Dick Van Dyke erinnert sich, wie er zum ersten Mal weinte, als er Mary Poppins Musik hörte: „Das Schönste, was es gibt“

https://people.com/dick-van-dyke-cried-first-time-heard-mary-poppins-music-exclusive-8749544

8 Comments

  1. > In a clip shared exclusively with PEOPLE, Van Dyke remembers crying when the Sherman Brothers first played the now-iconic songs for him.

    > “I couldn’t believe, one tune after another,” he says. “I wept. It was just the most beautiful thing I’d ever heard.”

  2. No_Traffic_9362 on

    Van Dyke reminds me how there’s still good, decent people in this world who (still) speak straight from their hearts.

  3. eccojams97 on

    I can see why he got emotional, it’s an incredible set of songs. You can tell how much love went into writing the music

  4. RadioactiveGrrrl on

    [Stay awake, don’t rest your head Don’t lie down upon your bed While the moon drifts in the skies Stay awake, don’t close your eyes Though the world is fast asleep Though your pillow’s soft and deep You’re not sleepy as you seem Stay awake, don’t nod and dream Stay awake, don’t nod and dream.](https://youtu.be/zL81kdF-k5w?feature=shared)

    That minor key change 💕

  5. millenial_wh00p on

    The movie is an absolute masterpiece and the music is a big part of that. The score is insane as well. Towards the end where Mr. banks has been called to the bank to be dressed down, and the music swells perfectly with the “feed the birds” leitmotif over top of the dark images of London is one of the most powerful things I’ve ever seen. No words, no people, just that crescendoing minor tune and the dark unforgiving Edwardian city. We’re lucky to have that film and that music.

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