Charmian Carr

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Sixteen Going on Seventeen 00:00 Tools
The Sound Of Music 02:13 Tools
So Long, Farewell 02:56 Tools
Do-Re-Mi - (from the 20th Century-Fox film "The Sound of Music") 05:33 Tools
Edelweiss 02:15 Tools
The Lonely Goatherd 02:11 Tools
Charmian Carr Interview 05:07 Tools
My Favorite Things (Reprise) 01:17 Tools
Sixteen Going On Seventeen (Reprise) 03:04 Tools
I Remember Sky 03:55 Tools
So Long, Farewell (Reprise) 01:57 Tools
I Remember 02:57 Tools
Charmian Carr Intervíew 00:00 Tools
so long farewell 00:00 Tools
Sixteen, Going On Seventeen 00:00 Tools
Charmian Carr Interview (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
Do-Re-Mi 00:00 Tools
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Charmian Carr (December 27, 1942 – September 17, 2016) was an American actress and singer best known for her role as Liesl, the eldest Von Trapp daughter in the film version of The Sound of Music. Carr was born Charmian Farnon in Chicago, Illinois, the second child of vaudeville actress Rita Oehman and musician Brian Farnon. The two divorced in 1957. She has two sisters, both actresses (Shannon Farnon and Darleen Carr). Her family moved to Los Angeles when she was 10. While a student at San Fernando High School, Carr was a cheerleader and played basketball and volleyball. "She had never had a singing lesson and had never tried to act" before she was signed to be in The Sound of Music. Carr was attending San Fernando Valley State College, studying speech therapy and philosophy, and working for a doctor, when her mother arranged for her to audition for a role in The Sound of Music. Rita Farnon hadn't asked Charmian if she wanted to audition for the part, but Charmian was sure her mother would consider getting a part in a film more important than earning a college diploma. In a newspaper article published November 9, 1964, Carr related the story behind the tryout as follows: I was going to college and getting extra spending money by modeling in fashion shows in one of the stores. One of the girls who modeled with me knew that Robert Wise, producer-director of The Sound of Music had been conducting a four-month search for someone to play the part of 16-year-old Liesl. My friend, without my knowing it, sent in my picture and explained in a note that I sang and danced. I received a call from Mr. Wise to come for a tryout. It took me completely by surprise. Director Robert Wise thought Farnon was too long a surname paired with Charmian. After he had given her a list of single syllable surnames, she chose Carr. She won the role of Liesl over Geraldine Chaplin, Patty Duke, Mia Farrow, Lesley Ann Warren and Sharon Tate. The film was on the whole a very happy experience for her. However, during the filming of her dance scene with Rolf in the gazebo, the costumers had forgotten to put no-slip pads on her shoes, she slid through a window of the gazebo, and she "had to complete the scene in agony". Carr appeared in Evening Primrose, a one-hour musical written by Stephen Sondheim, which aired on ABC Stage 67 in 1966. The male lead was Anthony Perkins. She owned and operated an interior design firm, Charmian Carr Designs, in Encino, California. Her clients included Ernest Lehman, screenwriter for The Sound of Music; Michael Jackson, who hired her because he was a fan of the film; and other cast members from the film. On December 12, 2007, Carr made a rare television appearance as a guest on British TV talk show Loose Women, wherein she shared some of her memories of making The Sound of Music with the hosts. Carr worked with Van Johnson on a pilot for a television program, Take Her, She's Mine. She has written two books, Forever Liesl and Letters to Liesl. She reunited with many of her co-stars from The Sound of Music on The Oprah Winfrey Show in October 2010 to celebrate the film's 45th anniversary. In 2014, Carr recorded "Edelweiss" with the great-grandchildren of the von Trapps on the album "Dream a Little Dream" by the Von Trapps and Pink Martini. Carr married a dentist, Jay Brent, and left show business. She and Jay had two daughters, Jennifer and Emily. Now, she has two grandchildren: Emma and Derek. Carr died on September 17, 2016, from complications related to dementia. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.