Irène Bordoni (16 January 1885 – 19 March 1953) was a French
singer and a
Broadway and
film actress.
Early years
Born in
Ajaccio,
Corsica,
France from Italian family she had been a
child actor, performing in
Paris on stage and in
silent films for a few years, having signed with theatrical agent
André Charlot. Bordoni made her first appearance on the stage at the age of thirteen, at the
Variétés, Paris. She came to the
United States on December 28, 1907, in steerage, on the
S. S. La Provence. Bordoni's year of birth is given in standard theatrical biographies as 1895, that is, a decade after her actual birth year of 1885. She was 22 when she arrived in the United States in 1907. She went first to
Reno,
Nevada, where her father Antonio had settled previously.
thumb|right|Irène Bordoni onstageOn Broadway
Bordoni made her Broadway debut in a
Shubert brothers production of
Broadway to Paris at the
Winter Garden Theatre and was a successor to
Anna Held as Broadway's idea of French piquancy and Continental flavor. She was in
Miss Information (1915) and successive productions of
Hitchy-Koo (1917 and 1918). 1919 audiences saw Bordoni in
Sleeping Partners co-starring with
H. B. Warner at the Bijou. In 1920 her "captivating voice and presence" graced
As You Were at the Central Theater.
Bordoni introduced
George Gershwin's hit song
Do It Again with vivacity and verve in the 1922 Broadway show
The French Doll at the Lyceum. The title of the show became her soubriquet. She also starred in
Little Miss Bluebeard (1923) and
Naughty Cinderella (1925) by
Avery Hopwood, about which the theatre critic for the
New York Times said, "Of Miss Bordoni one can report only what has been reported many times. Her voice, her accent and particularly her reeling eyes are, as ever, unmistakably attractive."
Noted for her seductive brown eyes and coquettish personality, Irène Bordoni is probably best remembered from
musical theatre as the star of the 1928
Cole Porter musical
Paris that featured the song "
Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love)" which became Porter's first big success. Bordoni would record and sing many times live and on radio another Cole Porter song, "
Let's Misbehave" with
Irving Aaronson and His Commanders dance band. The song has been included on the
soundtrack of five motion pictures including
Everything You Always Wanted To Know About Sex (But Were Afraid to Ask) (1972),
Pennies from Heaven (1981) and
Bullets Over Broadway (1994).
Throughout her Broadway career, Bordoni was renowned for wearing only the most stylish of clothes, including costumes by
Erte. During this time, Bordoni appeared in
Lucky Strike cigarette advertisements with the quip,
I smoke a Lucky to keep petite, which was said to have contributed to the tremendous increase in women's smoking in the 1920s. Bordoni wore her hair with trademark bangs, which she helped to popularize; indeed her 'look' was successfully emulated not only by her admirers but also by late 1920s budding Broadway starlet
Claudette Colbert. She was stockbroker W. D. Hutton's first customer when he opened his branch office on West 57th Street.
During the 1930s, Bordoni was a guest singer on many variety programs as well as being featured on The RKO Hour. Bordoni pleased audiences on both sides of the Atlantic, as with
Irving Berlin's
It's a Lovely Day Tomorrow in London's West End in 1939.
In Hollywood
Bordoni made her Hollwood debut in
Warner Brothers Show of Shows (1928). In 1929 her Broadway play
Paris was adapted to a talkie, also called
Paris, for which she reprised her starring role. The film used the
Vitaphone sound-on-disc sound system and was shot in early
Technicolor. That year Bordoni also performed "Just an Hour of
Love" (by Al Bryan and Ed Ward) for the
Warner Brothers film
The Show of Shows produced by
Darryl F. Zanuck. In 1932
Max Fleischer featured her in his follow-the-bouncing-ball Screen Song cartoon 'Just A Gigolo'
Her status as a major star of the American stage was such that in his song "
You're The Top", Cole Porter included the reference "You’re the eyes of Irene Bordoni". During the 1930s, she continued to perform on stage and starred in another Warner Brothers musical comedy film. In 1940, Bordoni was part of another major Broadway success with the
Irving Berlin musical
Louisiana Purchase and again reprised her role in the
Paramount Pictures film
Louisiana Purchase (1941) with
Bob Hope. She had another success in the role of "Bloody Mary" in the 1951 national tour of the musical
South Pacific.
Personal life
Bordoni was for a time married to actor Edgar Becman from whom she was divorced in 1917. On October 24, 1918, Irène Bordoni was married to and some years later (1929) divorced from Broadway producer and lyricist
E. Ray Goetz, who produced many of her Broadway shows and whose sister
Dorothy Goetz was
Irving Berlin's first wife. At the height of her international appeal she maintained homes in increasingly stylish New York neighborhoods: from 230 Westend Avenue to 108 East 78th Street to 104 East 40th Street--as well as in Paris and
Monte Carlo. She invested in real estate in
Palm Beach in the 1920s during the
Florida land boom. Bordoni was later associated with theatrical agent and producer Avery Galen Bogue (05/1896 - 09/05/1951). Bordoni died on March 19, 1953 at Jewish Memorial Hospital in
New York City. She was buried in the
Ferncliff Cemetery,
Hartsdale, New York.
Songs associated with Bordoni
Irène Bordoni introduced or was the first interpreter of the following songs:
- I Won't Say I Will but I Won't Say I Won't
- Where is the Song of Songs for Me?
- Don't Look at Me that Way
- Let's Do It: Let's Fall in Love
- You Can't Believe My Eyes