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yeuxdebleu September 1 2011, 00:15:31 UTC
These are all The Lady in Black movies listed at IMDb.com. Which one were you referring to?

1. Damen i svart (1958)
aka "The Lady in Black" - International (English title) (informal literal title)

2. The Lady in Black (1928)
aka "Die Dame in Schwarz" - Germany (original title)

3. The Lady in Black (1951)
aka "Die Dame in Schwarz" - West Germany (original title)

4. The Lady in Black (1913)
5. The Lady in Black (1921)
6. The Lady in Black (1935)

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mechtild September 1 2011, 01:20:12 UTC
None of these. See the other comment I just answered. The TV production I'm talking about was based on the 1983 novel by Susan Hill. Here's the entry at IMDB for Woman in Black:

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0098672/

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yeuxdebleu September 1 2011, 02:04:39 UTC
Holy cow! Look what that movie is going for now at amazon. *gulp* I guess I'll just have to wait for Dan's remake.

Available from these sellers:

3 new from $199.99 6 used from $90.96 1 collectible from $180.00

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mechtild September 1 2011, 03:11:11 UTC
Holy cow! Look what that movie is going for now at amazon. *gulp* I guess I'll just have to wait for Dan's remake.

Tell ya what. When I've watched it I could loan it to you, ey? DVD's are cheap to send media mail.

I didn't care for Renata Scotto. She had a vibrato like a tommy gun and I found it unpleasant. My husband does a hilarious imitation of her.Ha ha! Well, obviously not a singer to your taste. But by the time I saw her she no longer had a tommy gun vibrato (which suggests to me a very fast pulse). In fact, people used to say, "You could drive a truck through her wobble it's so wide." I saw her in Adriana Lecouvreur at the Met and she did not sound good when she pushed, which was anything high or dramatic - there was that wide wobble, unpleasant in itself but also making her go flat. But I have a recording of her singing the two famous arias from that opera when she was in her prime and they are fantastic. I think she must have had a short-lived instrument. Maybe that was true for Leontine Price, too. She wasn' ( ... )

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yeuxdebleu September 1 2011, 03:53:09 UTC
Tell ya what. When I've watched it I could loan it to you, ey? DVD's are cheap to send media mail.

Oh! That would be wonderfully kind of you. If you don't want to take a chance with media mail, I'll be more than glad to reimburse you for first class and return it to you that way. Just let me know when you're ready to send it and I'll PM my address. I checked Netflix and they don't have it. Thank you!

I liked Leontyne Price. She used to stop in at our office at RCA (I worked in classical marketing) when she was in the studio recording. Said we had the best coffee in the building. LOL She was absolutely lovely.

I only saw her as Aida and in Samuel Barber's Antony and Cleopatra, which opened the new Met at Lincoln Center. I didn't see it opening night though. The tickets cost a small fortune.

I saw Montserrat Caballe in Aida, too, and although she was about the same size as the pyramid on set, her voice was to die for.

I have quite a few of Leontyne Price's recordings and probably my favorite is the abridged Porgy and Bess ( ... )

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mechtild September 1 2011, 12:08:11 UTC
I saw Montserrat Caballe in Aida, too, and although she was about the same size as the pyramid on set, her voice was to die for.

Ha ha! My friend who was the big Callas friend used to call her "Monsterfat Caballe". He also said she had a great voice. I never saw her, alas. I am awed more than jealous, really, of all the great singers you were able to see and hear in person, Yeuxdebleu. It's as though you were present for what is prime opera performance history as it was made. WOW. I guess that goes for all the plays and shows you saw, too.

I will send you the DVD, then. I hope to watch it some time this month. Let me see if I have an email for you, to contact you for an address.... No, I don't. But if you look on my user info page, my email is there. I don't want to post it here because of all the nasty bots that keep showing up and dumping junk mail in my posts. :)

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yeuxdebleu September 1 2011, 21:57:54 UTC
I am awed more than jealous, really, of all the great singers you were able to see and hear in person...

It's odd now to think of how I took it all for granted back in the day. I had gotten BAs in both music and drama in college and headed straight to NYC a week after graduation. I worked in the recorded music business for 29 years and lived for the opera, ballet and theater. I had the Saturday matinee Met subscription for 25 years and attended a concert, ballet, play or show a week in addition to that. I was rarely home and never had much money for anything else. It all went for tickets, but that was OK. It was what I wanted to do more than anything else in the world.

Because of working in Marketing (which included Promotion and Sales) I got to meet nearly everyone who recorded for RCA and was allowed into recording sessions if I wanted.

For a music lover, I could not have asked for a better career...or life!

I will email you my address info. Thanks again.

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