Rose Marie is perhaps best known around the world as a movie. Four versions were made: the first two in 1928 as silent pictures (one was not released); the third and most popular in 1936, with Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald (re-released in the 1980s on MGM/UA Home Video); and a fourth in 1954.
Set in the Rocky Mountains, on the plains of Saskatchewan, and in the ballroom of the Château Frontenac hotel in Quebec City, the operetta was intended to appeal to US audiences' taste for the exotic. Rose Marie La Flamme is in love with Jim Kenyon of the Northwest Mounted Police. Kenyon has been accused of murder and Rose Marie stands ready to save her lover's life by giving herself to another. But Kenyon is vindicated, the Mounties get their man, and the lovers are reunited. (The plot underwent extensive changes in each of the movies.)
Among the show's most popular songs were 'Rose Marie,' 'Indian Love Call' (a duet for Rose Marie and Jim), and 'Totem Tom-Tom.' The many recordings of its music are listed in Jack Raymond's Show Music on Record (New York 1982), including excerpts recorded in 1925 by the Victor Light Opera Co (Vic 35756), highlights from the 1936 movie (RCA RPV-526/ Hollywood Soundstage 414), and the complete operetta in 1958 (RCA Victor LSO-1001) by a cast starring Julie Andrews and Giorgio Tozzi.
Author Dorith Cooper
Mason, Lawrence. '''Rose Marie'' a winner: brilliant musical play delights full house at Royal Alexandra,' Toronto Globe, 13 Jan 1925
Berton, Pierre. Hollywood's Canada: The Americanization of the National Image (Toronto 1975)
Links to Other Sites
Canadian Music Centre
Search the extensive CMC website for Canadian composer biographies and interviews, music scores, online newsletters, audio clips, podcasts, and more. Check out "CentreStreams" to listen to online archived recordings featuring outstanding Canadian composers.


Besides hockey and the maple leaf, there is little as symbolically Canadian as the CBC – the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. It grew out of a developing nation's need to express its identity and find its voice.
INSIDE TCE
