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Listeners’ Choice from August 2005Featuring Marni Nixon, Emmylou Harris, Greg Brown and Renée Fleming
Under the BIG TOP on August 27thGarrison returns to Bayfield, Wisconsin, for a show near the shores of Lake Superior. Garrison and his Prairie Home friends (Fred Newman, Heather Masse, Rich Dworsky, Richard Kriehn, Joe Savage, and Dean Magraw) will take the stage at Big Top Chautauqua for an evening of laughter, song, and the News from Lake Wobegon. The Lake Superior Big Top Chautauqua is a 900-seat music venue and performing arts center. It is an all-canvas tent-theater that has operated since 1986, primarily during the summer. It is one of Garrison’s favorite venues — he says it’s so lovely to tell stories on a summer’s night with the light breeze wafting from Lake Superior. Join us for an unforgettable evening. Get tickets to the August 27 show in Bayfield Listen to the Listeners’ Choice ShowBack in 2005, we asked listeners to submit their favorite bits and pieces from LIVE A Prairie Home Companions shows and received thousands of comments about many of their favorite broadcast moments. This Listener’s Choice special gathers together many of those moments along with a listener memories or comments to accompany the pieces. We had a wonderful time reading and hearing your stories and putting together a Listener’s Choice show all about them. Many fans’ favorites were included such as The Whippets Rag, Raw Bits, Ralph’s Pretty Good Grocery, Six Minute Macbeth, Guy Noir, some fine music and 3 classic News from Lake Wobegon stories. Join us on Saturday night via our Facebook page for a listen at 5pm CT orclick the link to listen now. Marni NixonMarni Nixon was dubbed by Time magazine as the “Ghostess with the Mostest,” a compliment to the famous invisible voice. Actresses who don’t sing are as common in musicals as actors who don’t fight in action films, and the female singing voice you hear in West Side Story, My Fair Lady, An Affair to Remember, Mulan, and The King and I is Marni Nixon’s. She dubbed for Deborah Kerr, Natalie Wood, Audrey Hepburn, Rita Moreno; she did a voice in The Secret Garden for child actress Margaret O’Brien, and she did the angel voices heard by Ingrid Bergman in Joan of Arc. On her own, she released albums that include Marni Nixon Sings Gershwin and Marni Nixon Sings Classic Kern, and she appeared as a cabaret and musical comedy performer, opera diva, stage actress, recitalist, symphony guest artist in both classical and pops repertoire, and recording artist. Marni Nixon passed away in 2016. Emmylou HarrisEmmylou Harris’s albums are mainstays in any music fan’s collection: Wrecking Ball, Luxury Liner, Roses in the Snow, The Ballad of Sally Rose, Trio, Red Dirt Girl. The list goes on and on. Born in Birmingham, Alabama, and raised in North Carolina and Virginia, Harris began playing the guitar at 16 and eventually left college to pursue a career in music. In the early 1970s, she moved to Los Angeles and joined forces with Gram Parsons, with whom she made two albums. After Parsons’ death in 1973, Harris made her major label debut, Pieces of the Sky. Now, after more than 50 years of performing and countless awards, including 14 Grammy Awards plus induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame, Emmylou maintains a widespread and loyal following, whether she’s singing folk, country, pop or traditional tunes. On this broadcast, she joined Mark Knopfler to share several songs from their duet album. Greg BrownGreg Brown was raised in southeastern Iowa, with a banjo-playing grandfather, a poet grandmother, an English teacher mother who played guitar, and a Pentecostal preacher father. The environment, combined with abundant talent, produced one of the most acclaimed singer-songwriters of the past half-century. Said a Boston Globe music critic, “Brown is to this country what Richard Thompson is to Britain: its most essential modern troubadour.” Greg’s dozens of recordings may just prove the point. Renée FlemingWhile studying at the State University of New York, Renée Fleming sang with a jazz trio and was discovered by jazz legend Illinois Jacquet, who invited her to tour with his band. Renée went to graduate school instead, where she focused on classical music at the Eastman School of Music and The Juilliard School. Fleming’s professional break came in 1988 when she was invited to sing the role of the Contessa in Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro with the Houston Grand Opera, and in 1989 she made her New York City debut in La Bohème. She sang in London’s Covent Garden and returned to New York in 1991 to make her Metropolitan Opera debut. Since then, the Grammy Award winner, who is recognized as a risk-taker in her field, has created many roles for the operatic stage and has premiered many songs written for her. She has performed in the world’s most distinguished venues with today’s foremost orchestras and conductors and recorded numerous award-winning discs. This episode features a number of sketches and bits from the archives and also from many of the previous CD releases. Early on, the Lake Wobegon Whippets had a featured spot on the show with weekly updates on our favorite hapless team, including the song “The Whippets Rag.” Here it is as featured on The Family Radio and on this classic listeners’ choice special. WOBEGON WHIPPETS RAG Lake Wobegon Family ReunionFrom America’s favorite storyteller, here are 19 memorable monologues, handpicked from over 15 previously released collections and 40 years of A Prairie Home Companion live broadcasts. This is the closest that we have gotten to compiling a “very best of Garrison Keillor” collection. It was assembled using fan input regarding their best-loved stories. The product pages for the CDs in our store have been updated with detailed track listings and easily downloaded links from Amazon and iTunes. Here is “Bruno, The Fishing Dog” as featured on this week’s listeners’ choice special and on this special collection of stories. Get the CDs or download. The Best of Guy NoirIt’s a dark night in a city that knows how to keep its secrets, but high above the mean streets, a light burns on the 12th floor of the Acme Building, where Guy Noir — hard-boiled, world-weary, yet surprisingly articulate — is trying to find the answers to life’s persistent questions. In his big swivel chair under the bare bulb beside the beat-up gray file cabinet, he awaits the call of his clientele: the disappointed, the paranoid, the embittered, the rejected — and the hilarious. This is a FREE NEWSLETTER. If you want to help support the cost of this newsletter, click this button. Currently there are no added benefits other than our THANKS! Any questions or comments, add below or email admin@garrisonkeillor.com
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