I know that Juanita Hall played her in the 1958 film version. I'm not sure who played her on Broadway.
Bali Hai
If you mean the Broadway stage version, it was Mary Martin.
Mary Martin as Nellie Forbush, Ezio Pinza as Emile de Becque, Juanita Hall as Bloody Mary, Myron McCormick as Luther Billis. For the full cast go to: http://www.ibdb.com/production.asp?ID=1831
Here's a link to the rules of Bloody Mary: http://paranormal.lovetoknow.com/Bloody_Mary_Face_in_the_Mirror
bloody Mary is not a ghost when she was a teenager people did not like her so she went home and put a spell on her self in the mirror
Bali Hai
Bloody Mary - South Park - was created on 2005-12-07.
There are several characters from South Pacific. The main character is a nurse named Nellie Forbush. Others include Lt. Joseph Cable, Bloody Mary, Jerome, Emile de Becque, and Ngana.
Muriel Smith has: Played Narrator in "Strange Victory" in 1948. Played Aicha in "Moulin Rouge" in 1952. Played Dolores, Montevideo in "The Battle of the River Plate" in 1956. Played Bloody Mary in "South Pacific" in 1958. Played Emma Tremaine in "The Crowning Experience" in 1960. Played Mary in "Voice of the Hurricane" in 1964.
Yes. * South Pacific (1949) (Broadway) * South Pacific (1951) (London)
Mary Martin played Ensign Nellie Forbush who was the lead.
If you mean the Broadway stage version, it was Mary Martin.
Yes, she absolutely did. She played the leading role, Nellie, back in the 80's.
it comes from bloody Mary it comes from bloody Mary it comes from bloody Mary
The nursery Rhyme is the harmless ( Mary, Mary, Quite contrary) and deserves no further comment. Yes it was poking fun at Queen Mary I, or Bloody Mary. There was a sort of folk song from the play South Pacific called Bloody Mary, no connection with the British monarch. On the other hand there was a sick joke in the early fifties- that went Mary, Mary, Quite contrary, Have a whiff of Chloroform! ( as a euthanasia agent) it is somewhat historically interesting that Queen Mary III died on March 25, l953 or thereabouts as Elizabeth I departed on March 25 l603. Too coincidental?
Bloody Mary
No, the cocktail "Bloody Mary" is named after "Queen Mary I of England".