. Tyler
was elected as
William Harrison’s vice president earlier in
1841 and was suddenly thrust into the role of president when
Harrison died one month into office.

He was the first vice president to immediately assume the role
of president after a sitting president’s untimely exit and set the
precedent for succession thereafter.

John Tyler and Presidential Succession - (Old) Photo 1 - Article Blocks

This 1888 engraving depicts a messenger delivering the news of President William Henry Harrison’s death to Vice President John
Tyler at his Williamsburg home on April 5,
1841.

posted by Bob Karm in ANNIVERSARY,HISTORY,Inauguration,President and have No Comments