#michel goulet
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Michel Goulet: A Journey from the WHA to NHL Stardom
Michel Goulet transitioned to the NHL in the 1979-80 season when the WHA and NHL merged. Although the Quebec Nordiques were part of this merger, they were a new team for Goulet, who had spent his lone WHA season with the Birmingham Bulls.
Early Career and Transition to the NHL
As part of the merger's unique framework, Goulet was selected by the NHL Nordiques in the first round of the 1979 NHL Entry Draft, 20th overall. Before his time with Birmingham, Goulet showcased his talent with the Quebec Remparts in the QMJHL. His standout performance in the 1977-78 season saw him net 73 goals and tally 135 points in just 72 games.
In his rookie NHL season, Goulet experienced a slow start, managing 22 goals. However, he found his stride and significantly improved, culminating in a 57-goal season in 1982-83. This achievement ranked him fourth in the league, trailing only Wayne Gretzky’s remarkable 71 goals. Goulet continued his offensive dominance, reaching the 50-goal mark in each of the next three seasons. His career-high of 57 goals remained unmatched, placing him among an elite group of players with consecutive 50-goal seasons, including legends like Gretzky, Mike Bossy, and Guy Lafleur.
A Prolific Career and Hall of Fame Recognition
Over a stellar NHL career spanning from 1979-80 to 1993-94, Goulet scored 548 goals in 1,089 regular-season games with the Nordiques and Chicago Blackhawks. This tally ranks him 32nd on the all-time goal-scoring list, just ahead of Maurice Richard and narrowly behind Ron Francis. Michel Goulet’s exceptional contributions to hockey were honored with his induction into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1998.
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Benches/Chairs (No. 38)
Quebec City, QC
#Rêver le nouveau monde by Michel Goulet#original photography#tourist attraction#cityscape#landmark#architecture#summer 2018#nature#flora#tree#exterior#landscape#travel#vacation#bench#chair#Quebec City#Québec#Canada#basse ville#old town#lower town#evening light#Dreaming the New World by Michel Goulet#hotel room#Le Saint Pierre Auberge Distinctive
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Le 67 rue Cérès à 3 époques
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#1946-2000 ///#Goulet-Turpin - Familistère - Comptoir Français ///#Laurent Leroy - Michel Thibault ///#Reconstruction ///#Rue Cérès ///
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Coming to the musical rescue is Nick Fitzer, whose Lancelot du Lac brings pizzazz and a powerful baritone across the Channel from France. Just as occurred in 1960 when Robert Goulet originated the role on Broadway, Fitzer’s rendition of “If Ever I Would Leave You” brings down the house. This despite choreographer Michele Lynch’s dubious decision to put a league’s distance between Lance and Guenevere during this tender love song. Scenic designer Walt Spangler’s bed of crimson rose petals redeems the bad blocking in this scene, and it’s a brilliant choice to have those petals remain on stage long after Lance and Jenny have consummated their forbidden passion. As they swirl together on stage, the rose petals resemble a pool of blood, a leaking wound that threatens to engulf Arthur’s castle and country and cannot be ignored.
HELP... COULD THIS BE THE BEST PRODUCTION OF CAMELOT...?
#and they let a scottish guy play mordred?!?!?? LEGENDS#camelot#camelot musical#shakespeare theatre company#camelot 2018
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"La Maison des Ailleurs" où Arthur Rimbaud a vécu au 1er étage avec sa famille (1869-75) reliée au "Musée Arthur Rimbaud" par l'installation de chaises-poèmes "Alchimie des Ailleurs" de Michel Goulet (2011) sur les quais de la Meuse à Charleville-Mézières, septembre 2023.
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∀ Michel Goulet Quebec Signed Light Blue Hockey Jersey 548 & Sports Integrity http://blog.collectingall.com/TGHqhc 👉 shrsl.com/4fujm 👈
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Décembre MMXXIII
Films
Chef (2014) de Jon Favreau avec Scarlett Johansson, Jon Favreau, Sofía Vergara, Emjay Anthony, John Leguizamo, Robert Downey Jr. et Dustin Hoffman
Y a-t-il un flic pour sauver Hollywood ? (The Naked gun 33⅓: The Final Insult) (1994) de Peter Segal avec Leslie Nielsen, Priscilla Presley, George Kennedy, Fred Ward, O. J. Simpson, Anna Nicole Smith, Kathleen Freeman, Ellen Greene et Ed Williams
Quai des Orfèvres (1947) de Henri-Georges Clouzot avec Louis Jouvet, Simone Renant, Bernard Blier, Suzy Delair, Pierre Larquey, Claudine Dupuis, Henri Arius, Charles Blavette, René Blancard et Robert Dalban
Maintenant, on l'appelle Plata (…più forte ragazzi!) (1972) de Giuseppe Colizzi avec Terence Hill, Bud Spencer, Cyril Cusack, Reinhard Kolldehoff, Riccardo Pizzuti, Ferdinando Murolo et Marcello Verziera
Moi, Michel G., milliardaire, maître du monde (2011) de Stéphane Kazandjian avec François-Xavier Demaison, Laurent Lafitte, Laurence Arné, Xavier de Guillebon, Guy Bedos, Patrick Bouchitey e Alain Doutey
Noël blanc (White Christmas) (1954) de Michael Curtiz avec Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney, Vera Ellen, Dean Jagger, Mary Wickes et John Bascia
Rendez-vous avec la mort (Appointment with Death) (1988) de Michael Winner avec Peter Ustinov, Lauren Bacall, Carrie Fisher, John Gielgud, Piper Laurie, Hayley Mills, Jenny Seagrove et David Soul
Bridget Jones : L’Âge de raison (Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason) (2004) de Beeban Kidron avec Renée Zellweger, Colin Firth, Hugh Grant, Gemma Jones, Jim Broadbent, Jacinda Barrett, Shirley Henderson et Sally Phillips
Les Trois Mousquetaires : Milady (2023) de Martin Bourboulon avec François Civil, Vincent Cassel, Romain Duris, Pio Marmaï, Eva Green, Lyna Khoudri et Louis Garrel
Y a-t-il un flic pour sauver le président ? (1991) (The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear) de David Zucker avec Leslie Nielsen, Priscilla Presley, George Kennedy, O. J. Simpson, Robert Goulet, Richard Griffiths, Anthony James et Jacqueline Brookes
Wallace et Gromit : Le Mystère du lapin-garou (Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit) (2005) de Nick Park et Steve Box avec Jean-Loup Horwitz, Jeanne Savary, Philippe Catoire, Frédérique Cantrel, Patrick Messe et Mireille Delcroix
Rivière sans retour (River of No Return) (1954) de Otto Preminger avec Robert Mitchum, Marilyn Monroe, Rory Calhoun, Tommy Rettig, Murvyn Vye et Douglas Spencer
L'Ange de Noël (Christmas Magic) (2011) de John Bradshaw avec Lindy Booth, Paul McGillion, Derek McGrath, Kiara Glasco, Teresa Pavlinek et Tricia Braun
Joyeux Noël (2005) de Christian Carion avec Benno Fürmann, Guillaume Canet, Diane Kruger, Gary Lewis, Daniel Brühl, Dany Boon, Lucas Belvaux, Bernard Le Coq et Alex Ferns
L'Assassinat du père Noël (1941) de Christian-Jaque avec Harry Baur, Raymond Rouleau, Renée Faure, Marie-Hélène Dasté, Robert Le Vigan, Fernand Ledoux et Jean Brochard
Danse avec les loups (Dances with Wolves) (1990) de et avec Kevin Costner ainsi que Mary McDonnell, Graham Greene, Rodney A. Grant, Floyd Westerman, Jimmy Herman, Nathan Lee, Tantoo Cardinal et Wes Studi
Noël en trois actes (Christmas Encore) (2017) de Bradley Walsh avec Maggie Lawson, Brennan Elliott, Art Hindle, Tracey Hoyt, Mercedes de la Zerda, Mika Amonsen, Sherry Miller, Sabryn Rock, David Tompa et Erin Agostino
La Souffleuse de verre (Die Glasbläserin) (2016) de Christiane Balthasar avec Luise Heyer, Maria Ehrich, Franz Dinda, Dirk Borchardt, Robert Gwisdek, Max Hopp et Ute Willing
Le père Noël est une ordure (1982) de Jean-Marie Poiré avec Anémone, Thierry Lhermitte, Gérard Jugnot, Marie-Anne Chazel, Christian Clavier, Josiane Balasko et Bruno Moynot
Le Lion en hiver (The Lion in Winter) (1968) de Anthony Harvey avec Peter O'Toole, Katharine Hepburn, Anthony Hopkins, John Castle, Nigel Terry, Timothy Dalton, Jane Merrow et Nigel Stock
Les Mystères de Paris (1962) d'André Hunebelle avec Jean Marais, Raymond Pellegrin, Jill Haworth, Dany Robin, Pierre Mondy, Georges Chamarat, Noël Roquevert et Jean Le Poulain
Derrick contre Superman (1992) de Michel Hazanavicius et Dominique Mézerette avec Patrick Burgel et Évelyne Grandjean
La Classe américaine : Le Grand Détournement (1993) de Michel Hazanavicius et Dominique Mézerette avec Christine Delaroche, Evelyne Grandjean, Marc Cassot, Patrick Guillemin, Raymond Loyer, Joël Martineau, Jean-Claude Montalban, Roger Rudel et Gérard Rouzier
La Grande Course autour du monde (The Great Race) (1965) de Blake Edwards avec Tony Curtis, Natalie Wood, Jack Lemmon, Peter Falk, Keenan Wynn, Arthur O'Connell, Vivian Vance et Dorothy Provine
Séries
Life on Mars Saison 1, 2
Bienvenue en 73 - La Loi selon mon boss - Le Pari - Corruption - Rouge un jour, rouge toujours - Compte à rebours - Cas de conscience - Mon père - Meurtrier en puissance - La Chasse aux ripoux - Peur sur la ville - Pièges pour jeunes femmes - Kidnapping - Héroïne - Recherche du coupable - La Promesse
Doctor Who
La Créature Stellaire - Wild Blue Yonder - Aux confins de l'univers - Le Fabricant de Jouets - The Snowmen - A Christmas Carol - The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe - The Return of Doctor Mysterio - The Church on Ruby Road - Eve of the Daleks
Les Enquêtes de Vera Saison 12
À contre-courant - Un homme d'honneur - Au nom de la loi - Une soirée funeste - Marée montante
Coffre à Catch
#144 : La Draft 2009 : Les bonnes affaires du mercato ! - #145 : La ECW débarque à Londres et l'Undertaker à Strasbourg! (avec Carole) - #146 : Christian enfin champion de la ECW ! - #147 : Un coffret à Noël, ça c'est une idée !
Kaamelott Livre III
Le Jour d’Alexandre - La Cassette II - La Ronde II - Mission - La Baliste - La Baraka - La Veillée - Le Tourment III - La Potion de fécondité II - L’Attaque nocturne - La Restriction II - Les Défis de Merlin II - Saponides et Détergents - Le Justicier - La Crypte maléfique - Arthur in Love II - La Grande Bataille - La Fête de l’hiver II - Sous les verrous II - Le Vulgarisateur - Witness - Le Tribut - Le Culte secret - Le Mangonneau - La Chevalerie - Le Mauvais Augure - Raison d’argent II - Les Auditeurs libres - Le Baiser romain - L’Espion - Alone in the Dark - Le Législateur - L’Insomniaque - L’Étudiant - Le Médiateur - Le Trophée - Hollow Man - La Dispute première partie - La Dispute deuxième partie
Affaires sensibles
Gérald Thomassin : l'étrange disparition d'un coupable idéal
Top Gear
Spécial Nativité
La Voie Jackson
Episode 1 - Episode 2 - Episode 3
Meurtres au paradis
L'étrange Noël de Debbie
Spectacles
Le Muguet de Noël (2021) de Sébastien Blanc et Nicolas Poiret avec Lionnel Astier, Frédéric Bouraly, Jean-Luc Porraz et Alexie Ribes
Sinatra (1969) avec Frank Sinatra, Don Costa & son Orchestre
Le Professeur Rollin a encore quelque chose à dire (2003) de François Rollin
Alain Souchon : J'veux du live au Casino de Paris (2002)
La Bonne Planque (1964) de Michel André avec Bourvil, Pierrette Bruno, Robert Rollis, Roland Bailly, Alix Mahieux, Albert Michel et Max Desrau
André Rieu : White Christmas (2023)
Michael Bublé: Home for Christmas (2011) avec Michael Bublé, Gary Barlow, Gino D'Acampo, Dawn French et Kelly Rowland
Michael Buble's Christmas in the City (2021) avec Michael Bublé, Leon Bridges, Camila Cabello, Jimmy Fallon, Kermit the Frog, Hannah Waddingham, Dallas Grant, Jarrett Johnson, Julianna Layne et Loren Smith
Michael Bublé's 3rd Annual Christmas Special (2013) avec Michael Bublé, Mary J. Blige, Mariah Carey, Red Robinson, Jumaane Smith, Patrick Gilmore et Cookie Monster
Un fil à la patte (2005) de Georges Feydeau avec Thierry Beccaro, Marie-Ange Nardi, Valérie Maurice, Églantine Éméyé, Ève Ruggiéri, Tex, David Martin et Patrice Laffont
Vintage Getz (1983) The Stan Getz Quartet live at the Robert Mondavi Winery, Napa Valley, California avec Stan Getz, Victor Lewis, Marc Johnson et Jim McNeely
James Brown : Live at Montreux (1981)
Livres
Le seigneur des anneaux, Tome 3 : Le retour du roi de J.R.R. Tolkien
Détective Conan, Tome 18 de Gôshô Aoyama
Lucky Luke, Tome 27 : L'Alibi de Morris et Claude Guylouïs
Détective Conan, Tome 19 de Gôshô Aoyama
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also the chairs that they jump around on in this band is back is an art piece called echoes by Michel Goulet that has a sign asking you not to climb on them.
i am in vancouver and so of course i had to visit jatp filming locations and the alley where julie cries after the orpheum performance is. NOT connected to the orpheum. miss girl ran for like, a whole block.
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#16 - Michel Goulet - LW - Chicago Blackhawks (1989-1994)
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8-Bit Michel Goulet (Quebec Nordiques)!
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Public Art, Quebec City (No. 5)
Dreaming the New World
Artist: Michel Goulet Location: Place de la Gare
Forty chairs are set out in pairs on the sidewalk, each inscribed with passages from poems by 40 Québec authors from various time periods. They “express, in the span of a free moment, where we have been, who we are, and the joy of getting together.” The walkway thus constitutes a portrait of society from the city’s origins to the present day.
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Situated along the pedestrian corridor next to the Gare du Palais in the lower part of the city, Rêver le Nouveu Monde is composed of forty stainless steel chairs installed in pairs and placed back to back, side by side or front to front. On each of the chairs, the sculptor engraved excerpts from the work of forty renowned Québec poets, from the time of the founding of Québec to the present day. Dated and marked with the name of the author, these chairs-poems are also chairs-memories, offering the viewer the pleasure of imagining the source, of contemplating it, and even of its re-contextualization. Two chairs placed at an angle at the entrance facing a boulevard, are linked by a bronze element, representing a scaled-down image of the Saint Lawrence River flowing between Québec City and Montreal. According to Michel Goulet, this emblematic segment of water symbolizes the lifeline between the new land of America and the rest of the world. At the opposite end of the installation, two other chairs close the bracket. They are installed side by side, facing the entire ensemble of forty chairs. Under one of these chairs the viewer will find the Earth's globe and underneath the other, a replica of an old Québec house with a slanting roof and skylights. In the words of the sculptor, these two objects signify the opposing poles of a public and a private space. The spectators strolling along the corridor housing the installation become themselves players, whose role it is to "dream the New World", for this complex and demanding artwork cannot transmit its full message without the participation of the viewer. While the chair is a recurring element in many of Goulet's sculptures, an involvement with literature and writing is a constant in his work. He has engraved texLs that in their entirety reflect the New World imagined by the soul and language of its poets, past and present. The choice was not easy. Following a lengthy research which included scouring anthologies of Québec poetry and academic manuals, 160 names were selected, and from those, forty were ultimately retained. The process involved, on the one hand, covering 400 years of literary output, and on the other, keeping in mind the different poetic genres. A reflection on the language leads to a reflection on thought and a dialogue with history. As the sculptor himself notes, the forty chosen excerpts and the names of their authors are as much historical and cultural artifacts as the archeological fragments buried beneath the installation site, representing the fragmented memory of our history. They present in a coherent way the themes tied with the evolution of the poetic language as well as the interpretation of history. The work is accompanied by a publication, and all that is left is to allow our senses be seduced by this creation and its invitation to journey and to dream the new world.
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Embarkation
2008, Brass, Height of the boat: 170cm Old Port of Quebec Market. (Translated from the above French text) Landscapers: André Plante and Joanie Lévesque Legacy of the Quebec Chamber of Commerce to mark its bicentenary and the 400th anniversary of Quebec City. In the middle of a granite base, a small leaf boat tosses. At a distance, in the enclosure of plants and pebbles, two bollards stand up. A sentence is engraved on each one: It has happened to us adventures of the end of the world - When one comes from far away it is not to stay there. There is in the passage of the barque leaf, the movement initiated by the meaning of the text of Saint-Denis-Garneau: If we do not stay there, we become something else! In another way, the passage of the boat in sheet is in the image of the transformation of the basin Louise in a recreational green space. The arrangement of the whole invites the observer to move, to board the boat-leaf. The plants were chosen for their power to suggest odors (in connection with the Market) and the movement of water (in connection with the iconography). The boat-leaf and bollards are brass with a patina on the surface that adds to the monument effect in this historic place.
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#Rêver le nouveau monde by Michel Goulet#Dreaming the New World#globe#house#detail#chair#Gare du Palais#Embarkation by Michel Saulnier#public art#sculpture#Place de la Gare#basseville#lower town#Québec#Quebec City#travel#vacation#summer 2018#original photography#cityscape#Old Port of Quebec#road trip#landmark#tourist attraction
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Susan Sarandon and Burt Lancaster in Atlantic City (Louis Malle, 1980) Cast: Burt Lancaster, Susan Sarandon, Kate Reid, Michel Piccoli, Hollis McLaren, Robert Joy, Al Waxman, Robert Goulet, Moses Znaimer, Angus MacInnes, Sean Sullivan, Wallace Shawn. Screenplay: John Guare. Cinematography: Richard Ciupka. Production design: Anne Pritchard. Film editing: Suzanne Baron. Music: Michel Legrand*. Old gangsters, like old gunfighters, make good movie protagonists, witness the success of Martin Scorsese's The Irishman (2019). There's something about a survivor's story that draws us in, giving veteran actors good roles to play at the waning of their careers. But director Louis Malle and screenwriter John Guare give us a special twist on the survivor's story, eventually revealing their old gangster to be a bit of a fraud, a hanger-on after all the big guns have been killed off, a has-been who is really a never-was. Hence the glee of the elderly Lou Pascal when he actually guns down two thugs -- something he never had the nerve to do when he was a bit player in the mob. Atlantic City works neatly with two kind of dreamers, both with impossible dreams. Lou's dreams are impossible because they're about an illusory past in which he was a big shot, whereas the dreams of the young, like Sally Matthews's, are impossible because they don't have what it takes to fulfill them. Burt Lancaster and Susan Sarandon got Oscar nominations for playing Lou and Sally, and the film itself racked up nominations in the three other categories in the "top five": picture, director, and screenplay. It won none of them, but like so many Oscar also-rans it has become more valued over the years than most of the winners: Who today remembers Chariots of Fire, which won for best picture and for Colin Welland's screenplay, or has the endurance to sit through Reds, for which Warren Beatty won best director? I cherish Atlantic City for the many unexpected angles through which it views its sort-of-lovable losers, for its use of the crumbling old Atlantic City as a metaphor for the ravages of time, and for lines like Lou's "You should have seen the Atlantic Ocean in those days."
*A courtesy credit: Although Malle commissioned a score from Legrand, he decided not to use it. The only music in the film is diegetic, like Sally's tape recording of Bellini's "Casta Diva" and Robert Goulet' s rendition of Paul Anka's "Atlantic City, My Old Friend."
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∀ Michel Goulet Quebec Signed Light Blue Hockey Jersey HOF 98 & Sports Integrity http://blog.collectingall.com/TGHqhV 👉 shrsl.com/4fujm 👈
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ey alvadee, did yo boi ever do any singing?
(sorry for the belated answer but i was so delighted to get to ramble in the reply of this ask the first time when i had typed the half of it chrome froze and shut down and then i had no time until now)
yes, yes he did. 😌
When I was still going through the newspaper archives for the first time I came across a long interview from 1974 in which Vic said:
"I had a book that came out called It Could Be Verse, most of which was material I wrote for talk shows, so that I would have something other to take on than my pretty face. Or making up a story about my poodle. I don't sing or dance. Well I can, but I don't want to show them up, so I don't sing or dance."
And knowing Vic, he wouldn't have casually said he can sing and dance unless he was at least decent at it. And then I quickly got it confirmed that he must he been good because I found out about the musical theater detours he made in his career.
In 1965 he played Mr. Darling/Captain Hook in the musical "Peter Pan" (with Ruta Lee as Peter) in Salt Lake City.
A review:
“…However, in points of acting, Victor Buono, as the splendid and anxiety-ridden Captain Hook (as well as Mr. Darling, the father) was peerless.
He, of course, has some of the finest lines and the funniest songs - among them, a tango and a tarantella - but he himself gives off the authentic tragi-comedy of the character as, I am sure, Sir James would have had it.”
In 1968 he played Sir Guy in the star studden NBC television musical "The Legend Of Robin Hood" which was nominated for an Emmy. The cast also included Douglas Fairbanks Jr, Lee Beery, Walter Slezak, Noel Harrison, Roddy McDowall and Bruce Yarnell.
I would consider this one "lost" because no normal person can get their hands at it BUT it seems like the Payley Center for Media has a copy which...doesn't do fucking ANYTHING for me because I won't be in America in the next years, especially not just to visit one archive and as far as I understand there's no other way to access their stuff. Well, their facebook site had told me I could maybe have a look at some stuff but then they ghosted me...
And one television audio archive seems to have a tape of it and this is right now probably my best chance to ever get any glimpse on this production AND maybe hear Vic sing.
In 1968/69 he starred in the musical "Many Happy Returns" alongside Pat Carrol, John Raitt, Linda Michele and Paul Gilbert. The musical first toured as a try out and then in '69 played at the Desert Inn in Las Vegas and was originally intended to go to Broadway afterwards. Unfortunately it didn't because I have read in Billboard magazine that they already had a contract with a recording studio which was supposed to publish the official recording. And since Vic has an entire song in this it would mean I would have an entire, professionally recorded song that he sung. :(
There's a website that claims there exists a soundboard recording of the musical but I don't think I'll ever get to hear it. I mean yeah, there probably is a recording in some cellar or archive but nothing I would be able to find out about or be able to access unless I have incredible luck.
Here's a Las Vegas Sun review:
“Another comedy highlight in the musical is the role played by the brilliant Victor Buono (…) He is the heavy of this musical in characterization as well as size. His 350-pounds plus makes this part most effective. He plays a conniving Washington boss with political ambitions. His song and dance rountine, “Give the Public What It Wants” is a show stopper.”
And the last musical I know of in which he was in is a 1975 production of "Camelot" in LA which also starred Robert Goulet and Carol Lawrence. I'm not too familiar with the musical, I just know it was JFKs favorite and that Pellinore has no song in it.
But Vic got to go on stage with a cute doggy!! and some reviews said he was "too cute" in the role to which I say "how dare you!" and "I can imagine <3".
So overall not much regarding how he sounded which has always disappointed me a lot. I have been through his high school and uni yearbooks too and as far as I know he was never in a chorus or glee club. His singing seems to have always been tied to acting in a way. His grandmother probably taught him though, at least when he was young. She used to be in the Orpheum Circuit. Vic credits her with giving him his first acting lessons and how to have an upright posture and such. She sung and also made up songs for and about him.
He had been in the Rat Pack movie musical "Robin and the 7 Hoods" but only gets to sing like twice as part of the gangster chorus, you can't hear him. And in movies/TV he has been humming/singing to himself once or twice but like in character and I don't count that as hearing him actually sing.
So overall I came to the conclusion that Vic most likely was a good singer, like not great but nice enough that any chorus would be glad to have him you know?
And then luckily! I found this guy on facebook
And now I still dream of hearing him sing one day.... Like, there are many things regarding him I've accepted I will never get my hands on. Either because they're "lost" media or I'm too fucking poor too dish out hundreds or thousands of bucks to commercial archives but I think it's still realistic that I might hear a clip of him singing one day! 🥺
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