Mario Lanza - This is A Night to Remember, And Here You Are, Someday - I'll Never Forget You movie
Mario sings three songs,
A Night to Remember, And Here
You Are and
Someday to accompany film clips of the 1951
Tyrone Power and
Ann Blyth film
I'll Never Forget You. The film is basically a love story. (It is helpful to read the film synopsis, here below, before viewing the video).
The following is a synopsis of the film's plot. The film is available for purchase from
Turner Classic Movies.
"An intriguing, time-traveling romantic fantasy, I'll Never Forget You (1951) stars Tyrone Power as an
American atomic scientist in 1951
London who lives in a beautiful old house he has inherited. He keeps it furnished and designed just as it looked two centuries earlier.
Power believes that time is nonlinear and that one can theoretically visit any period.
Thanks to a bolt of lightning (not to mention some brief atomic exposure and the strong possibility that he is mentally unbalanced), Power indeed soon finds himself transported to eighteenth-century London, where he meets his ancestors and finds himself falling in love with Ann Blyth.
Generally, however, things don't go too well for Power in the past. He's not good at hiding his knowledge of people he hasn't yet met or of events that haven't yet occurred, and as a result he frightens everyone around him. When he "invents" all sorts of devices including electricity, a trip to the loony bin at
Bedlam becomes a genuine threat. At its heart, though, I'll Never Forget You is a romance, and a touching one at that, as Power and
Blyth experience a love similar to that in the later film
Somewhere in Time (
1980) and to
Jack Finney's novel
Time and Again.
As it turns out, I'll Never Forget You is a remake of an earlier film,
Berkeley Square (1933), which starred
Leslie Howard and was based on a play by
John L. Balderston, the famous writer of atmospheric classics like
The Mummy (1932),
Mad Love (1935) and
Gaslight (
1944).
Shot by renowned cinematographer
Georges Perinal, the film's present-day sections are in black-and-white while the past is in
Technicolor."
(The above quote is from Turner Classic Movies at:
http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/78984/I-ll-Never-Forget-You/home-video-reviews
.html)
The film, I'll Never Forget You (1951) with TYRONE
POWER Ann Blyth
MICHAEL RENNIE, was uploaded onto YouTube Jan. 4,
2013 by SESpotlights and now has 54,035 views. The film is found at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98AJMowTHXQ. It is an excellent film and I recommend its viewing to my own viewers. It may be purchased from Turner Classic Movies.