Centennial Summer
Centennial Summer is a 1946 American musical film directed by Otto Preminger. Starring Jeanne Crain and Cornel Wilde, the film is based on a novel by Albert E. Idell.
It was produced in response to the hugely successful 1944 MGM musical film Meet Me in [St. Louis].
Plot
The movie is about two sisters growing up in Philadelphia in the 1870s. They both fall for a Frenchman who has to prepare the pavilion for the Centennial Exposition.Cast
Awards
The movie was nominated twice at the 19th Academy Awards. One of those nominations was for Academy [Award for Best Original Song|Best Original Song] for the song All Through the Day, written by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II. In Kern's case, the nomination was posthumous, as he had died on 11 November 1945.Songs
- "The Right Romance"
- "Up with the Lark"
- "All Through the Day"
- "In Love in Vain"
- "Cinderella Sue"
- "Two Hearts Are Better Than One" was cut from the film.