60 Years Later, The Hills Are Still Alive With the Sound of Music
When The Sound of Music was released in early 1965, American moviegoers instantly fell in love. After all, who wouldn't be charmed by seven endearing kids and an energetic, lovable governess who sing and dance their way through Salzburg?
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences agreed with the public. In 1966, the members nominated The Sound of Music for 10 Academy Awards. It won five, including Best Picture.
I saw The Sound of Music at my best friend's birthday party, and it became one of my favorite movies. I enjoyed the story and the music but especially remembered the drop-dead gorgeous alpine scenery. I was barely nine years old and only had a vague idea of where Austria was. However, I decided then and there that someday I'd go there to see the filming locations.
"Someday" finally came and I joined a group of couples of all ages, a few families and several other single travelers on "The Original Sound of Music Tour." We spent the afternoon seeing familiar scenes from the movie, beginning with Nonnburg Abbey, where Maria was a novice. We weren't allowed inside since it's a working convent, but we saw the main entrance where the Von Trapp children were when they tried to visit Maria and where the Nazis arrived to search for the family.
Leopoldskron Castle
We immediately recognized the front of Frohnburg Castle as Maria's first glimpse of the Von Trapp estate. It was originally a summer home for Prince Archbishop Max Gandolf and is now a dormitory and concert venue for the Mozarteum Art University.
Hellebrunner Allee
Frohnburg Castle is on Hellbrunner Allee where Maria danced and sang "I've Got Confidence" on her way to the Von Trapp villa. Some members of our group entertained us by dancing down the lane and recreating the scene.
Gazebo
Most fans remember the gazebo where Rolf and Liesl danced while singing "Sixteen Going on Seventeen," and where Maria and Captain Von Trapp declared their love. It was originally in the garden at Leopoldskron Castle. However, there were so many trespassers after the movie was released that city officials moved it to a park on the Hellbrunn Palace grounds.
Basilika St Michael
In the movie, it looks like Maria and Captain Von Trapp were married in Nonnburg Abbey. The film crew could only film from outside the wall since they weren't allowed inside the Abbey. So, most of the wedding scenes are at Basilika St Michael in Mondsee, a town in the Salzkammergut Lake District about 15 miles east of Salzburg.
Mirabell Palace Gardens
Our last stop was the Mirabell Palace Gardens, where Maria and the Von Trapp children sang "Do-Re-Me." Some members of our group marched around the fountain with the Pegasus Statue and jumped up and down the steps singing "Do-Re-Me steps" like Maria and the kids did in the movie. A few super-dedicated fans stayed after the tour to walk (or run?) through the Hedge Tunnel and visit the Gnome Garden.
Residenzplatz Square and Fountain
Our tour didn't include Residenzplatz Square with the water-spouting horse fountain, Residenz Palace and Salzburg Cathedral because the streets in Old Town Salzburg are too narrow for tour buses. It's easy to walk to Residenzplatz Square to see where Maria sang "I've Got Confidence."
It took six months–from April to September 1964–to film 83 scenes for The Sound of Music, and things didn't always go smoothly. One of the most interesting parts of the tour was hearing the stories about the problems the filming crew and cast experienced.
Acting is Hazardous Duty
Directors anticipate problems when filming a movie, but a few of The Sound of Music's cast members could have justifiably demanded hazardous duty pay.
In the iconic opening scene, Julie Andrews spins through a verdant alpine meadow singing, "The hills are alive with the sound of music." The production crew used a helicopter to get aerial panorama shots as she came into view. It took a week to shoot the scene because the downdraft from the helicopter kept knocking her down. It took nine takes to shoot the scene and her hair, makeup and clothes needed to be refreshed each time.
Five-year-old Kym Karath, who played Gretl almost drowned while filming the scene where Maria and the children fall out of the rowboat. Karath was reluctant to do the scene because she didn't know how to swim. The producers finally persuaded her when Andrews promised to catch her when she fell in the lake.
It took four takes before the director was satisfied, and this worked for the first three. On the fourth take, Andrews lost her footing and fell backward and Karath fell forward. After the director yelled, "Cut," everyone realized Karath was missing, and divers who were standing by rescued her from the bottom of the lake. In the movie, some "creative" editing makes it look like Heather Menzies, who played Louisa, catches Karath.
Charmian Carr, who played Liesl, sprained her ankle while she and Daniel Truhitte, who played Rolf, were shooting the 'Sixteen Going on Seventeen' dance scenes. The costume department forgot to add rubber soles to the bottom of her shoes. So, she slipped while leaping from bench to bench and crashed through one of the glass windows. Since the show must go on, a doctor wrapped her ankle and gave her an injection for the pain.
Growing Pains
One of the problems with producing a movie with children is that they grow. Seven-year-old Debbie Turner, who played Marta, lost her two front teeth. To maintain continuity, the director fitted her with false teeth to wear during filming. They were not only uncomfortable but made it difficult for her to talk and sing.
When the Von Trapp children are introduced, we see them lined up from oldest to youngest, and they're graduated by height. During filming, 14-year-old Nicholas Hammond, who played Friedrich, had a growth spurt. He was 5'3" when production began in April and 5'9" by the end of the summer. Since this made him taller than Carr (Liesl), the filming crew used a lot of creative camera angles to make him appear shorter and her appear taller. In scenes where the kids were in a group, she stood on a box in the back.
Tours begin and end at the Panorama Tours office on Mirabellplatz next to St. Andrew's Church (Andräkirche) and across from the Mirabell Palace and Gardens.Make your reservations in advance. The tours fill up quickly.Wear comfortable shoes. You'll be doing a lot of walking and climbing on and off a bus.Bring bottled water, snacks and other items you think you'll need. The stop in Mondsee is the only one with shops and restaurants.Bring Euros. Many Austrian shops and restaurants don't accept credit or debit cards.You're only in Mondsee for an hour and the restaurants are busy. So, allow plenty of time if you want to have lunch or a snack.Food trucks on the square in front of Basilika St Michael offer faster service and sell wursts, water and soft drinks.If you eat at one of the restaurants, pay for your food when it arrives so you don't have to hunt for your server when you're ready to leave.Bone up on your Sound of Music trivia and song lyrics and get ready to have fun!
Experience the Fusion of History, Art, and Culture in Vienna, AustriaAmaWaterways Danube River Cruise ReviewBudapest, Hungary: Best Things to Do in 72 Hours
The post 60 Years Later, The Hills Are Still Alive With the Sound of Music appeared first on She Buys Travel.
Copyright © 2025 SheBuysTravel · All Rights Reserved
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hamilton Spectator
34 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Rick Mercer's long finished ‘Talking to Americans,' but he's got new ways to address neighbourly tension
TORONTO - Rick Mercer picks up the bottle of sparkling water he just ordered, puts on his glasses and inspects the label. 'Where's that from? We're not having that in the shot if it's American. Jeez,' he says, glancing at the video camera with an impish smile. It's a product of Italy, but he moves it out of the shot anyway. 'Are we rolling?' We are. On this Tuesday afternoon in late spring, Mercer sits in a booth by the window at a Toronto restaurant. The sparkling water, his now-discarded reading glasses and some notes he doesn't reference are the only things in front of him as he promotes his new comedy tour, 'Stand-Up for Canada,' which gets underway in September. The show's message, he says, meets the moment: one in which U.S. President Donald Trump has imposed punishing tariffs on Canada and threatened this country's sovereignty. 'That has permeated almost every aspect of our lives, but it actually hasn't impacted my act at all. I'm doing the same act,' he says. 'I decided a long time ago that everything I do was going to be celebrating the country.' Mercer believes people are looking for that now more than ever, given the animosity that's developed between Canada and the United States: a relationship that is in some ways foundational to our national self-image. 'If you want to have that conversation about what it means to someone to be Canadian, you've really got to dig because the first thing that nine out of 10 Canadians will do is they'll start talking about how we're different than Americans, which is no way to define yourself,' he says. 'What's happening in the country now — people are standing in the middle of drugstores Googling what's a Canadian toothpaste, and they're reading labels in the ways that they've never read before, and their making choices about whether they'll eat a kiwi fruit — that's new. But I think it's always been there: Canadians, we're a proud country, there's no doubt about it.' Playing off of this cross-border kinship is part of how Mercer became a household name north of the 49th parallel. His wildly popular segment 'Talking to Americans' took off on CBC's 'This Hour Has 22 Minutes' and spawned an hour-long comedy special in April 2001. More than two million viewers tuned into the special to watch Mercer ask Americans leading questions about Canada based on ludicrous stereotypes. Would they consider a visit to our national igloo? What do they think of Canada's national dish, the beaver ball? 'It really was one joke over and over again, but it was a joke that Canadians really enjoyed,' he says. The execution of that joke relied on two things, Mercer says: Americans' ignorance about Canada and their goodwill towards Canadians. 'I was aware that by and large Americans knew nothing about Canada. But they did know we were the neighbours, and they wanted to be only generous and kind to the neighbours,' he says. 'That has clearly changed somewhat. People are very suspicious of Canada. I think Americans are more suspicious of everyone, both inside their country, their neighbours, and then outside their country as well.' That Americans are looking more closely at Canada is one of many reasons the bit wouldn't work today, Mercer says. The list also includes the general mistrust in mainstream media and the likelihood that once-unsuspecting Americans might recognize him from online clips. For his purposes, that's OK. It seems like it's time to look inward rather than measuring ourselves against others, he says: 'In order for Canada to be good, Denmark doesn't have to be bad.' The temptation to focus on the giant underneath us is ever-present, but Mercer is practised at resisting it. He left 'Talking to Americans' behind when he launched his flagship TV show, 'Rick Mercer Report,' in 2004. Over the course of 15 seasons, he travelled across the country, poking fun at politicians along the way. 'When I was doing 'Mercer Report,' one of the big learning curves that writers who worked on the show had to deal with was that in our universe that we created, America didn't exist. Like, it really didn't. We were just like, 'we don't talk about that.'' Americans got enough attention elsewhere, he says, so if the show talked about entertainment, it wouldn't be American entertainment. If it talked politics, it wouldn't be American politics. Whether his September tour will take the same tack remains to be seen. It's early yet, he says, but he doesn't foresee dunking on the United States overmuch. Tickets go on sale later this week, but he isn't due to hit the road until Sept. 11, performing 22 shows in 38 days alongside comedians Sophie Buddle, Mayce Galoni and Julie Kim. This is Mercer's third standup tour. He's leaned into live performance since leaving TV behind in 2018. Last year, he toured in conversation with musician Jann Arden. He also wrote two memoirs, 'Talking to Canadians,' about everything leading up to 'Rick Mercer Report,' and 'The Road Years' about the time he spent on the show. 'If you're in my business, if you're creating TV shows, if you're doing one-man shows — which I used to do in my early 20s — if you're writing books, if you're writing scripts, it really helps if you love your subject matter. And my subject matter has always been my country,' he says. 'And I'm not saying it's perfect, not by a long shot. It's just, that's someone else's lane. Right now it's all about celebrating.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 3, 2025.
Yahoo
42 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Lorenzo Musetti avoids French Open disqualification after kicking ball at line judge
Italian eighth seed Lorenzo Musetti was lucky not to be disqualified from the French Open after kicking a ball at a line judge. In the second set of his quarter-final against American Frances Tiafoe, Musetti booted the ball in frustration and it hit the woman, standing about three metres away, in the chest. Advertisement Tiafoe looked stunned at the other end of the court and gestured towards the umpire, who eventually gave Musetti a code violation. There were echoes of Novak Djokovic being defaulted at the 2020 US Open after accidentally hitting a female line judge with a ball. Tiafoe, the 15th seed, said: "I mean, obviously he did that and nothing happened. I think that's comical, but it is what it is. "Nothing happened, so there's nothing really to talk about. Obviously it's not consistent, so it is what it is." Former player-turned broadcaster Rennae Stubbs wrote on X: "Wow Musetti is very lucky to be still on court right now. You cannot kick a ball and it hit the lines person and not be defaulted." Advertisement Musetti, who reached the semi-finals at Wimbledon last year, won the match 6-2 4-6 7-5 6-2 to progress to the last four at Roland Garros for the first time. He said: "Yeah, I was a little bit, honestly, scared, because I really didn't want to harm nobody, of course. "So I immediately went to the line umpire, and I of course said 'sorry', I apologise to everyone. "It was right to have a warning, but I think the umpire saw that there was no intention about that, and that's why probably just, you know, let me continue my game." The French Open is the only one of the four Grand Slams to still use line judges rather than electronic line calling. Advertisement Former British No1 Tim Henman was defaulted in a Wimbledon doubles match in 1995 when a ball he hit across the net after a point had finished struck a ball kid. Henman, part of TNT Sports and Eurosport's coverage of Roland Garros, said: "By the letter of the law, if you hit or kick a ball away in frustration and it hits a ball boy, line judge, or umpire, that can be a disqualification. "When you look at that, the umpire could have interpreted that as a disqualification. However, if Musetti was disqualified for that, Musetti would feel very unlucky and aggrieved. "When you're kicking a ball away, you've either got to be a better footballer and kick it in the right direction, or you are risking something like that." Advertisement Musetti will meet defending champion Carlos Alcaraz, who steamrollered American 12th seed Tommy Paul 6-0 6-1 6-4 in another one-sided night match. "I'm sorry you wanted to watch more tennis. I had to do my work," Alcaraz told the Court Philippe-Chatrier crowd afterwards.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
How to Watch the Coco Gauff vs. Madison Keys French Open Quarterfinal
Rolling Stone and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change. If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission. Two of the best American tennis players will go head-to-head on the clay courts of Roland-Garros when the number two-ranked Coco Gauff faces the number eight-ranked Madison Keys, the reigning Australian Open champion. Advertisement More from Rolling Stone At a Glance: How to Watch Coco Gauff vs. Madison Keys French Open Match This will be Gauff's fifth consecutive women's singles quarterfinal at the French Open. Gauff or Keys will then face either Mirra Andreeva or Lois Boisson in the semifinals. The other semifinal match is set between Aryna Sabalenka and Iga Świątek, with the final scheduled to take place on Saturday, June 7. Anyone looking to stream the Gauff-Keys match live in the US will have to be an early bird (or night owl), as the match will take place at 5:00 a.m. ET/2:00 a.m. PT. The match will air on TNT, with live streaming on Max (the once and future HBO Max). Advertisement Looking to stream the match for free? There are a few ways to watch, including with free trials. Coco Gauff vs. Madison Keys: How to Watch French Open Quarterfinal DirecTV get free trial ➤ Pros: Free trial, affordable genre packs, ESPN+ included ➤ Cons: Not as many entertainment channels in genre packs as other options DirecTV includes TNT, truTV, and other sports channels like ESPN, Tennis Channel and others, depending on the package. DirecTV Stream is free for the first five days, and the Choice package is $59.99/mo for the first month and $89.99/mo after. Coco Gauff vs. Madison Keys: How to Watch French Open Quarterfinal Max sign up on prime sign up at max ➤ Pros: Affordable, on-demand content ➤ Cons: Limited live coverage, no free trial Much of TNT's sports programming is available on Max, including NBA, NHL, MLB, and the French Open. Max does not have a free trial, and starts at $9.99/mo. It's available as a bundle with Prime Video or Disney+ and Hulu. Coco Gauff vs. Madison Keys: How to Watch French Open Quarterfinal Hulu + Live TV get free trial Advertisement ➤ Pros: Free trial, large channel lineup, includes Disney+ ➤ Cons: Pricey Hulu + Live TV includes Disney+, ESPN+, and of course, Hulu, as well as dozens of channels including TNT, truTV, and other sports-focused channels like ESPN. New subscribers can get a free, three-day trial. Coco Gauff vs. Madison Keys: How to Watch French Open Quarterfinal Sling sign up for sling ➤ Pros: Tons of channels, easy to use ➤ Cons: No free trial Sling is an affordable live streaming option that includes TNT on all packages, as well as truTV on Blue and ESPN on Orange. If you want even more tennis, the Tennis Channel is available on Sling's Sports Extra package. Sling is not available with a free trial. Advertisement Best of Rolling Stone Sign up for RollingStone's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.