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** While not sharing that particular detail in their biographies, the stars of the 1959 (Creator/JerryLewis) and 1980 (Music/NeilDiamond) versions were still Jewish. Not so with the 1953 remake, with Creator/DannyThomas, a Maronite Catholic son of Lebanese immigrants, in the lead role.

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** While not sharing that particular detail in their biographies, the stars of the 1959 (Creator/JerryLewis) and 1980 (Music/NeilDiamond) versions were still Jewish. Not so with the 1953 1952 remake, with Creator/DannyThomas, a Maronite Catholic son of Lebanese immigrants, in the lead role.
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** Creator/AlJolson, like his character, was a RealLife son of a cantor who turned to pop music instead. Samson Raphaelson had initially conceived the plot while watching Jolson perform and noting that his emotional performing style was similar to cantorial singing (not knowing about his background).

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** Creator/AlJolson, like his character, was a RealLife son of a cantor who turned to pop music instead. Samson Raphaelson had initially conceived the plot while watching Jolson perform and noting that his emotional performing style was similar to cantorial singing (not knowing about his background).background at the time).
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** Creator/AlJolson was a RealLife son of a cantor who turned to pop music instead.

to:

** Creator/AlJolson Creator/AlJolson, like his character, was a RealLife son of a cantor who turned to pop music instead.instead. Samson Raphaelson had initially conceived the plot while watching Jolson perform and noting that his emotional performing style was similar to cantorial singing (not knowing about his background).
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Added DiffLines:

* ActorSharedBackground:
** Creator/AlJolson was a RealLife son of a cantor who turned to pop music instead.
** While not sharing that particular detail in their biographies, the stars of the 1959 (Creator/JerryLewis) and 1980 (Music/NeilDiamond) versions were still Jewish. Not so with the 1953 remake, with Creator/DannyThomas, a Maronite Catholic son of Lebanese immigrants, in the lead role.
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* DuelingWorks: The 1980 version was released not long after another Jewish singer-songwriter's NonActorVehicle--Music/PaulSimon's ''One Trick Pony''.

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* DuelingWorks: The 1980 version was released not long after another Jewish singer-songwriter's NonActorVehicle--Music/PaulSimon's ''One Trick Pony''.''Film/OneTrickPony''.
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** Once filming finally commenced at the start of 1980, initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him after just a few weeks and replaced him with Richard Fleischer.

to:

** Once filming finally commenced at the start of 1980, initial director Sidney J. Furie Creator/SidneyJFurie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him after just a few weeks and replaced him with Richard Fleischer.
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* TheOtherMarty: Lucie Arnaz replaced Deborah Raffin as Molly Bell in the 1980 version when Richard Fleischer took over as director.



** There was a slight silver lining, as the film itself did surprisingly well at the box office, making back double its budget, with Diamond's soundtrack album spawning three huge hits. But it was poorly reviewed and, with the cost overruns, was much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.

to:

** There was a slight silver lining, as the film itself did surprisingly well at the box office, making back double its budget, with Diamond's soundtrack album spawning three huge hits. But it was poorly reviewed and, with the cost overruns, was much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.for.
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Useful Notes pages are not tropes


* UsefulNotes/AFIS100YearsSeries:
** AFIS100Years100Movies: #90
** AFIS100Years100MovieQuotes:
*** #71, "Wait a minute, wait a minute. You ain't heard nothin' yet!"
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* AFIS100YearsSeries:

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* AFIS100YearsSeries:UsefulNotes/AFIS100YearsSeries:
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** After checking the dailies that Furie shot, Fleischer realised he had an enormous task at hand. Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible. Then original lead actress Deborah Raffin quit in protest of Furie's dismissal. She was replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her). Fleischer decided to reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence).

to:

** After checking the dailies that Furie shot, Fleischer realised he had an enormous task at hand. Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible. Then original lead actress Deborah Raffin quit in protest of Furie's dismissal. She was replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her).her. Fleischer decided to reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence).

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Breaking this up for better readability


* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version was snakebitten from start to finish. It was conceived in 1976 in response to ''[[Film/AStarIsBorn1976 A Star is Born]]'', but it took a year to disentangle exactly which studio could grant rights for a remake (Creator/WarnerBros and Creator/UnitedArtists both claimed ownership of the 1927 version). Creator/MetroGoldwynMayer greenlighted the film to start production in the fall of 1978, but canceled it at almost the last minute. A new deal was worked out and filming was supposed to start in the spring of 1979, but Music/NeilDiamond asked for a delay so he could have back surgery and finish writing the songs. The producers were ticked off and briefly considered replacing Diamond with Music/BarryManilow. Once filming finally commenced at the start of 1980, initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him after just a few weeks and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly realised what an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting in protest of Furie's dismissal (she was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually did pretty well at the box office (making back double its budget), but was poorly reviewed and, with the cost overruns, was much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.

to:

* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version was snakebitten from start to finish.
**
It was conceived in 1976 in response to ''[[Film/AStarIsBorn1976 A Star is Born]]'', but it took a year to disentangle exactly which studio could grant rights for a remake (Creator/WarnerBros and Creator/UnitedArtists both claimed ownership of the 1927 version). version).
**
Creator/MetroGoldwynMayer greenlighted the film to start production in the fall of 1978, but canceled it at almost the last minute. A new deal was worked out and filming was supposed to start in the spring of 1979, but Music/NeilDiamond asked for a delay so he could have back surgery and finish writing the songs. The producers were ticked off and briefly considered replacing Diamond with Music/BarryManilow.
**
Once filming finally commenced at the start of 1980, initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him after just a few weeks and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly Fleischer.
** After checking the dailies that Furie shot, Fleischer
realised what he had an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that at hand. Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with possible. Then original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting quit in protest of Furie's dismissal (she dismissal. She was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having her). Fleischer decided to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). sequence).
**
Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually
** There was a slight silver lining, as the film itself
did pretty surprisingly well at the box office (making office, making back double its budget), but budget, with Diamond's soundtrack album spawning three huge hits. But it was poorly reviewed and, with the cost overruns, was much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version was snakebitten from start to finish. It was conceived in 1976 in response to ''[[Film/AStarIsBorn1976 A Star is Born]]'', but it took a year to disentangle exactly which studio could grant rights for a remake (Creator/WarnerBros and Creator/UnitedArtists both claimed ownership of the 1927 version). Creator/MetroGoldwynMayer greenlighted the film to start production in the fall of 1978, but dropped it at almost the last minute. A new deal was worked out and filming was supposed to start in the spring of 1979, but Music/NeilDiamond asked for a delay so he could have back surgery and finish writing the songs. The producers were ticked off and briefly considered replacing Diamond with Music/BarryManilow. Once filming finally commenced at the start of 1980, initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him after just a few weeks and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly realised what an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting in protest of Furie's dismissal (she was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually did pretty well at the box office (making back double its budget), but was poorly reviewed and, with the cost overruns, was much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.

to:

* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version was snakebitten from start to finish. It was conceived in 1976 in response to ''[[Film/AStarIsBorn1976 A Star is Born]]'', but it took a year to disentangle exactly which studio could grant rights for a remake (Creator/WarnerBros and Creator/UnitedArtists both claimed ownership of the 1927 version). Creator/MetroGoldwynMayer greenlighted the film to start production in the fall of 1978, but dropped canceled it at almost the last minute. A new deal was worked out and filming was supposed to start in the spring of 1979, but Music/NeilDiamond asked for a delay so he could have back surgery and finish writing the songs. The producers were ticked off and briefly considered replacing Diamond with Music/BarryManilow. Once filming finally commenced at the start of 1980, initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him after just a few weeks and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly realised what an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting in protest of Furie's dismissal (she was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually did pretty well at the box office (making back double its budget), but was poorly reviewed and, with the cost overruns, was much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version was snakebitten from start to finish. It was conceived in 1976 in response to ''[[Film/AStarIsBorn1976 A Star is Born]]'', but it took a year to disentangle exactly which studio could grant rights for a remake (Creator/WarnerBros and Creator/UnitedArtists both claimed ownership of the 1927 version). Creator/MetroGoldwynMayer greenlighted the film to start production in the fall of 1978, but dropped it at almost the last minute. A new deal was worked out and filming was supposed to start int he spring of 1979, but Music/NeilDiamond asked for a delay so he could have back surgery and finish writing the songs. The producers were ticked off and briefly considered replacing Diamond with Music/BarryManilow. Once filming finally commenced at the start of 1980, initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him after just a few weeks and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly realised what an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting in protest of Furie's dismissal (she was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually did pretty well at the box office (making back double its budget), but was poorly reviewed and, with the cost overruns, was much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.

to:

* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version was snakebitten from start to finish. It was conceived in 1976 in response to ''[[Film/AStarIsBorn1976 A Star is Born]]'', but it took a year to disentangle exactly which studio could grant rights for a remake (Creator/WarnerBros and Creator/UnitedArtists both claimed ownership of the 1927 version). Creator/MetroGoldwynMayer greenlighted the film to start production in the fall of 1978, but dropped it at almost the last minute. A new deal was worked out and filming was supposed to start int he in the spring of 1979, but Music/NeilDiamond asked for a delay so he could have back surgery and finish writing the songs. The producers were ticked off and briefly considered replacing Diamond with Music/BarryManilow. Once filming finally commenced at the start of 1980, initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him after just a few weeks and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly realised what an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting in protest of Furie's dismissal (she was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually did pretty well at the box office (making back double its budget), but was poorly reviewed and, with the cost overruns, was much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.

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* FollowTheLeader: The 1980 version was inspired by the success of the 1976 ''[[Film/AStarIsBorn1976 A Star is Born]]'' remake.



* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version suffered from a disastrous first few weeks of filming, when initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly realised what an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting in protest of Furie's dismissal (she was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually did pretty well at the box office (making back double its budget), but was poorly reviewed and, with the cost overruns, was much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.

to:

* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version suffered was snakebitten from start to finish. It was conceived in 1976 in response to ''[[Film/AStarIsBorn1976 A Star is Born]]'', but it took a disastrous first few weeks year to disentangle exactly which studio could grant rights for a remake (Creator/WarnerBros and Creator/UnitedArtists both claimed ownership of filming, when the 1927 version). Creator/MetroGoldwynMayer greenlighted the film to start production in the fall of 1978, but dropped it at almost the last minute. A new deal was worked out and filming was supposed to start int he spring of 1979, but Music/NeilDiamond asked for a delay so he could have back surgery and finish writing the songs. The producers were ticked off and briefly considered replacing Diamond with Music/BarryManilow. Once filming finally commenced at the start of 1980, initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him after just a few weeks and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly realised what an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting in protest of Furie's dismissal (she was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually did pretty well at the box office (making back double its budget), but was poorly reviewed and, with the cost overruns, was much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.
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* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: The 1959 TV remake of ''The Jazz Singer'' has never been rebroadcast or distributed on any home format.

to:

* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: The 1959 TV remake of ''The Jazz Singer'' has never been rebroadcast or distributed and was not released on any home format.DVD until 2012.
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Added DiffLines:

* DuelingWorks: The 1980 version was released not long after another Jewish singer-songwriter's NonActorVehicle--Music/PaulSimon's ''One Trick Pony''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version suffered from a disastrous first few weeks of filming, when initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly realised what an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting in protest of Furie's dismissal (she was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually did pretty well at the box office, but was poorly reviewed and much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.

to:

* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version suffered from a disastrous first few weeks of filming, when initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly realised what an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting in protest of Furie's dismissal (she was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually did pretty well at the box office, office (making back double its budget), but was poorly reviewed and and, with the cost overruns, was much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.

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* BillingDisplacement: Despite playing the rather important role of Jack's mother in the 1927 version, the posters bill Eugenie Besserer below Cantor Yosselle Rosenblatt, whose role only really amounts to a roughly four-minute cameo.



* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version suffered from a disastrous first few weeks of filming, when initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having Diamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly realised what an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting in protest of Furie's dismissal (she was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually did pretty well at the box office, but was poorly reviewed and much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.

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* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version suffered from a disastrous first few weeks of filming, when initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having Diamond lead actor Music/NeilDiamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly realised what an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting in protest of Furie's dismissal (she was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually did pretty well at the box office, but was poorly reviewed and much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.
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* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: The 1959 TV remake of ''The Jazz Singer'' has never been rebroadcast or distributed on any home format.

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* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: The 1959 TV remake of ''The Jazz Singer'' has never been rebroadcast or distributed on any home format.format.
* TroubledProduction: The 1980 version suffered from a disastrous first few weeks of filming, when initial director Sidney J. Furie rewrote the screenplay beyond recognition and made several bizarre decisions such as hiring Creator/LaurenceOlivier — who had no known Jewish ancestry, and was well into his MoneyDearBoy phase — to play the all-important part of Cantor Rabinovitch, and having Diamond perform a scene in ''blackface'' in total seriousness. After seeing how much money Furie had already wasted on useless footage, the producers fired him and replaced him with Richard Fleischer, who quickly realised what an enormous task he had on his hands when he checked the daillies and found that Diamond was wooden and unconvincing, while Olivier had decided to be as much of a LargeHam as possible, and this combined with original lead actress Deborah Raffin quitting in protest of Furie's dismissal (she was subsequently replaced by Lucie Arnaz, who was cast so hastily that they didn't even have time to screen test her) resulted in them having to ditch and reshoot virtually everything shot so far (except, bizarrely, the blackface sequence). Things ran a lot smoother under Fleischer, though the reshoots meant that they badly overran the original shooting schedule, causing the budget to balloon; Olivier for instance had time to leave the country, film scenes for ''Series/BridesheadRevisited'' and direct a play, while being paid for this film all the while. Then, just to add insult to injury, after the film wrapped Olivier went out to dinner with some friends and talked about how disastrous the shoot had been, only for a reporter at a nearby table to overhear this and publish the story the following day, while conveniently leaving out the fact that Olivier had been talking about when Furie was directing the film, not Fleischer's subsequent work. The end product actually did pretty well at the box office, but was poorly reviewed and much less profitable than the studio had hoped for.
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** AFIS100Years100MovieQuotes:
*** #71, "Wait a minute, wait a minute. You ain't heard nothin' yet!"
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* AFIS100YearsSeries:
** AFIS100Years100Movies: #90
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* BreakawayPopHit: The 1980 version is less remembered than the three hit songs its star, Neil Diamond, wrote and performed for it: "Hello Again", "Love on the Rocks", and "America".

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