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The House I Live In (1945 film)

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Director
  
Mervyn LeRoy

Music director
  
Earl Robinson

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

6.6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Short, Drama, Music

Writer
  
Albert Maltz

Language
  
English

The House I Live In (1945 film) movie poster

Cast
  
Frank Sinatra
(Himself),
Teddy Infuhr
(Boy in Gang),
Harry McKim
(Boy in Gang),
Merrill Rodin
(Boy in Gang),
Axel Stordahl
(Himself - Orchestra Conductor)

Release date
  
November 9, 1945 (1945-11-09)

Awards
  
Academy Honorary Award, Golden Globe Award for Best Film Promoting International Understanding

Similar movies
  
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The House I Live In is a ten-minute short film written by Albert Maltz, produced by Frank Ross and Mervyn LeRoy, and starring Frank Sinatra. Made to oppose anti-Semitism at the end of World War II, it received an Honorary Academy Award and a special Golden Globe award in 1946.

Contents

In 2007, this film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".

Plot

Sinatra, apparently playing himself, takes a break from a recording session and steps outside to smoke a cigarette. He sees more than ten boys chasing a Jewish boy and intervenes, first with dialogue, then with a short speech. His main points are that we are "all" Americans and that one American's blood is as good as another's and that all our religions are to be respected equally.

Title song

The song originally appeared in the musical revue, Let Freedom Sing, which opened on Broadway on October 5, 1942. Brooks Atkinson wrote in the New York Times: "Although Mordecai Bauman does not sing it particularly well, he sings it with earnest sincerity, without feeling that he must imitate youth by blasting the voice amplifying system and cutting a rug."

In the film, Sinatra sings the title song. His recording became a national hit. The music was written by Earl Robinson. Robinson was later blacklisted during the McCarthy era for being a member of the Communist Party. He also wrote campaign songs for the presidential campaigns of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Henry A. Wallace, and, in 1984, Jesse Jackson. The lyrics were written in 1943 by Abel Meeropol under the pen name Lewis Allan. In 1957 Meeropol adopted two boys, Michael and Robert, who had been orphaned when their parents Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed in 1953. Meeropol was enraged that the second verse of the song was not used in the film. When the film premiered, he protested against the deletion of the verse referring to "my neighbors white and black".

The song was memorably covered in later years by Paul Robeson, Mahalia Jackson, and Josh White. Sam Cooke also covered it. Kim Weston included it on her second post-Motown album This Is America (1968). Sinatra continued to include it in his repertory for decades. He performed it during a state dinner at the White House during the Nixon administration at the 1985 inaugural ceremonies of Ronald Reagan, and at the ceremony marking the centenary of the Statue of Liberty that same year. Bill Cosby used a recording of the song to open some of his shows in 2002.

The song figures prominently in Arch Oboler's radio play "The House I Live In," which aired on April 26, 1945.

References

The House I Live In (1945 film) Wikipedia
The House I Live In (1945 film) IMDb The House I Live In (1945 film) themoviedb.org