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Showing posts with label Gene Kelly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gene Kelly. Show all posts

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 1960: Results

Thursday, October 18, 2012

5. Gene Kelly in Inherit the Wind- Kelly plays with his type once again playing a loud showman, but this time with a deep rooted cynicism.
4. Charles Laughton in Spartacus- Laughton gives a nice enjoyable performance that creates a believable portrait of a politician who uses quiet methods of persuasion.
3. Fred MacMurray in The Apartment- MacMurray is quite good in role giving a commanding presence that revels to just the right degree in his character immorality.
2. Laurence Olivier in Spartacus- Olivier as usual gives a great performance here as the main villain of the film. He is effectively a tremendous force of evil, but as well still creates a three dimensional character out of the tyrant that is his character. 
1. Eli Wallach in The Magnificent Seven- This was a very close one for me, and yes I was ready to give Olivier by lead and supporting for this year. Wallach though is equally excellent in his role in the Magnificent Seven, and manages to do basically anything he possibly could with his role. Even with his role being very limited Wallach never makes it feel that way giving an extremely entertaining as well as being appropriately menacing as well.
Overall Rank:
  1. Eli Wallach in The Magnificent Seven
  2. Laurence Olivier in Spartacus
  3. Peter Falk in Murder, Inc.
  4. Peter Ustinov in Spartacus
  5. Fred MacMurray in The Apartment
  6. Steve McQueen in The Magnificent Seven
  7. James Coburn in The Magnificent Seven
  8. Peter Ustinov in The Sundowners
  9. Roger Livesey in The Entertainer
  10. Charles Laughton in Spartacus
  11. Sal Mineo in Exodus
  12. Gene Kelly in Inherit the Wind
  13. Arthur Kennedy in Elmer Gantry
  14. Martin Balsam in Psycho
  15. Trevor Howard in Sons and Lovers
  16. Herbert Lom in Spartacus
  17. Jack Kruschen in The Apartment
  18. Woody Strode in Spartacus
  19. Ray Walston in The Apartment
  20. Alan Bates in The Entertainer
  21. Harry Morgan in Inherit the Wind
  22. Brad Dexter in The Magnificent Seven
  23. David Lewis in The Apartment
  24. Albert Finney in The Entertainer
  25. Richard Conte in Ocean's Eleven
  26. Laurence Harvey in The Alamo
  27. Charles Bronson in The Magnificent Seven
  28. Tony Curtis in Spartacus
  29. Richard Widmark in The Alamo 
  30. Robert Vaughn in The Magnificent Seven 
  31. Dick York in Inherit the Wind
  32. John Wayne in The Alamo
  33. Alan Young in The Time Machine
  34. Joseph Wiseman in The Unforgiven 
  35. Cesar Romero in Ocean's Eleven
  36. Albert Salmi in The Unforgiven
  37. Horst Buchholz in The Magnificent Seven
  38. Charles Bickford in The Unforgiven
  39. John Dall in Spartacus
  40. Dean Jagger in Elmer Gantry
  41. John Gavin in Psycho
  42. John Gavin in Spartacus 
  43. Sammy Davis Jr. in Ocean's Eleven
  44. Dean Martin in Ocean's Eleven
  45. Michael Anderson in The Sundowners
  46. Akim Tamrioff in Ocean's Eleven
  47. Chill Wills in The Alamo
  48. John Ireland in Spartacus
  49. Claude Akins in Inherit the Wind
  50. Vladimir Sokoloff in The Magnificent Seven
  51. The Rest of the Villagers in The Magnificent Seven
Next Year: 1999 Supporting 

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 1960: Gene Kelly in Inherit the Wind

Gene Kelly did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying E.K. Hornbeck in Inherit the Wind.

Gene Kelly on screen performance for the most part are very similar. They are basically only slight variations on the performance that he gave in his Oscar nominated performance in Anchors Aweigh. Kelly though plays a far more dramatic role here as the news paper writer who comes to town to cover the story of a teacher put on trial for teaching evolution in the classroom. Kelly portrays Hornbeck who is based on H.L. Mencken, who was interestingly also the basis for Arthur Kennedy's character in Elmer Gantry, although his character in that film is given a little less focus than Kelly here.

Kelly plays his part as a cynical showman, and actually he uses well his usual screen persona well refuting it in a way at the same time. He of course as the same voice, and one could argue almost the same delivery as in his musicals as Hornbeck, but with Hornbeck there is always an underlying deep rooted cynicism that always prevails. Kelly infuses every line he has with a great deal of enthusiasm and well showmanship, but below everything that he says there is always an unmistakable amount of venom within it.

This is a fairly limited role for Kelly actually after his speeches early in the film he mostly just has a quick reaction that only ever is brief, which is especially true in the court room scenes where he takes a back seat. That is not to say Kelly is forgotten, and he is good in coming in whenever he can bringing about the sharp wit of his character very well. He does not do a great deal though more until the end when Spencer Tracy's character questions his cynicism. Kelly is quite good in this scene as he shows Hornbeck feign any feelings of self-doubt, and quickly go back to his old ways. This is a pretty simple, Kelly does play it well though, and it shows that he had more in him than the Gene Kelly musical character.

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 1960

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

And the Nominees Were Not:

Fred MacMurray in The Apartment 

Eli Wallach in The Magnificent Seven

Charles Laughton in Spartacus


Laurence Olivier in Spartacus

Gene Kelly in Inherit The Wind

Singin' in the Rain on the "Big Screen".

Thursday, August 23, 2012


Last night, during a huge thunderstorm, My husband Stephen and I drove to the Century-Oro Valley Market Place Theater in Arizona, to see one of my favorite musicals, Singin' in the Rain. I would say 30 other people, also.. came out in the rain to see the classic musical.

I was thrilled to have been one of those who were selected to receive two TCM promotional passes, for the 8/22/12 showing. I have not been to a movie theater, since my son was a little boy.

I have to share with you, that seeing a classic film, on the "big screen" is an amazing experience. I hope all of you get the opportunity to experience it at least once.

Watching the film, in a theater armed with a bag of movie popcorn and drink, sitting with an audience, is like seeing the classic for the first time. With the large size screen you really do see more detail:


The costumes really sparkled and were more amazing on the "Big Screen".



When Don was doing his "Make um Laugh" routine you could actually see his feet ripping up the carpet.


As I mentioned before.. we had a huge thunderstorm in Tucson, last night and while we were watching Gene Kelly, "Singin' in the Rain" routine, you could actually hear large claps of thunder, from outside the theater.. it was amazingly(is that a word) good timing.

Gene Kelly, dancing routines are breathtaking. Seeing the film at the theater, made me realize how well Gene Kelly, really danced..




Cyd Charise, was full of energy and commanded the screen in all her dance numbers, even though she did not have any speaking parts.



Jean Hagen's voice, was even more irritating on the 'Big Screen". Matter of fact "that voice" is still ringing in my ears.


Debbie Reynolds, voice seemed very girlish.. but it worked...


My gosh.. the color just popped off the screen, it was like watching a firework display, in some of the scenes. The black and white scenes, were amazing and odd. It was the first time in my life, that I had ever seen one up on the "big screen". Thank you The Lady Eve, Jill and Michael for making this possible! I had a wonderful time. A night I will remember for the rest of my life..

Please click here to read my Singin in the Rain movie review.


Gene Kelly Centennial Blogathon


This is my contribution to the week-long Gene Kelly Centennial Blogathon, sponsored by the Classic Movie Blog Association. Please stop by other blogs(located on the sidebar) and read the many wonderful tributes celebrating Gene Kelly's 100th birthday.





Cover Girl (1944). Musical. Cast: Rita Hayworth and Gene Kelly. Directed by Charles Vidor, and was one of the most beloved musicals of the war years.

The film has 8 dance/songs written by Jerome Kern and Ira Gershwin, including: "Long Ago (and Far Away)". The film won the 1944 Academy Award for best musical scoring.It was also nominated for four other awards; Best Art Direction (Lionel Banks, Cary Odell, Fay Babcock), Best Cinematography, Best Original Song for "Long Ago (and Far Away)" and Best Sound, Recording (John Livadary).

The film begins when, Maxine Martin enters a contest to be a Vanity magazine cover girl. Rusty Parker, another dancer at Danny Maguire's Brooklyn nightclub, also enters the contest. The two women are interviewed by Cornelia Jackson, who works for the magazine.

When Jackson shows interest in Rusty, Maxine ruins her chances by telling her that Jackson is looking for a model with over the top personality. When Rusty takes her advice and puts on a huge act, Jackson thinks she is nuts. Jackson believes that Maxine, is the better candidate for the cover.

Coudair insists on going to Danny's club to see her in her "natural environment." When they get to the club they watch the girls dance number where Rusty, reminds Coudair of his long lost love, Maribelle Hicks.

After her performance, Rusty joins Danny and Genius, at Joe's oyster bar, where they enjoy their Friday night ritual looking for a pearl to bring them luck. When they return to their apartment, Rusty finds a telegram from Coudair, inviting her to his office the next day. Thinking that Coudair's offer will end their close friendship, Genius tears up the telegram. When Rusty is alone she runs back downstairs to put the pieces back together.

Rusty makes her appointment with Coudair and when he learns that Maribelle Hicks was her grandmother, he gives her the magazine's cover. Coudair brings Broadway theater owner Noel Wheaton to meet Rusty to offer her a job. At first Rusty turns him down. Coudair joins forces with Wheaton to lure Rusty to Broadway and sends Rusty an invitation to Vanity 's 50th anniversary dinner.

Mean while Danny arrives at the Coudair mansion only find to find the house empty except for Coudair who insist that Danny free Rusty from her contract.

The next day, Rusty is late for rehearsal, and Danny gives her song to Maxine to perform. Rusty hurt rushes out of the club, headed for Broadway. Will Rusty give up fame and fortune for love?

What makes this a milestone film for Gene Kelly, are the two musical numbers: Put Me to the Test. Along with the Alter Ego. Kelly, said the alter ego number was one of the hardest dance numbers he ever performed in his career. With the amazing technicolor cinematography, Cover Girl, will forever be one of my favorite musicals.


FUN FACTS:

Columbia Pictures gave Gene Kelly almost complete control over the making of this film, and many of his ideas contributed to its lasting success. He removed several of the sound stage walls so that he, Rita Hayworth, and Phil Silvers could dance along an entire street in one take. He also used trick photography so that he could dance with himself in one sequence.

Rita Hayworth's singing voice was dubbed by Martha Mears.

Lauren Bacall had been wanted by Columbia to appear in this film as Harper's Bazaar cover girl (as she had appeared on Harper's Bazaar cover in March 1943), but instead filmed To Have and Have Not at Warner Bros. and became a star.

During the middle of shooting Rita Hayworth eloped with Orson Welles. Coincidentally the film's wedding scene was shot that day. Share this Several Conover Cover Girl models appear in this film.

"MAKE WAY FOR TOMORROW"
Music by Jerome Kern
Lyrics by Ira Gershwin and E.Y. Harburg
Sung and Danced by Gene Kelly, Rita Hayworth (dubbed by Martha Mears); Phil Silvers.




"ALTER-EGO DANCE"
Music by Jerome Kern
Danced by Gene Kelly.



Kelly was born in the Highland Park neighborhood of Pittsburgh. He was the third son of Harriet Catherine and James Patrick Joseph Kelly, a phonograph salesman.

At the age of eight, Kelly was enrolled by his mother in dance classes, along with his older brother James, feeling like sissy's, they both dropped out

Kelly returned to dance after becoming an sportsman and able to take care of himself. He attended St. Raphael Elementary School in the Morningside neighborhood of Pittsburgh, PA. He graduated from Peabody High School in 1929 at the age of sixteen. He enrolled in Pennsylvania State College to study journalism but the economic crash changed his plans and he had to find employment to help support his family.

This is when he put together dance routines with his younger brother Fred, to earn prize money in local talent contests, they also performed in local nightclubs. In 1931, Kelly enrolled at the University of Pittsburgh to study economics where he joined the Phi Kappa Theta fraternity.While at Pitt, Kelly became involved in the university's Cap and Gown Club, which staged original, comedic musical productions.

Earning a Bachelor of Arts in Economics, with his graduation from Pitt in 1933, he remained active with the Cap and Gown Club, serving as its director from 1934 to 1938, while at the same time enrolling in the University of Pittsburgh Law School. Also during this period, Kelly's family started a dance studio in Pittsburgh. In 1932, the dance studio was renamed, The Gene Kelly Studio of the Dance. A second location was opened in Johnstown, Pennsylvania in 1933. Kelly, served as a teacher at the studio during both his undergraduate and law student years at Pitt.

In 1931, he was asked by the Rodef Shalom synagogue in Pittsburgh to teach dance and to stage the annual Kermess. This venture lasted for seven years until he decided to pursue his career as a dance teacher and full-time entertainer and dropped out of law school.  In 1937, he moved to New York City to follow his dream of becoming a successful choreographer and actor. He did perform one time with his brother(1954), Fred Kelly in the movie:


Deep in My Heart(1954). Biographical musical about the life of operetta composer Sigmund Romberg, who wrote the music for The Student Prince, The Desert Song, and The New Moon. Leonard Spigelglass adapted the film from Elliott Arnold's 1949 biography of the same name. Stanley Donen directed and Eugene Loring choreographed.

The film, which takes its title from "Deep in My Heart, Dear," a song from "The Student Prince," which has  cameos by: Cyd Charisse, Rosemary Clooney, Vic Damone, Howard Keel, Gene Kelly and his brother Fred Kelly (their only on-screen performance together), Tony Martin, Ann Miller, James Mitchell, Jane Powell, and the ballerina Tamara Toumanova. Robert Easton and Russ Tamblyn both make uncredited appearances.

 

Some highlights of Fred Kelly's career: Winner of three Donaldson awards, which were the precursor of the Tony Awards: one for acting, one for comedy and one for dance (presented by Antoinette Perry, for whom the Tony awards are named).

Directed The Ice Capades. Introduced the mambo to the New York City dance scene. Invented the cha-cha. Taught a young man named John Travolta to dance in Oradell, NJ.

In the movie Meet Me in St. Louis, the song “The Boy Next Door” was based on Fred and his wife, Dottie, who was his childhood sweetheart. They lived next door to each other in Pittsburgh. Fred produced, directed, or was otherwise involved with the first television drama series, soap opera, cooking show, and talk show - a true television pioneer.



On the Town (1949)

Monday, August 20, 2012

****
Country: US
Director: Stanley Donen/Gene Kelly

"What could happen to you in one day?" asks a longshoreman of three high-spirited sailors setting off on twenty-four hours' shore leave in New York City at the beginning of On the Town. The answer: a lot more than anyone might reasonably expect. In one day and one night, the three sailors—Gabey (Gene Kelly), Chip (Frank Sinatra), and Ozzie (Jules Munshin)—see more sights, meet more people, and get into more mischief than they could ever have imagined. And along the way they find romance in the form of three lovely residents of the city who accompany them as they visit tourist sights from the Statue of Liberty to the Empire State Building, romp from Manhattan to Brooklyn to Coney Island, and sing and dance their way all around the town.

The sailors are all small-town boys awed by the prospect of spending a day in what in their minds is the most glamorous and bustling city in America. The bashful Chip is an inveterate sightseer determined to visit as many of the city's landmarks as possible in twenty-four hours. The girl he hooks up with, a romantically aggressive taxi driver named Hildy (Betty Garrett), falls for him as soon as the boys hail her cab and immediately becomes their self-appointed tour guide. Gabey, a starry-eyed romantic from Indiana, falls in love at first sight with a girl whose picture he sees on a poster in the subway. She's Ivy Smith (Vera-Ellen), and she has just been chosen by the Transit Authority as Miss Turnstile, the subway poster girl of the month.

When Gabey sees her for real in a subway station but can't reach her before she leaves on the next train, he and his buddies, chauffeured by Hildy, set off after her. One of their first stops is the Natural History Museum, where a student of anthropology, Claire (Ann Miller), takes an immediate shine to the goofy Ozzie because of his resemblance to the statue of a caveman on display there. Soon she, Hildy, and the sailors are all involved in the pursuit of Gabey's elusive dream girl, an odyssey that takes them from one end of the city to the other.

The musicals made at MGM by On the Town's producer, Arthur Freed, in the 1940s and 1950s are legendary. Originally a pianist, vaudeville performer, and songwriter, Freed produced his first film (uncredited) in 1939. It was for MGM and the film was The Wizard of Oz. The same year MGM gave him his own musical film production unit, and for the next twenty years Freed and his unit were responsible for some of the greatest musicals ever made. Over the years Freed brought together a group of people—writers, musicians, choreographers, dancers, actors, directors—whose talent and ability to work together were unequaled in the film industry. In his foreword to Clive Hirschhorn's The American Musical, Gene Kelly, who worked on twelve films with Freed, described working with the Freed unit at MGM:
The members of the group who worked at MGM during my tenure there were very serious about musicals. That is not to say that we didn't make them to entertain and uplift the spirit, but we thought that to do this effectively they had to superbly crafted; and that meant the closest kind of collaboration. . . . There were probably more assembled talents in this field at Metro than anywhere else at any other time.
Gene Kelly and Arthur Freed

Freed's greatest musical film achievement is universally acknowledged to be Singin' in the Rain (1952), and I certainly wouldn't quarrel with that assessment. After that sublime film, any of a number of other musicals produced by the Arthur Freed unit could reasonably be designated for the number two position in the Freed canon. Meet Me in St. Louis, Easter Parade, An American in Paris, The Band Wagon, Gigi are all strong contenders. But my own favorite Freed-produced musical after Singin' in the Rain would be On the Town. It's a big, rollicking, unflaggingly kinetic movie that combines jazzy, assertive music, flippant dialogue and song lyrics, slapstick physical comedy—including a rousing car chase through Brooklyn, the three sailors in drag at Coney Island, and a collapsing dinosaur skeleton borrowed from Bringing Up Baby—and dance styles from tap to ballet to acrobatic in a package wrapped in nonstop creativity and inspiration.

Even so, the film's originality is less the product of pure innovation than of innovative synthesis. From the earliest days of the movies sailors had been used as fodder for comedy by people like Harold Lloyd, Laurel and Hardy, and Abbott and Costello. Sailors had also been the subject of musicals like the Eleanor Powell film Born to Dance (1936), the Astaire-Rogers film Follow the Fleet (1936), even Gene Kelly and Frank Sinatra's previous picture together, Anchors Aweigh (1945). Its antecedents in film comedies and musicals aside, On the Town was the result of its own evolutionary synthesis, from ballet to stage musical to musical film. It began in 1944 as a ballet called Fancy Free, with choreography by Jerome Robbins and music by Leonard Bernstein. Robbins and Bernstein invited Betty Comden and Adolph Green to provide book and lyrics, and the ballet was developed into a Broadway musical financed in part by the sale of the film rights to MGM. Finally, after much tinkering and modification, its book rewritten and most of the original songs replaced, it became the movie we know today.

A good example of an existing idea that the film adapted and advanced can be found in the "A Day in New York" number. Toward the end of the film Gabey, walking through the streets alone, comes upon a poster for a show called "A Day in New York" and slips into a reverie in which he imagines the show as a condensed version of the experiences of the three sailors' own day in the city, a dream ballet featuring Kelly, with the five other principals replaced by ballet dancers (one of them recognizably Carol Haney). Perhaps a holdover from the original concept of Fancy Free, the number is clearly inspired by both the dream ballet in the 1943 Broadway musical Oklahoma! as well as the Red Shoes ballet in Powell and Pressburger's The Red Shoes. The "A Day in New York" number in turn led directly to the ballet finale in An American in Paris and the elaborate movie-within-a-movie sequence "Broadway Rhythm Ballet" in Singin' in the Rain.

Another example of the adaptation and advancement of an existing film idea in On the Town is the use of real New York locations in the picture. One of the great creative developments of postwar American filmmaking was to get movies out of the studio and on location, the way the postwar Italian neorealists and certain prewar plein-air filmmakers like Jean Renoir had done. Yet for some reason this move away from the Hollywood studio didn't seem to reach the musical until On the Town. Only part of the picture was shot on location, but those parts give it an authenticity and realism that could never have been achieved on a sound stage or studio backlot. The next time you watch the Sharks and the Jets dance down the streets of the West Side, or the Austrian Alps come alive with the sound of the music of Rodgers and Hammerstein, or Barbra Streisand admonish the sky from that tugboat not to rain on her parade, think of On the Town as the musical that started it all.

The other great synthesis in On the Town is the way it unites all of Gene Kelly's prodigious talents and fuses them into one creative whole. Singing, dancing, acting, choreography, film direction—this is the first example of Kelly filling all these roles in a single film. While it's true that directing credit is shared with Stanley Donen, the creative life force of On the Town springs directly from Gene Kelly. Both Kelly and Donen have commented that working together showed them how difficult it is for two people to share directing chores, but that didn't stop the pair from topping themselves just three years later with Singin' in the Rain. Ultimately, On the Town might be seen as a warm-up act for that greatest of all musicals, but if so, what a warm-up act it was—a zany, colorful, exuberant movie that jet-propelled the musical film to new heights.

This post is part of the Gene Kelly Centennial Blogathon sponsored by the Classic Movie Blog Association. For more information on the blogathon, click here. On the Town plays on Turner Classic Movies on Thursday, August 23, the 100th anniversary of Gene Kelly's birth, as part of TCM's Summer Under the Stars. Check local listings for times. Also check out the 2012 TCM Summer Under the Stars Blogathon for more on Gene Kelly and all the stars featured on TCM this month.

SINGIN' IN THE RAIN

Friday, July 27, 2012

SINGIN' IN THE RAIN
Written by Adolph Green and Betty Comden
Directed by Stanley Donen and Gene Kelly
Starring Gene Kelly, Donald O"Connor and Debbie Reynolds

SINGIN' IN THE RAIN is not only one of my favourite movie musicals of all time but I actually count it amongst my favourite films, period. This year, the film celebrates its 60th anniversary by making its first appearance on Blu-ray and with a brilliant remaster at that. Every time I see this film, I am reminded of just how groundbreaking it truly was, from its dazzling Gene Kelly choreography to its brilliantly cheeky take on Hollywood. It also features some of the most tender and romantic moments in any movie I‘ve seen, all of it elevated with great ease by the beautiful music of Arthur Freed. There is a reason that the American Film Institute considers this film to be the best movie musical ever made.

Most people don’t know this but SINGIN' IN THE RAIN is actually a jukebox musical. All but one song sung in the film was written about 30 years before the film was even made. The idea was that Warner Bros. had access to all the music already so why would they pay someone to write a new musical. But even with Freed classics like “Good Morning” or the title track itself to set the mood, and mind blowing Kelly choreography to fill the screen, the film would never have endured if it weren’t for the Adolph Green and Betty Comden screenplay. Kelly plays a silent film actor who struggles to find his place in the “talkies” and falls in love with a young ingenue (a 19-year-old Debbie Reynolds in her first starring role) in the process. Along the way, co-director, Stanley Donen, turns the mirror on the often duplicitous nature of the studio system.


Despite its classic status, SINGIN' IN THE RAIN is perhaps better described as timeless. The anniversary edition is available now but aside from the picture quality, arguably of course the most important part, this edition contains no new bonus material. It is however also available in a special edition package that contains a stunning colorful book about the production as well an umbrella so we can too can do a little singing next time we’re caught in the rain.

An American In Paris

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

An American In Paris, 1951
Directed by Vincente Minnelli
Nominated for 8 Academy Awards, Won 6.

Synopsis: Jerry Mulligan is a struggling American painter, living in Paris after being a soldier in WWII. He gets discovered on the streets by a rich young woman, who decides to sponsor him, and get him set up with exhibitions and meet important people to become successful. But she's got more on her mind that Jerry's art. At the same time, Jerry has swooned for a French girl named Lise, who is already engaged to an acquiantence of Jerry's, though neither of them know this- yet. But, as we all know, it's going to happen eventually, and the situation will be quite comical indeed.

I watched the movie Singin' In The Rain for the first time about a month and a half ago, and absolutely adored it. The tap dancing, laughing hysterically at Donald O'Connor's antics, and may or may not have been swooning over Gene Kelly. SInce then, I've watched it once or twice more, and still love it. So naturally, when I was looking over the list of Oscar Winning Pictures, and looked into what An American In Paris was about, I was excited to see it was a musical- and Gene Kelly was in it!

I quickly made a reservation at the library for it (along with a couple others) and was eager to watch it. I snuggled into bed and watched this movie on a rainy night with my mother, glad for someone to watch a movie with, because I find I can hardly ever sit through a movie by myself. But I digress.

The story itself, unfolded quite nicely and quickly (though not too quickly). We are introduced to the three main men quite quickly. Jerry Mulligan, Adam Cook (Jerry's friend, another American in Paris) and Adam Cook's good friend Henri Baurel, a cabaret singer, and Lise's boyfriend/fiance. Not ten minutes later, have we met the two main women; Milo Roberts, the rich young woman who takes a liking to more than just Jerry's painting, and Lise Bouvier, the young dancer who works at a perfume shop, and is with Henri.

The situation quickly sets itself up. We open on the film with Henri telling Adam Cook about this woman he is in love with. We learn about Lise, without realizing she is to be a main player in the film. Then we see Jerry and Lise encounter each other for the first time at a smoky nightclub.restaurant. Jerry is instantly drawn to Lise, while he is out with Milo and some friends shortly after Milo and Jerry meet when she purchases 2 of Jerry's paintings. Lise is resistant, but Jerry is persistant, while Milo is still vying for his attention.

I quite enjoyed this film. It was a light-hearted romantic-musical-comedy, with some brilliant situational irony (you can just imagine what is happening at this point), dance numbers and okay songs. While I didn't think the music was mighty fantastic, I thought Gene Kelly was great. He was really convincing as a poor painter, and played obvious, adamant, and happy-go-lucky lover, so well.


Newcomer Leslie Caron (Lise) was also really good. While I didn't much care for her character, she's an extremely, extremely talented dancer, if nothing else. She really holds her own next to Kelly (I'm just biased because I love tap dancing, though I can't do it myself) and the 17-minute long finale was really quite something. She's a very very talented woman.


While I enjoyed this movie, I didn't love it. I thought the dancing was great, the music was so-so, Gene Kelly looked great, and the storyline was pretty good. While I enjoyed it, I know there are several other musicals that didn't win Best Picture I liked much better, though it was decent, and cute.

Rating: B

Brigadoon

Monday, August 29, 2011



The following appeared last week on Sam Juliano's wonderful Wonders in the Dark blog (http://wondersinthedark.wordpress.com/) as part of the countdown of Sam's 70 favorite musicals. There's a different essay each day on a new musical. Any lovers of musicals can't afford to miss out on checking out Sam's site.



A major criticism of “Brigadoon” (1954) is it was shot on the M-G-M soundstages and not on location in Scotland. If there was ever a musical that should have been shot outdoors, some say, it is “Brigadoon.”

I never really bought that argument because the Scottish village and hillside created for the movie are so gorgeous to look at. While the idea of shooting on location in Scotland does sound appealing, the often unpredictable nature of Scottish weather could have seen costs soar. The fact that M-G-M used AnscoColor instead of Technicolor means they were definitely watching the bottom line.

Plus, because so many theaters were still unequipped to show movies in the new Cinemascope format, “Brigadoon” was shot twice, once in the standard wide-screen format and again in Cinemascope. Shooting in Scottish weather once would have been daunting enough, but shooting twice would have been tempting fate.

“Brigadoon” is a fantasy along the lines of “Lost Horizon” and a most beguiling one at that. Brigadoon is a magical Scottish village that appears only 100 years. It is discovered by accident by two American hunters who find themselves lost in the Scottish highlands.

Tommy Albright (Gene Kelly) is something of a lost soul, someone who knows his life is missing something, but he can’t put a finger on it. His best friend is Jeff Douglas (Van Johnson), who has a drinking problem and has no faith in anything he can’t see, taste, smell or touch.

They see the village through the morning mist and are perplexed at its quaint costumes and customs of the inhabitants. Tommy meets Fiona Campbell (Cyd Charisse) and begins to fall in love with her. Fiona’s sister Jean (Virginia Bosler, re-creating her role from the Broadway production) is getting married that day to Charles Dalrymple (Jimmy Thompson). It promises to be a merry day in Brigadoon except for the dark cloud known as Harry Beaton (Hugh Laing), who is in love with Jean and does not want to see her married to another man.

“Brigadoon” opened on Broadway on March 13, 1947 and was an immediate success. It was the first big hit for composer Frederick Loewe and lyricist and book writer Alan Jay Lerner.

Based on a German fairy tale called “Germelshausen”, about a German town which appears every 100 years, “Brigadoon” retained the idea but transferred it to Scotland.

The show ran 581 performances on Broadway and its London engagement played 685 times.( Other musicals playing on Broadway that season included: “Oklahoma!”; “Carousel”; “Call Me Mister”; Annie Get Your Gun”; “Beggar’s Holiday”; “Street Scene” and “Finian’s Rainbow.”)

It took famed producer Arthur Freed several years to bring “Brigadoon” to the screen. It was first announced in 1951, and was to have re-teamed Gene Kelly with his “Anchors Aweigh” (1945) co-star Kathryn Grayson. That fell through, though Kelly remained as part of the deal. With that in mind, it was decided to make the movie more dance-oriented. Kelly wanted Moira Shearer for the Fiona role, but her commitments to the Sadler Wells Ballet Company prevented that. Finally, M-G-M contract player Cyd Charisse was given the assignment.

For the role of Jeff, producer Arthur Freed wanted to re-team Kelly with Donald O’Connor from “Singin’ in the Rain” (1952), but O’Connor was no longer under contract to M-G-M, so Van Johnson was cast. A good choice, and Johnson had started his career as a dancer in the chorus.

Harry Beaton makes vague threats about leaving Brigadoon, even though it would spell disaster to the whole town. Tommy is puzzled by the village but finds himself falling in love more and more in love with Fiona, especially after singing and dancing to the haunting “The Heather on the Hill”. Eventually he learns the secret of the village from the village schoolmaster, Mr. Lundie (Barry Jones). Thanks to a covenant with God, Brigadoon materializes only every 100 years and none of its inhabitants can ever leave its boundaries. Mr. Lundie tells Tommy an outsider can remain in the village only if they love someone in Brigadoon, not the village itself.

By all accounts, “Brigadoon” was not a happy set. Vincente Minnelli was always on board to direct, and even though he initially wanted to film on location in Scotland, he quickly realized how much more control he would have in Hollywood. He and Gene Kelly had worked well together on “Ziegfeld Follies” (1946), “The Pirate” (1948) and “An American in Paris” (1951) and appreciated each other’s talents.

But Kelly was bitterly disappointed at not shooting on location and stayed morose throughout the shooting.

Kelly is quoted in “A Hundred or More Hidden Things: The Life and Films of Vincente Minnelli” by Mark Griffin (DeCapo Press, 2010) and admits he and Minnelli were never in synch on this production.

Griffin writes: “Minnelli envisioned the movie as ‘more of an operetta’ - the type of ‘theatrical artifice’ that was like an “An American in Paris” and more like “The Pirate”. Kelly however, saw “Brigadoon” as a Scottish Western, - Arthur Freed meets John Ford. When the entire production veered more in Minnelli’s direction, the star-choreographer was unhappy, and it showed. Minnelli later said he ‘had many talks with [Kelly], trying to impress on him the need to show exuberance in the part.’ But the star remained remote and grim-looking.”

Kelly and Minnelli also took to re-writing the script on the set, which infuriated screenwriter Alan Jay Lerner when he heard about it. He complained to Freed, who immediately sent a cease and desist order to Kelly and Minnelli. They complied.

The wedding between Charlie and Jean takes place at night, lit by torches and attended by the entire village in their most colorful finery. The entire village joins in the dancing, including Harry. He makes his way to Jean and violently kisses her. He is attacked by Charlie and they two have to be restrained. Harry breaks free and announces he is leaving Brigadoon and the miracle is over.

The men search the surrounding countryside for Harry to no avail. He almost makes good his escape until, hiding in a tree, he is accidentally shot by an inebriated Jeff, who has left the wedding ceremony to go grouse hunting.

Charlie Dalrymple was played by Jimmy Thompson, who had appeared as the singer/narrator in the “Beautiful Girl” number in “Singin’ in the Rain” (1952). Thompson could not handle the vocal demands of the role, so was dubbed by John Gustafson. He was not the only one to be dubbed, as Cyd Charisse was dubbed by Carol Richards.

Jeff convinces Tommy that Brigadoon isn’t for them, and they return to a very noisy New York City. Tommy is distant from his fiancée Jane (Elaine Stewart) and everything reminds him of Brigadoon. The two return to Scotland. Tommy is desperate to return to the village’s site, even though the village won’t appear for another 100 years and he knows he’ll never see Fiona again. The village does appear before them as does Mr. Lundie. He tells Tommy he must really love her, because he woke him up. Tommy runs to the village and meets Fiona coming out of her house. They walk slowly towards each other as the camera pulls back and the chorus swells.

I think “Brigadoon” is an absolutely gorgeous film to look at and listen to. With that score how could it not be ambrosia for the ears? But thanks to the remarkable behind the scenes musical talents at M-G-M, a beautiful score is made even more ravishing, and the art direction and set design are some of the most impressive for any M-G-M musical.

Musical director was the great Johnny Green with the arrangements made by the legendary Conrad Salinger. One of the reasons why M-G-M musicals are so good is because of Salinger’s contributions.

In the notes accompanying a Chandos CD celebrating songs and production numbers from MGM musicals, the late and eminent film music historian Christopher Palmer wrote of Salinger:

“Salinger’s was actually a complex musical personality, narcissistic and perfectionist (everything sounds fresh and spontaneous, but I have a feeling the wastepaper basket overflowed many times with rejected drafts). Ravel described his own orchestration as ‘complex, but not complicated’ and much the same could be said of Salinger’s. His scores are studded with detail, with incidental subtleties and small felicities of all kinds, but they are never cluttered, never made-up to the point whereby glamour becomes overkill. The perfume is exclusive – and expensive – but Salinger knows exactly how much to put on, and where. Pop songs are like people in that if they are to be dressed up a basic simplicity must always obtain. That Salinger understood that was part of his genius.

“…But the real Salinger was the de luxe quality of orchestral texture exemplified by “Dancing in the Dark”, “Singin’ in the Rain” and “The Heather on the Hill” – a quality born of his feeling for beauty of timbre, for mood, for atmosphere, for nuance, above all for line, for the give and take of melody and countermelody. His vocal accomplishments are object lessons in subtlety, sensitivity and understatement.”

Choral arranger for the film was Robert Tucker, and I think the choral work in this film is equal to the work choral arranger Ken Darby was doing at Twentieth Century Fox. In fact I’ll go out on a limb and say this is probably the finest choral work in any M-G-M musical.

The choral work is amazingly acute and precise in “The Chase”, the sequence where the men of the village hunt for Harry. The hushed opening chorus as the camera pans also the highland countryside as the village emerges from the mist sounds like something from a dream. Naturally, there’s a lot of good choral work in M-G-M musicals, but the chorus truly surpassed themselves here.

Vincente Minnelli’s sense of design and space is also well on display here. The film’s opening number, “Down on MacConnachy Square” is a riot of color and excitement as the village awakens to live another day. The group dancing in the “Go Home to Bonnie Jean” shows Minnelli’s understanding of the wide Cinemascope image and how to use it to maximum advantage. .

The wedding sequence is also a marvel of sight and sound as the different clans gather, with bagpipes playing and the villagers turned out in their best attire. Lit by torches it’s an evocative sequence that’s a marvel to behold. This is immediately followed by the aforementioned “The Chase” which looks like it was shot in almost one take, or at least one or two long, continuous takes. The planning and preparation must have been enormous, but Minnelli had a huge canvas to stage the sequence on and he makes every bit of it count.

How big was the “Brigadoon” stage? Hugh Fordin’s invaluable look at the Freed Unit, M-G-M’s Greatest Musicals: The Arthur Freed Unit” (First De Capo Press Edition, 1996) tells us:

“According to the script, the story would take place on two main sites: the hills of Scotland and the village of Brigadoon. These were to be constructed on three separate sound stages, until (Art Director Preston) Ames came up with the ingenious idea of combining everything on one stage, creating a vast panorama. He presented his idea to Minnelli. ‘I think you’re crazy,’ said Minnelli, ‘but do it! But remember, I want lots of heather!

“To execute this enormous undertaking, the construction department built hillsides and valleys, a village with many cottages and a bridge spanning a brook; there were livestock and all the trappings of the outdoors. One man was responsible for creating the visual illusion of the Scottish countryside: George Gibson, the same man who so masterfully executed the backdrops for the “American in Paris” ballet. His backing for the “Brigadoon” set was 600 feet wide and 60 feet high. Gibson’s painting was so realistic that even the birds were attracted by ‘their natural habitat’ and flew through the open stage doors straight into the backdrop.”

In transferring the show to the screen, some compromises had to be made and some songs dropped. The man-hungry Meg Brockie character lost her songs and was relegated to only two scenes with Van Johnson. As played by Dodie Heath, she’s a delight, but the Hays Office nixed the mildly risqué lyrics in her two songs, “The Love of My Life” and “My Mother’s Wedding Day.” It’s too bad because she’s such a delight. (Ironically, the role was played on Broadway by Pamela Britton, who played Frank Sinatra’s girlfriend in “Anchors Aweigh” (1945). There’s another Gene Kelly connection right there).

Other songs filmed but edited out of the final print were “Come to Me, Bend to Me” (sung by Charlie to Jean); “There But For You, Go I” (sung by Fiona to Tommy) and “The Sword Dance” (performed by Harry Beaton and dancers at the wedding ceremony).

The DVD of “Brigadoon” offers these deleted numbers as an extra, and I was particularly intrigued by the “There But For You, Go I” number. While the song was excised from the final print, the dance remains but is re-scored by a more expansive orchestral treatment of “The Heather on the Hill.” The sequence occurs after the chase and death of Harry Beaton, and as gorgeous as the song is, it does slow the action.

Since Fiona and Tommy began to fall in love as they sang and danced to “The Heather on the Hill” earlier in the movie, I liked the reprise here as it seems to strengthen the character’s love into a deeper and more affecting relationship.

“Brigadoon” opened to fairly tepid reviews. Griffin quotes two. “The whimsical dream world it creates holds no compelling attractions,” said Penelope Huston of the London Times. Newsweek said, “Hollywood can still put its worst foot forward in the classic manner.”

Audiences liked it though, and it grossed more than $3 million. It’s a film that seems to get better with age. It still has its detractors, but Minnelli’s direction, and the incomparable dancing of Kelly and Charisee and that classic Lerner and Loewe score, make this a film to be enjoyed over and over. And with the current economy and the seemingly never-ending streak of bad news, who wouldn’t want to find a place like Brigadoon in their own lives?

Thousands Cheer

Thursday, September 2, 2010


Thanks to its incredible roster of musical talent, M-G-M should lead the pack of WWII all-star musicals with its offering “Thousands Cheer” (1943). But for me it’s probably my least favorite title of this select group.

Oh, it’s not a bad film by any means, and it’s often quite enjoyable. A couple of the numbers are quite good. For instance, Lena Horne singing “Honeysuckle Rose” with the Benny Carter Band is terrific (and was featured in the first “That’s Entertainment” (1974) movie.) But too many of the numbers are only average, there are some painfully unfunny comedy sketches and there’s a final number, composed by Dmitri Shostakovich, no less, that is cringe-inducing in the worst way.

There isn’t much story in “Thousands Cheer”, but that’s OK, since most of these all-star musicals aren’t known for their scripts.

In only his fourth film, Gene Kelly plays Private Eddie Marsh, who falls in love with Kathryn Jones (Kathryn Grayson), a singer who is responsible for providing entertainment for the soldiers. She’s also the daughter of Marsh’s commanding officer (John Boles). Kathryn tries to re-connect her divorced parents (mom is Mary Astor) while trying to knock Eddie’s chip off his soldier. She’s also responsible for putting on a big show at the local army camp, which just happens to be all talent under contract to M-G-M at the time.

The best number in the film is not one of the show numbers, but a dance number Kelly does with a mop. The aforementioned Lena Horne number is great, and there’s an infectious song called “I Dug a Ditch” which is performed several times throughout the movie, most notably by the Kay Kyser Band.
For me, though, the numbers are pretty banal, a surprise coming from M-G-M. Judy Garland does “The Joint is Really Jumping Down at Carnegie Hall”, and it will never make any Garland highlight reels.

The final number is a prescient tribute about a United Nations, with Grayson singing about “making a new way for tomorrow” accompanied by male choruses representing different Allied countries. (Since the real United Nations was not formed until after WWII, the song can be seen as a preview of what everyone wanted the world to look like once the war was over).

Shostakovich is credited for the song in the opening credits, but surely he wasn’t commissioned by M-G-M for the song. Did Stalin even let his prized composer leave the country, during time of war no less?

A quick check on the Internet shows the song was originally called “Song of the Counterplan” for a 1932 Soviet film called “Counterplan.” Even with new lyrics, it sounds exactly like one of those pieces Shostakovich wrote to placate and keep Stalin happy, and since it kept Shostakovich alive, I guess I can’t complain too much about the song. Uncle Joe was no doubt pleased, the rest of us less so.

For me, I’ll take the finale to “Star Spangled Rhythm” (1942), with Bing Crosby singing “Old Glory.” “Star Spangled Rhythm” boasts everything lacking in “Thousands Cheer”- breeziness, no attempts at faux-culture, a great song score (“That Old Black Magic and “Time to Hit the Road to Dreamland”) and good comedy.

I also prefer the two Warner Bros. entries, “Thank Your Lucky Stars” (1943) and “Hollywood Canteen” (1944). They’re much livelier and engaging. Universal had a good one in “Follow the Boys” (1944) and United Artists produced “Stage Door Canteen” (1943), which was an East Coast version of the Hollywood Canteen. Frank Borzage directed the latter, and it’s quite an affecting movie. Unfortunately it has fallen into the public domain and is now available in copies of varying quality. I hope a pristine version shows up somewhere.

Fox and Columbia did not produce any all-star musicals, though Fox came close with “Four Jills in a Jeep” (1944), a highly fictionalized look at a traveling USO show.

The one all-star musical title that remains maddingly elusive is Paramount’s “Duffy’s Tavern” (1945). I can’t remember this ever showing up on TV, and has not been made available on VHS or DVD. I’m hoping it turns up on TCM one day. I would love to see it.
 

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