Marc Revere, an American TV singer of Italian heritage, travels to Italy in search of his jet-setting fiancée, Carol Ralston, played by Peggie Castle. Revere moves in with his comical and good hearted cousin Pepe Bonelli, a struggling artist who also befriends a beautiful young girl, Raffaella Marini, whom Revere had met on a train, and who develops a crush on him. Lanza, after some difficulty, lands a contract to sing in a fine nightclub, but misses his opening night due to unforeseen circumstances during a date with Carol.
Cast
Mario Lanza as Marc Revere
Marisa Allasio as Raffaella Marini
Renato Rascel as Pepe Bonelli
Anna Maria Saritelli as Extra
Peggie Castle as Carol Ralston
Clelia Matania as Beatrice
Carlo Rizzo as Club Ulpia Director
Rossella Como as Anita
Guido Celano as Luigi
Carlo Giuffré as Franco Cellis
Marco Tulli as Romoletto
Paddy Crean as Mr. Fante
Music
The music was supervised and conducted by George Stoll, and included the following songs:
"Vogliamoci tanto bene" - Music Renato Rascel, Lyrics Roger Berthier
"Come Dance With Me" - Stan Browsher
Imitation Medley
"Cielito Lindo" - music by Quirino Mendoza y Cortes
"Loveliest Night of the Year" - just a stanza from Lanza's hit song
Among the selections that Lanza sings in this "vocal tour de force" is "Arrivederci Roma", performed in the Piazza Navona with a young street urchin, Luisa Di Meo. In typical Lanza fashion, the star had encountered the youngster while in Rome and insisted on her appearing in the film. Lanza also performs a sequence of imitations of famous singers of the era — Perry Como; Frankie Laine; Dean Martin; and Louis Armstrong- "When The SaintsGo Marching In" — committing to film what was one of his favorite party performances. Opera selections include "Questa o quella" from Rigoletto.
Production
The film was directed by Roy Rowland and was the first of only four films produced by Lester Welch. The screenplay was the last written by Art Cohn, who died two months after the film's release in the same airplane crash that killed famed producer Mike Todd, whose biography Cohn was writing at the time. Cohn partnered with Giorgio Prosperi on the script for the Lanza film, which was based on a story by Giuseppe Amato. The Italian title, Arrivederci Roma, was meant to be the American title of a film Lanza was scheduled to make in 1960, until he died in Rome in October 1959.
Reception
The film performed well at the box office. According to MGM records it earned $680,000 in the US and Canada and $1,275,000 in other countries, resulting in a profit of $162,000 for MGM.