After making his first -- and final -- appearance on the professional opera stage in 1948 in the New Orleans Opera's production of Madame Butterfly, Lanza made his MGM debut the following year in #The Midnight Kiss, scoring a hit with the soundtrack's Celeste Aida. #The Toast of New Orleans followed, launching his first million-selling hit, Be My Love. In 1951, Lanza starred as his idol in the biopic #The Great Caruso, scoring another million seller with The Loveliest Night of the Year. In 1951, he mounted his own CBS radio series, and the following year starred in #Because You're Mine; the title song, penned by Sammy Cahn and Nicholas Brodszky, earned an Academy Award nomination and became Lanza's third and final million-selling effort.
After completing the music for the MGM production of #The Student Prince, Lanza walked out on the project; by allowing the studio to retain rights to the recordings, he was able to avoid a breach of contract lawsuit, with the single The Drinking Song rising to the top of the U.S. charts. In the wake of his walkout, Lanza became a recluse, disappearing from the limelight for over a year while battling addictions to food, alcohol, and tranquilizers; he also faced a series of battles with the IRS. Finally, in 1956 he resumed his film career in the Warner Bros. production #Serenade. However, the next year, disillusioned with American life, he moved to Italy, settling in Rome to star in 1958's #The Seven Hills of Rome. That same year, Lanza toured the U.K., making one final film, #For the First Time. He died on October 7, 1959 of a pulmonary embolism at the age of 38. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi