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Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Gene Kelly & Rita Hayworth in "Cover Girl" (new breed of musical - essay)

"Broadway song-and-dance man Gene Kelly made his screen debut opposite Judy Garland in MGM’s 'For Me and My Gal' (1942), which shared 'Yankee Doodle'’s black-and-white nostalgia for the previous war’s era. It was a huge hit, establishing Garland as an adult star and setting up Kelly as a threat to Astaire.

MGM didn’t seize the moment, dumping Kelly into a supporting role in the inane 'DuBarry Was a Lady' (opposite Lucille Ball) and a starring role in the lumpy 'Thousands Cheer', plus a few low-budget war dramas.

"Rita Hayworth had become a star in 1941 on loan to Warners for 'The Strawberry Blonde' and to Fox for 'Blood and Sand', then back home to Columbia for 'You’ll Never Get Rich' opposite Astaire. In 1942, she starred in Fox’s 'My Gal Sal', a Technicolor period musical in the Betty Grable mold, and was then reteamed with Astaire for 'You Were Never Lovelier', a pleasing, modest musical with divine Jerome Kern-Johnny Mercer tunes.

As with Kelly, it was time for Hayworth to get a vehicle that maximized her potential and raised her position to the superstar level. It came for Kelly and Hayworth in the same package: Columbia’s 'Cover Girl' (Kelly was borrowed from MGM).

Leslie Brooks, Eve Arden, Gene Kelly and Rita Hayworth in "Cover Girl" (1944) directed by Charles Vidor

With this picture, the forties musical seemed to have found a forward-looking identity. In its freshness, 'Cover Girl' also sowed the seeds for the sublime exuberance of the genre’s best works of the 1950s. Its impact would be felt throughout Kelly’s career, and it is easy to spot its influence on specific works of his. It must be said that much about 'Cover Girl' is conventional, even for 1944: the turn-of-the-century flashbacks, the backstage showbiz tribulations, the love-conquers-all notions.

Yet, it is what’s new about it that dominates: Kelly’s virile dancing; Hayworth’s emergence as a screen goddess; a terrific Jerome Kern-Ira Gershwin score; the stylized use of color; and the razzle-dazzle camerawork and editing.

Rusty Parker (Rita Hayworth), a beautiful redheaded dancer with ambition, is a chorine at a lowbrow Brooklyn nightclub run by Danny McGuire (Gene Kelly), a war veteran returned home after being wounded in Libya. Danny also performs in the club’s revue (his wounds have obviously healed beautifully), and he and Rusty happen to be in love.

Their situation is upset when Vanity magazine chooses Rusty to be their “Golden Wedding Girl.” She becomes a celebrity, even lures the elite to Brooklyn to see her dance, and is soon being wooed professionally (and personally) by Broadway producer Noel Wheaton (Lee Bowman). Will Danny fight to keep Rusty, or will he refuse to stand in the way of her glittering future? Rusty is torn between Danny and everything she has dreamed of attaining.

Refreshingly, the movie does not turn into one of those career-or-marriage struggles so prevalent in forties films. Rusty will have to choose between two men, represented by two New York boroughs, but there is never any discussion about her not performing.

The movie has not worked so hard to put her over as a dancing goddess only to make her a housewife at the end. 'Cover Girl'’s screenplay was written by a woman, Virginia Van Upp. However, there is still plenty of old-style Hollywood moralizing: it is better to do things the hard way than to grab the easy, quick ride to fame; money and luxuries will not make you happy (and may even make you unhappy); Manhattan represents the sins of material excess whereas Brooklyn represents the values of decent, hardworking people. To be fair, the Manhattan and Brooklyn portrayed here are fantasy places —states of mind— from which Rusty must choose.

The first showstopper is “Make Way for Tomorrow” (with lyrics by E. Y. Harburg), begun by Kelly, Hayworth, and Phil Silvers late at night at a Brooklyn oyster bar, site of their weekly pearl-hunting ritual. Kelly and his assistant, Stanley Donen (also on loan from MGM), obviously remembered this number when constructing Singin’ in the Rain’s “Good Morning,” another opportunity for two men and a woman to unleash their positive energy. Kelly’s classic 'Singin’ in the Rain' solo was also influenced by “Make Way for Tomorrow” in the way he reacts to a nighttime street and those he encounters (including a cop) on it. Even garbagecan lids would be back when Kelly danced with Dan Dailey and Michael Kidd in 'It’s Always Fair Weather' (1955), the final Kelly-Donen musical.

After Rusty becomes a media sensation (but before Broadway beckons), she and Danny put a snazzy new number into the club’s revue. “Put Me to the Test” is the first sexy duet of Kelly’s career, and Hayworth’s too. (I love her numbers with Astaire in 'You Were Never Lovelier', but their dynamic does not have the amatory friskiness she shared with Kelly.) It is set in a dress shop, with Kelly as an employee (with a feather duster) and Hayworth one of the store’s six models. As they jump, glide, and embrace, the number is a celebration of their freedom, their beauty, their possibilities. It is unlike the Fred and Ginger dances; libido is explicit rather than subtextual. “Put Me to the Test” is more akin to the numbers that Kelly, and even Astaire, would do with Cyd Charisse and Vera-Ellen in upcoming musicals.

'Cover Girl' does have one sequence that is more in the classic spirit of Fred and Ginger, set to the gorgeous ballad “Long Ago and Far Away.” After-hours at the club, Hayworth, wearing an off-the-shoulder pale-blue gown with three rows of ruffles on its skirt, sings (dubbed by Martha Mears) to Kelly, in the film’s most awkward burst-into-song transition. The brief, lilting dance that results is lushly romantic, more as a worship service for Hayworth’s beauty than as memorable choreography, but the song is so good that it hardly matters what they do.

'Cover Girl' is probably best remembered as the film that contains Kelly’s first real innovation as a movie-musical artist. With Stanley Donen, he devised the “Alter Ego” dance, a rather sophisticated nervous breakdown. Danny is torn between giving up on Rusty or fighting for her. A second Danny, transparent as a ghost, appears to him in a store window and speaks to him. The alter ego thinks Danny should let Rusty go, but Danny can’t accept that. Dressed identically (in a plain suit and a bow tie), they dance their power struggle, with the alter ego trying to manipulate and control Danny, who is sometimes weak and malleable, sometimes combative.

That’s the psychological drama being waged, the fight within Danny himself. Kelly’s intensity and the darkness of the concept make for a thrilling sequence. It is the downer version of his “Singin’ in the Rain” street romp.

If the disparate forces at work here (the Kelly-Donen influx from MGM, the Columbia-backed push for Hayworth’s superstardom, the wartime ambiance, the time-worn flashbacks, the spectacle of the color design) seem to be at cross-purposes, it hardly matters since it is all in the name of putting on a humdinger of a show. At the directing helm was Charles Vidor, an underrated figure of the studio system, who made several fine films noted for their striking visual sense. He was particularly good with color, making his palette a crucial part of the dramatic content in films like 'Love Me or Leave Me' (1955) and 'The Swan' (1956).

The hypnotic world of artifice created by the entire crew hovers near kitsch but transcends it. It is a film in which a receptionist has a pink phone, a grand staircase seems never to end, a cabbie costume (Hayworth’s) sports a mini-skirt. 'Cover Girl' received Oscar nominations for color cinematography, color art direction, sound, and song (“Long Ago and Far Away”). It won the Oscar for “scoring of a musical,” beating MGM’s 'Meet Me in St. Louis', which was released at the tail end of 1944.

'Cover Girl' may not be artistically or dramatically as accomplished as 'Meet Me in St. Louis', but it paved the way for the kind of vigor that Kelly and Donen would bring to the New York locations of 'On the Town' (1949). With the Kelly-Donen influence on such exhilarating display, Columbia’s 'Cover Girl' is figuratively the first important MGM musical of the 1940s. Kelly then made 'Anchors Aweigh' (1945), beginning his glorious decade of actual MGM musical successes. He would reteam with Phil Silvers on MGM’s 'Summer Stock' (1950).

It is easy to dismiss 'Cover Girl' as manufactured, silly, and overproduced, yet it is a knockout of Hollywood craftsmanship, and the invention and zest that went into it should not be disregarded". -"Cover Girl: Gene Kelly, Rita Hayworth and the breed of new musical" essay by John DiLeo (2011).

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Gene Kelly ("Crazy for my Baby") video

Cyd Charisse and Gene Kelly in "It's Always Fair Weather" (1955) directed by Stanley Donen and Gene Kelly


Gene Kelly ("Crazy for my Baby") video. Soundtrack: Glenn Miller Orchestra ("I'm Old Fashioned"), "Ya Ya" by Lee Dorsay and "Crazy about My Baby" by Randy Newman.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Jake Gyllenhaal attends the 'Farewell My Queen' Berlinale premiere

Jake Gyllenhaal attending the ‘Les Adieux De La Reine’/'Farewell My Queen' Premiere on February 9, 2012 in Berlin, during the The 62nd Berlinale Film Festival

Wednesday, February 08, 2012

Jake Gyllenhaal is greeted with flowers by Berlin Festival director

Jake Gyllenhaal arriving at Berling Tegel Airport in Germany, on 7th February 2012

Jake Gyllenhaal will be participating as a jury member the for the 62nd annual Berlin International Film Festival.

Jake was greeted by a throng of awaiting fans including festival director Dieter Kosslick who offered Jake a tiny bouquet of flowers, which brought a smile to the actor’s face.

Jake Gyllenhaal with Charlotte Gainsbourg at the Berlinale Festival Jury Photocall on 9th February 2012

Poker Face: Gene Kelly in "On the Town", Poker Games Online

Vera-Ellen and Gene Kelly in "On the Town" (1949) directed by Gene Kelly & Stanley Donen

Gene Kelly puts on a poker face when he's paired with Alice Pearce in a scene from "On The Town"

"We sailed the seas and played a bit of poker way in Mandalay,
We've walked the streets till the night was over,
And we can safely say, the most fabulous sight is New York.
In the light of day, our only day. New York, New York, it's a wonderful town" -"New York, New York (It's a Helluva Town)", "On the Town" opening number

"This film was a milestone," Gene Kelly said in 1977. "It was the first musical to be shot on location. We took the musical off the sound stage and showed that it could be realistic."

"Every time I hit Las Vegas take a good look at it just to make sure it's still there" -"The Prowler" (1951) directed by Joseph Losey

Officer Webb Garwood (Van Heflin) returns to Susan Gilvray's (Evelyn Keyes) residence initiating a romantic relationship game. With no prowler in sight, a looming Californian hacienda in front of him and a beautiful woman alone inside, Garwood decides to take on the titular role without even changing out of his uniform.

He and Susan reunite and Webb pledges both innocence and love. The couple gets married. Webb quits the police department and fulfills his dream: buying a truck stop motel next to a busy freeway in Las Vegas, Nevada! Garwood believes that his ship has finally come in. A closer view reveals that Webb's ambition isn't a gold bargain.

Susan Sarandon received her first Oscar nomination for playing croupier Sally Matthews, in "Atlantic City" (1980) directed by Louis Malle, who handles poker chips with aspirations to become a blackjack dealer and move to Monte Carlo.

In "Casino Royale" (2006) there are thrilling adventures and romance amidst rounds of poker culminating in an engrossing high-stakes poker game in Montenegro. “Money Penny” Lynd (Eva Green) assists James bluffing her way through poker and later a love story.

If you want to play online poker you'll enjoy your favorite poker and casino games withouth limitations, using the possibility of downloading software for playing poker in your computer and catching up with international poker events.

Connecting online you can learn how to play poker: a wide variety of poker games including No Limit, Pot Limit, as well as varieties of Omaha, Stud and Razz, and you'll find the first interactive gaming site where players can enter a poker tournament, while they see (poker face to poker face), hear and talk to each other, competing for cash and prizes.

Tuesday, February 07, 2012

Gene Kelly ("I've got a crush on you") video


Gene Kelly ("I've got a crush on you") video

Gene Kelly and Leslie Caron in "An American In Paris" (1951) directed by Vincente Minnelli

Soundtrack featuring Artie Shaw & Helen Forrest: "The One I Love", "I've got a crush on you", "Paradise" and Glenn Miller Orchestra: "Moonlight Cocktail".

Cover Girls: Lauren Bacall (with Bogart) and Rita Hayworth (with Gene Kelly)

Lauren Bacall, 1942 - Vintage Gelatin Silver Print

Lauren Bacall was an usherette briefly, then got a couple of minor stage jobs and several modelling assignments. One Harper's Bazaar cover was seen by Howard Hawks, who tested her and signed her to a seven-year contract, 32 weeks a year. Columbia asked her to be the Harper's Bazaar girl in "Cover Girl", but she knew Hawks' offer was likely to provide her a better future.

Hawks showed the test to Warners and cast her opposite Humphrey Bogart in "To Have and Have Not" (1944).


Jinx Falkenburg, Gene Kelly and Rita Hayworth in "Cover Girl" (1944) directed by Charles Vidor

One insider' recount during the filming of "Cover Girl": "These ladies [wardrobe & make-up personnel at Columbia studios] are one of a kind - their memory of COVER GIRL is unbelievable - they showed me photos of the backstage of 40 plus hairdressers running around taking care of business and things that I haven't seen in my lifetime. I was in a treat for the ages and they taught me what was like back then.

Gene Kelly was not really a great egotist - but in COVER GIRL he became 2nd Director of the movie was it difficult on set. Gene was a humble man and had a heart of gold - Harry Cohn to make life miserable for both Rita Hayworth and Gene Kelly. Cohn also told Gene Kelly that he would get top billing - but, he didn't - he gave it to Rita instead. The assistant/aide told me that Gene Kelly was one of the nicest man that she had ever met. His smile warmed her heart.

Rita thanked Gene for his honesty and their friendship grew even greater afterwards. She considered him to be most electrifying male entertainer of all time and told him that his performance in 'Singing in the Rain' to be his ultimate best musical ever. Gene knew that Rita being mistreated at Columbia and he tried his best to get Rita to work for MGM instead.

Gene Kelly was doing movies, stage, and television work at the same time – and he regretted of not having a chance to do another Kelly/Hayworth movie/musical again. Gene truly wanted to do another musical with her but regretted not being able to do so and felt really bad about it. Their agents tried to coax both Cohn and Meyers to cooperate once more do another Hayworth/Kelly musical but Cohn and Meyers told both of them to get lost.