Fred Astaire Archives - Welcome to Oaty McLoafy! https://oatymcloafy.com/tag/fred-astaire/ The Life and Times of Miss Mittens Wed, 10 Jan 2024 16:41:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://i0.wp.com/oatymcloafy.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/20220123_012404.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Fred Astaire Archives - Welcome to Oaty McLoafy! https://oatymcloafy.com/tag/fred-astaire/ 32 32 214757351 #8 Swing Time (1936) https://oatymcloafy.com/2023/03/02/8-swing-time-1936/ https://oatymcloafy.com/2023/03/02/8-swing-time-1936/#respond Thu, 02 Mar 2023 21:28:00 +0000 https://oatymcloafy.com/?p=845 The several minutes of forced laughter isn’t the only thing cringey about this film

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The several minutes of forced laughter isn’t the only thing cringey about this film

Y’know, my friend has something called the Thumper Rule: If you can’t say something nice, don’t say nothing at all.  And I try to abide by it, but most of the time I’m like Olympia Dukakis in Steel Magnolias.

I tried, I tried really hard to understand why Swing Time is so high on the list.  If we’re only considering the Fred and Ginger dance numbers, sure, you could make a case, because they’re amazing and at the top of their game.  The choreography in this movie is fire, and the repeating motif of them walking side by side together picks up emotional weight as the story progresses.  But literally everything else about this movie is annoying to me.  The “Fred and Ginger Formula” is now starting to lose its luster.

Fred Astaire’s character, Lucky, is a gambler/dancer, and he’s supposed to be getting married to an affluent women named Margaret immediately after he tap dances off the stage.  His friends, who for sure have grandkids who think that Saturdays Are For The Boys, have decided to sabotage this endeavor by telling Lucky his pants are so last season.  Lucky kills time waiting on them to be tailored by rolling some dice, and several hours later, when he figures out he’s been tricked, he shows up to his own wedding several hours late after all the guests have left.  While his fiancé and her father are initially furious with Lucky, he tells them he was out earning a dumb amount of money, and offers to buy Margaret for $25k.  They agree to this arrangement because they are terrible people.

Lucky flees to New York with his unscrupulous friend Pop to gamble his way into a wife.  He encounters Penny at the cigarette machine when he trades her his lucky quarter for a few dimes and a nickel.  Thirty seconds later, when he gets the money to trade it back, she refuses because she thinks he’s attempting to pick her up.  While she’s trying to rebuff Lucky’s advances, Pop steals the quarter from her purse, and she alerts a policeman because she thinks Lucky took it.  The policeman, being super on-brand, calls her a crazy broad and threatens to arrest her for disturbing the peace because Lucky is wearing a nice suit.  She leaves, Pop reveals to Lucky he actually did steal the quarter from Penny, and Lucky follows her into her place to business to return the money… again.

If this sounds super convoluted, it is.  This is, by far, the dumbest meet-cute I’ve ever encountered, and I’ve lived through and been forced to watch nearly all the terrible early 2000s romantic comedies.

To Lucky’s absolute luck, Penny works at a dance studio, so Lucky pulls a Cady Heron and pretends he doesn’t know how to dance in order procure some lessons.  Penny is pleased as punch to see him, and doesn’t slug him on site because she wants to keep her job.  Once Lucky finally admits that he’s a premium dancer, Penny’s boss books the two of them a gig at the Silver Sandal, as long as Lucky can show up in a tuxedo.

Lucky, of course, only has a stolen quarter to his name, so Pop runs out to try and scam a drunk guy into betting his dapper clothes.  Penny walks in on her new friends playing strip poker with a guy 3 sheets to the wind and storms off, furious she’s going to miss her new gig because the guy who accosted her in the street turned out to not be on the up and up.

A week later is enough time for Lucky to bankroll a new wardrobe, a room at the inn, and a new audition at the Silver Sandal.  Penny’s refusal to forgive Lucky for blowing their first chance at stardom results in Lucky picketing outside her door.

When that doesn’t work to turn her favor, he decides to serenade her with the most famous song of this movie, “The Way You Look Tonight”.  I have heard Frank’s showy, bouncy version of this song about a million times, but I do enjoy Fred’s version as it sounds more tender and sincere.

This is enough to make Penny swoon, and they head to The Silver Sandal together.  Lucky discovers that the band leader, Ricky, is not only handsome, but has proposed to Penny several times.  Lucky has the nerve to act jealous even though, if you remember, he’s already engaged to Margaret back home.  Ricardo also views Lucky as a threat and refuses to play a song for Penny and Lucky’s audition so they cannot dance together.  Lucky decides to use his gambling super powers to win the band’s contract from a club owner and force Ricky’s orchestra to play.  Penny is somehow charmed by this because his gambling addiction has now directly benefitted her.

They ace the audition and Penny and Lucky book the gig.  Lucky negotiates down the terms of his payment so he doesn’t make over $25k and have to return to his hometown to purchase/marry his fiancé.  Conversely, he is trying his best not to be left alone with Penny as he’s now fallen in love with her.  Penny, unfortunately, feels the same way about him, and decides to make a bunch of unreciprocated moves that just give her blue balls.  When Lucky finally decides that cheating on his fiancé sounds like a good idea, Pop intervenes and tells Penny that Lucky’s engaged and she rightfully turns cold toward him.  This only lasts about 3 minutes, and soon she’s making awkward advances before making out with him in their dressing room.

Right as my exasperation in this back and forth romance hit its peak, Fred distracted me by walking over to his dressing table and smearing black paint on his face.  Oh.  Oh no. 

Oh nooooooooooo.  I thought after The Jazz Singer I was in the clear for shit like this on the list, but nope, turns out one of the most famous dancers in the world decided that blackface was a great idea.

This is um…  This is straight up offensive.  No amount of shuffling around is going to make me defend a number that starts with comparing the skin color of black people to the bottom of shoes.  I found a great article by Katrina Richardson that elaborates why this number, even in 1936, was in very, very poor taste.

Bill “Bojangles” Robinson is the man Fred is “paying tribute to” in this number.  My grandmother loved Shirley Temple and bought me The Little Colonel when I was a kid, which I watched once and unceremoniously stored in our VHS cabinet because I had no interest in a precocious seven-year-old that pretends not to know how to read, or a movie about The South™.  But I remember this scene because I was simultaneously fascinated by his dancing and afraid he was going to fall down the stairs.  Honestly, spending several hours on youtube watching Mr. Robinson dance was the only redeeming part of being forced to watch Swing Time.

Anyway… Directly after the number, Lucky gambles away the orchestra because Pop revealed that Lucky cheated it off of the club owner the first time.  Immediately after that, Margret and Penny finally meet each other, and Penny is so devastated that Lucky is still going to marry her that she runs off and accepts Ricky’s latest proposal.  Lucky is similarly disappointed they’re heading in different directions and tells Penny that he’s going to punish himself for marrying someone he doesn’t love by never dancing again.

Fred and Ginger’s dance numbers always tell a story, and this movie features several perfect examples of how their movements illustrate their current feelings toward each other.  In the beginning, they start their journey by taking a few steps together, and we similarly revel in the joy on Penny’s face realizing Lucky can meet her move for move.  When they are auditioning for the club, they come out confident and fierce, knocking everyone’s socks off because they realize how special their relationship is and want to flaunt it in front of everyone (especially Ricky).  In “Never Gonna Dance”, their steps are nostalgic, echoing the previous numbers before, and eventually send them in two separate directions and up two separate staircases.  They’re reunited quickly and furiously at the top, giving into their passion for one another.  But by the end of this number, Penny is sprinting away from Lucky, as its the only way they can part.  It’s so beautiful it makes me forgive the plot I had to trudge through to get here.  Also, Astaire insisted on over 40 takes of this number and Ginger’s feet were bleeding through her shoes by the end of it, which only highlights Fred’s perfectionism and Ginger’s perseverance.

Alas, Lucky and Penny didn’t need to break up in the first place, because Margret has decided to break off their engagement because she wants to marry someone else.  Lucky then decides to tell Margret that he’s in love with Penny, and she starts laughing because it’s all very funny and conveniently timed.  Lucky rushes over to break up Penny and Ricky’s wedding and Lucky and Penny live happily ever after even though she doesn’t like that he gambles and he seems incapable of not doing so.  The end.

Swing Time is a whole lot of fluff and no substance, which is completely fine, it just annoys me when the plot hinges on a series of secrets or misunderstandings.  The director of this movie, George Stevens, had filmed several movies with Fred and Ginger, together and separately, until he enlisted in the US Army during World War II in order to document it.  He was present during D-Day, and also filmed the conditions of the concentration camps.  The footage he captured was used as evidence during the Nuremberg Trials.  Needless to say, this guy saw some shit, and it changed the kind of content he produced afterward.

In the 1970s, he was head of the jury at the Berlin International Film Festival, which issued no awards because the jury eventually resigned.  A film about the Incident on Hill 192, o.k., was cut-off mid-screening and removed from the festival because a majority of the jury believed “All film festivals should contribute to better understanding between nations”.  Stevens himself called the movie “anti-American”, and was the driving force behind its disqualification.  The jury actually had no right to turn the film off, or question its qualification in the first place, which caused several directors of competing films to withdraw their movies from the competition in protest.  Many looked upon the film’s exclusion as censorship and called for a dissolution of the entire institution of Berlinale.  This didn’t happen – they restructured and have been conducting the event ever since.  Although a few years ago they did have to rename one of their awards when it was revealed its namesake Alfred Bauer’s involvement in creating Nazi propaganda “was more significant than had previously been known”…  Yikes.

But I found it both curious and unsurprising that Stevens had such a visceral reaction to o.k., as United States patriotism was the key motivating factor during the second world war.  The sacrifices made by the soldiers and their families was under the premise it was for The Greater Good.  The heroes in the US of A would be getting revenge on those no-good Fascists and Imperialists because here in America, we believe in Freedom™.

Not to suggest the US shouldn’t have been involved in the war, but our own (sometimes racist) propaganda shaped the views of the entire generation.  I’m going to go out on a limb and guess that a lot of WW2 veterans struggled with those who protested the war in Vietnam, and had a hard time beings faced with the fact that United States soldiers could become power-hungry monsters that commit atrocious war crimes.

But I majorly digress…  Swing Time is, conversely to the previous diatribe, Pre-WW2 glamourous escapism, where the worst a woman could encounter was a philandering gambler who didn’t cuff his pants.

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#3 Top Hat (1935) https://oatymcloafy.com/2023/02/28/3-top-hat-1935/ https://oatymcloafy.com/2023/02/28/3-top-hat-1935/#respond Tue, 28 Feb 2023 21:04:00 +0000 https://oatymcloafy.com/?p=836 This iconic (and arguably most famous) dancing duo fight through feathers in this glorious and fluffy movie.

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Welcome to Fred and Ginger week, where we dive into two of their most beloved movies, Top Hat and Swing Time.  Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers made 10 movies together, setting the standard for dynamic dancing pairs.

They were thrown together in Flying Down to Rio, which was a fine arrangement for Astaire for one film.  He had previously been part of a double act with his older sister, and when she married and retired from the industry he was hesitant to be paired up again.  After the success of Rio, however, little could be done to deny Fred and Ginger’s on-screen chemistry.

Katharine Hepburn summed it up perfectly when she said, “He gives her class and she gives him sex appeal.”  Fred was dynamic and charismatic, and I’m sure it was easy for him to act as though he was enamored with Ginger.  Ginger made it look like it was the most fun in the world dancing with Fred, and every time they performed together, it was pure fantasy and Hollywood glamour.

Top Hat is yet another Irving Berlin lead musical, except instead of focusing on holidays it’s about a girl who is trying everything within her power to not get involved with someone else’s open marriage.

Jerry, played by Freddie himself, is a successful dancer that is actively being recruited by his friend Horace to star in his upcoming stage show.  Jerry seems generally intrigued by the plan, until he starts to realize his friend Horace has some unignorable personality quirks.  First he’s inserted into the middle of a tiff between Horace and his valet Bates over their differing opinion on tie styles.  Next, he’s told that Horace’s wife, Madge, is interested in hooking Jerry up with her painfully single friend Dale.  In fact, after the show opening, the plan is for the two of them to travel to Italy and rendezvous with Madge and meet this attractive young lady.  Jerry is wholly uninterested in the prospect of snagging a permanent dame as living unencumbered has so far suited him just fine.  Even though it’s the middle of the night, he demonstrates to Horace how truly footloose and fancy free he really is.

This number is so flippin’ glorious – Fred’s enthusiasm is infectious and hilarious.

Jerry changes his tune really quickly when the attractive young woman directly below Horace’s hotel room storms upstairs to let him know she’s not super pleased he’s literally tap dancing on her ceiling while she’s trying to sleep.  Fred lays down the moves, but she’s tired and cranky and easily rebuffs his advances before heading back downstairs.  In an attempt to get on her good side, he plays the sandman and soft shoe ASMRs them both to sleep.

The next few days Jerry fills his crush’s room with flowers and charges it to his benefactor, Horace.  We learn that this young woman is Dale, Madge’s friend she’s trying to set Jerry up with, but neither Jerry or Dale realize this.  Unfortunately, Dale is already kept woman.  Mr. Beddini, a fashion designer, has been paying for her room and board in exchange for her “modelling some clothes” for him.  Oblivious to this, Jerry escalates the situation when he stalks Dale to the park.  Somehow Dale finds this both annoying and charming, because it’s Fred Astaire and he can woo any woman by crooning an Irving Berlin tune.  The have a little tête-à-tête in the rain, and Dale falls for this man hard.

This is so much fun I can’t handle ittttttt.

After returning from her play date, Dale is confronted by Mr. Beddini, as he’s upset she no longer wants to travel to Italy to be set up with some rando.  Mr. Beddini was relying on the trip to Italy for Dale to “show off his new clothes”, and is immediately jealous that Dale would rather spend time in New York with her new friend Jerry.  Madge informs Dale that her husband Horace would be looking her up regardless if Dale decides to join them or not, and that Mr. Beddini could accompany her to Italy if that helps change her mind about the trip.

Through a series of misunderstandings communicated by the hotel desk clerk, Dale comes to believe that Jerry is her friend Madge’s husband Horace.  She confronts Jerry by slapping the shit out of him, offended she ever batted her thin-eyebrowed eyes at his dumb face.  To Mr. Beddini’s relief, Dale decides to travel to Italy in an effort to purge Jerry from her brain, and presumably conceal the fact her friend’s “husband” was hitting on her.

Surprisingly, the hotel decides to investigate “the slapping incident”, and when they approach Horace, who Dale thinks was hitting on her, he decides not to rat out Jerry because he doesn’t want to jeopardize the stage show he’s invested a lot of money in.  He instead throws his valet Bates under the bus and tells the staff Bates was the one who was slapped by Dale.  After the staff leave, Horace asks Bates to trail Dale to make sure she’s not trying to take advantage of Jerry for his wealth or connections, and the two of them decide not to travel to Italy.

During the opening night of the show, Jerry and Horace discover that Dale is the woman Madge was intending to introduce to Jerry.  Jerry also changes his mind about the Italy trip and pressures Horace to charter a plane so he can intercept Dale.  After Jerry murders his fellow backup dancers, the entire cast heads to the best Italy the “It’s A Small World” construction crew could erect on a sound stage.  

Honestly, this plot gets unbelievably complicated and convoluted, as this mistaken identity bit gets dragged out for like another 20 minutes.  Dale keeps trying to tell Madge her husband is a weirdo, and Madge continually blows her off.  When Madge finally gets Dale and Jerry to eat dinner with her, Dale is further put-off by the fact her friend keeps insinuating she should sleep with who Dale thinks is Madge’s husband.  But try as hard as Dale may, she finds Jerry/Horace harder to resist the more they dance together.

Fun fact: This is the dress that Fred Astaire was making fun of in Easter Parade because it shed like nobody’s business and was a pain in the ass to dance with Ginger fought Fred and the studio to wear this gorgeous gown, and she won in the end, but not without earning the nickname “Feathers”.

While dancing with her friend’s husband is acceptable, Dale is immediately furious when Jerry/”Horace” proposes to her.  In order to remove herself from this weird fucking dynamic between her friend and her “husband”, she decides to accept Mr. Beddini’s impromptu marriage proposal and they immediately get hitched.  When Madge is informed of this, she immediately blames her husband Horace for Dale’s poor life decision because it was him that was skeezing her out.  Finally, in the last 20 minutes of the movie, the group realizes that Dale thinks Jerry is Horace, and Jerry runs to correct this assumption and rescue her from the Bridal Suite.  He tap dances his way back into her life, and a slow speed chase ensues when the two of them flee in a gondola.  Dale and Jerry get away thanks to Horace’s valet Bates’ intervention, as he’s been tasked with following Dale and is fully apprised of the situation.  While the rest of the party is dead in the water, Jerry and Dale sing, dance and be merry.

Jerry and Dale decide to marry each other, but they need to get Dale divorced from Mr. Beddini first.  Turns out, the person who posed as a priest was MVP of this story, Bates, so the marriage was never legal.  Dale and Jerry immediately tie the knot and everyone lives happily ever after.  The end.

The acting in this movie is great, and several of the line deliveries from the supporting cast had me on the floor.  The music is catchy and memorable, and the dance numbers, of course, are out of this world.   If the plot wasn’t so fucking tedious, Top Hat would have been one of my favorites.

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#37 Royal Wedding (1951) https://oatymcloafy.com/2021/09/07/37-royal-wedding-1951/ https://oatymcloafy.com/2021/09/07/37-royal-wedding-1951/#respond Tue, 07 Sep 2021 23:19:00 +0000 https://oatymcloafy.com/?p=655 It’s 1947 and the marriage bug is apparently contagious.

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It’s 1947 and the marriage bug is apparently contagious.

Y’know, I’m fairly certain Fred Astaire’s movies comes up on this list more than any other actor or actress.  This is yet another traditional “couple of show folks getting into shenanigans” story, but the one difference here is Jane Powell.  And this week we will focus on her two collaborations with director Stanley Donen.  I will write about Mr. Donen several more times before the end of this project, which is great, because he does some crazy creative things in his films that make them stand outs in this genre.

I was first introduced to Jane in Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (which you’ll be treated to later this week), and boy, she made an impression.  She has a robust voice that holds its own against everyone, especially that sexy baritone of Howard Keel, but I had *no idea* she could dance as well as she does here.  Full transparency, I’ve been binging Fred and Ginger movies because they were leaving HBO Max, so I figured this would be a nice change of pace where I’d be treated to a beautiful voice, but light on the dancing.  This would have been totally fine, not everyone has to be Fred or Ginger.  But nope, Jane Powell can tap dance the pants right off you.

These skills aren’t immediately showcased in the first few performances of this movie, however.  In Royal Wedding, Fred and Jane play Tom and Ellen, a brother and sister dancing duo who select very questionable romance-based musical numbers for their act.  I would SEVERELY roll my eyes at a 30 year age difference for a romantic relationship, but it’s somehow more hilarious that they’re supposed to be siblings because he could feasibly be her father instead of her brother.  Paired with the fact he constantly calls her baby and honey, their on-screen pairing was just steeped in Weird Vibes TM.  For example, their first number together, “Every Night at Seven”, features Fred/Tom as a king making the moves on a maid who works in the palace, his sister, Jane/Ellen.

After their show has completed its run, we’re introduced to the premise of the film – Tom and Ellen’s agent Irving informs them they’ve been invited to England to perform their show during the several week lead-up to THE royal wedding between Queen (then princess) Elizabeth and Phillip Mountbatten.  The self-assured and charismatic Ellen is a bit of a serial dater, and several men are disappointed when she departs on an ocean liner to head across the pond.  Tom, on the other hand, has no interest in dating whatsoever, with his singular focus being their upcoming gig.  This gets awkward when Ellen makes heart eyes at another man on board she would rather spend her time with, and Tom is forced to find ways to entertain himself.

Once the ship’s captain discovers he’s got two famous performers on board, he recruits them to perform after dinner.  They’re warned the ship may be hitting some rough waves, but Tom decides to move forward full speed ahead.  Ellen shrugs her shoulders and uses the opportunity to seduce Lord John, her latest romantic attraction.

Dude, I just love this.  Jane’s voice starts off heavenly and strong, and as the ship hits choppier water the whole number devolves into chaos. I was chuckling at the fruit rolling by, but when the drum barreled into them I totally lost it.  This is clever and impressive, and foreshadows future inside-the-box dance numbers we’ll be treated to.  Also, Jane deserves a medal for sliding around in those heels.

Once the duo arrives in London, Tom accosts a poor woman in the street.  Much like in Swing Time, this lady, Anne, becomes Fred’s new dance partner in the show they’re producing.  He asks her on a date, and it isn’t until after dinner, drinks, and a visit to the woman’s father to shake him down for an alimony payment, that Anne reveals she’s engaged to a jolly old chap from Chicago named Hal that will totally marry her once he’s saved up enough money, never mind he hasn’t called her in 2 months.  Tom continues to date Anne anyway without the promise of romance, while Ellen and John’s relationship gets more serious every time Ellen sings at him.

After several weeks of rehearsal, the show goes off without a hitch, and Jane and Fred have yet another bizarrely-toned number together that features a very strange bit where they put on some really cheap accents.

How are they tap dancing and chewing gum like that?!  And just like, as a general question, why has tap dancing come out of favor in modern day?  It’s so much fun to watch.  When I was a child in the 90’s, my only exposure to tap dancing was little girls shuffling away to “Animal Crackers in my Soup” at the Community Center and Michael Flatley’s showboaty Riverdance phenomenon (which, for someone with Irish heritage, was fucking annoying to be constantly associated with).  Is it because tap dancing is connected to a time of great prosperity and optimism and we haven’t been the mood for it as our mental health has declined?  Or do we not want to be interested in things that our parents (or grandparents) thought were cool?

Anyway, after opening night when Anne’s fiancé Hal fails to call from Chicago and congratulate her, Tom’s rightfully intuits the situation as sus and asks his agent Irving’s British brother Edgar (both played by Peter Lawford in a Parent Trap-esque split-screen situation) to get Irving to conduct a background check on Anne’s Yank “boyfriend”.  Although their relationship is supposed to be platonic while he waits for news from the States, Tom struggles not to get his hopes up as he’s completely smitten with Anne.

“You’re All the World to Me” is the standout performance of this film because Fred blew everyone’s fucking minds by dancing on the furniture, then the walls, and then the ceiling.  It’s so cool to watch, especially since my first exposure of this filming method of a stationary camera hooked to a moving room were MTV-era music videos that didn’t fully take advantage of the medium.

“Virtual Insanity” really fascinated me when I was a child, and the room isn’t even rotating, it’s only sliding around.  Also, I love that when the blood comes out at the end everything remains stationary because they didn’t want to replicate what happens when a roomba sucks up a dog turd.  Whatever happened to Jamiroquai, anyway?  Did Napoleon’s rendition of “Canned Heat” kill their career?  

Guys, this will be the first (and probably only time) a reference I make to Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo is *actually* relevant to the conversation.  It’s the best homage to this, really, so kudos to Michael “Boogaloo Shrimp” Chambers for making dancing on the ceiling look as much fun as Fred Astaire being in love.  Other applications of this technique in music videos are mostly people sliding around and not taking the actual room movement into account during the choreography.  But let me tell you the joy I felt listening to Mark McGrath talk about using Royal Wedding as an inspiration for “Fly”.  That man is full of surprises.

Anyway, after the fun number, we get Fred acting like a creep because he’s discovered that Hal has married someone else, leaving Anne single and available to date.  I swear, this movie’s musical number formula is just Easter Parade with different clothes on.

Singing and dancing about Haiti as an American is… an interesting choice to make while the US were a military presence in their country, simultaneously being a loan shark and a hired murder squad to take out any political dissidents.  But hey, their white people are beautiful, it’s easy to get distracted and forget a hat!

I take that back, the alternative of them not casting a single black person to play the Haitians is the dancers wearing blackface, which is objectively worse.  And y’all haven’t even seen my Swing Time post, yet.  It’s not a Fred Astaire movie unless we get at least one questionable dance number that references a culture he’s not a part of.  Not to mention, this is just a bizarre number to end the movie with as it has absolutely nothing to do with the story whatsoever.

But finally, the day of the royal wedding arrives and Ellen and Tom decide to take a cue from Elizabeth and Phillip and impulsively marry John and Anne even though they’ve only known each other a few weeks.  The end.

Royal Wedding features several outstanding dance numbers that not only are iconic in their own right, but also changed how choreography and cinematography collaborate.  It’s unfortunate these numbers are strung together with a plot that’s a bit of a dud.  Thankfully Gentlemen Prefer Blondes comes a few years later where we get an entertaining version of the story of a double act traveling to Europe on a ship, dancing in a gym, and beginning a romance that ends with a double wedding.

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#44 Easter Parade (1948) https://oatymcloafy.com/2021/04/04/44-easter-parade-1948/ https://oatymcloafy.com/2021/04/04/44-easter-parade-1948/#respond Mon, 05 Apr 2021 01:56:00 +0000 https://oatymcloafy.com/?p=444 The Irving Berlin predecessor of "She's All That" starring two industry titans that are almost as famous as Freddie Prinze Jr. and Rachel Leigh Cook.

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Judy Garland and Fred Astaire star in another Irving Berlin holiday vehicle, Easter Parade.  Or as I like to think of it, the predecessor of She’s All That.

We’re introduced to Don, who is super focused on buying flowers, hats, and useless trinkets for his dancing partner, Nadine, because Easter is notorious for capitalist overconsumption.  In fact, he immediately cons a child out of buying a stuffed rabbit by playing drums with his feet.  Fred Astaire is like the uncle every parent hates because they buy shit for their kids that make a ton of noise.

Wow, a song about drums that features someone playing the drums.  Take note, Carmen Jones.

Returning to the hotel with his large bounty of gifts, Nadine (Ann Miller) confesses to Don she no longer wants to date or work with him, and instead has an offer to headline her own show.  Don tries to convince her to stay in his overbearing grasp by romantically singing in her ear, which only serves to skeeze me out since he’s 50 and she’s half his age.

Like, sure it’s Fred Astaire, and he’s ridiculously charming and a great dancer, but like… he could be her dad.  I will never understand why Hollywood cast and continues to cast movies like this; it’s uncomfortable.

Anyway, Don takes it like a champ and drowns his sorrows with a good ‘ol misogynistic bartender.  Riding high on the false assumption he taught Nadine all she knows, he vows to find another ingénue to imbue all his dancing knowledge, and if it makes Nadine jealous, so be it.

Enter Hannah Brown (Judy Garland), a painfully twee bar chorus dancer who sings about Michigan in a way nobody from Michigan would ever sing about Michigan.

He convinces her, because he’s famous, to quit her job and dance with him.  She, unfortunately, turns out to be a terrible dancer, which he wouldn’t expect from someone who is paid to dance nightly.  When she reveals she literally cannot differentiate her left and her right leg, he almost gives up, but like me, his heart melted from the moment she said “Good Morning” to him and he labors on.

On their lunch break, they run smack-dab into the Easter Parade, which is apparently a thing where people get all gussied up and walk down the street.  Nadine struts by them, living her best and most fabulous life.  Hannah is in awe of her, but Don, still salty from their breakup, reiterates that Hannah is going to destroy Nadine, whether she likes it or not.

Don then commences with plan “Make My Replacement Girlfriend Look as Much Like My Ex as Possible” by buying Hannah a bunch of clothes that don’t suit her and changing her name to Juanita because it is more “exotic”, which is some racist bullshit.  Hannah is also forced to prove her worth to Don by turning heads on the street.  She handles this in a creative and unique way.

Judy Garland is hilarious in this movie; I could not stop giggling at her.  

Juanita and Hewes enter the vaudeville circuit with their new act, which goes dubiously at best.

Nadine and Don attempt to have lunch afterward, but it goes about as well as his performance with Hannah.  He tries to convince Nadine she’d be nothing without him, and she chides him for trying to clone her.  Don then decides on his own volition (and definitely not because Nadine said her friends were mocking him) that maybe Hannah would be more comfortable if she wasn’t imitating someone else.  Hannah is thrilled with their change of direction and knocks every performance out of the park, gaining them notoriety and landing them an audition with Mr. Ziegfeld himself.

It is quickly revealed that Nadine is the headliner of the show Hannah and Don were auditioning for, and when Hannah finds out that Don and Nadine used to date, she is understandably upset.  He reassures her there’s no hard feelings there, and turns down the Ziegfeld show because, as he tells Hannah, her and Nadine don’t belong on the same stage.

Except Hannah is right and Don’s not totally over Nadine.  He attends her new show to see how good it is, and hoooooly shit, Ann Miller, you are a legend.

I think there’s only one other Ann Miller movie on this list and that is not enough.  I just want to relive these numbers over and over again.  I came to find out later that she filmed this with a BROKEN FUCKING BACK after her drunk husband pushed her down a flight of stairs causing the miscarriage of their child and I just… dude.  I have no words to describe how goddamn strong this woman was.  She also, according to biographer Walter Isaacson, gave war criminal Kissinger lip when she saw him on a date with Bond girl Jill St. John, questioning why he was having fun in public while “our boys in Vietnam are getting their heads shot off.”  Queen. Shit.

Don uses this as motivation to snag Hannah and him their own headlining show, and then celebrates their achievement by making out with her.  He realized they were in love this whole time, and that making Nadine jealous wasn’t as important as their new endeavor…  Sure.  Hannah sings Don and Nadine’s famous song in response and yeah, this whole thing is creepy, I don’t like it.

Opening night for Hannah and Hewes’ new show arrives, and it is spectacularly received.  Fred Astaire is exuberant, and you cannot ask for a better performer than him.  He exudes an effortless joy that is insanely infectious.

The number he and Judy share after this one is… a choice.  Even though Judy is ridiculously funny, I’m not going to attempt to defend this.

Afterward, they celebrate the opening of their own show by crashing Nadine’s show directly afterward, because Jesus, who wouldn’t want to watch Ann Miller?

This poor woman, who broke it off with Don because she wanted to strike it out on her own (and by the way, wasn’t in love with him…), gets a gig headlining a show that she CLEARLY deserves.  Don not only tries to replace her with literally anybody, but he dresses his new pet up and teaches her how to dance like Nadine.  Nadine’s friends have to tell her this information, which obviously embarrasses her to the point where she has to confront Don about it.  He then shows up with with his new girlfriend to audition their act at Nadine’s new place of business.  He’s so butthurt by Nadine standing up for herself he decides to headline his own show, only to then steal the glory from Nadine’s show by showing up as an audience member immediately afterward, pulling all the focus to him and his new girlfriend.  Nadine doesn’t crack under pressure, and graciously asks him to dance with her, presumably to prove to Hannah that this man is still hung up on his ex, and Nadine’s painted as the villain for it.

Also, it’s pretty clear Don was pigeon-holing her into this ballroom dancing role, since Nadine clearly can tap dance and sing just as good as Hannah.  No wonder she wanted to break free of their partnership, cheese and crackers.  #JusticeforNadine

Anyway, Hannah is broken hearted by Don and Nadine’s dance and runs off to get drunk at the bar where they met.  When Don runs into her later, he convinces Hannah him and Nadine’s dance was their version of breakup sex, and that he wants to move forward with his partnership with Hannah.  She believes this for whatever reason, and struts down the lane during the Easter Parade with Don on her arm and a shiny new engagement ring on her finger.  The End.

This movie, by all accounts, was fun for everyone to film, and it shows.  This was supposed to be a darker movie with Vincente Minnelli directing, but I’m glad with the director change came a light, fluffy story about dancing and hats.  While the plot did elicit a lot of eye rolls from me, the songs and dance numbers are great, and there isn’t a weak link in the cast list.  

Happy Zombie Jesus Day, everyone!

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