Jake Gyllenhaal is in negotiations to star in Motor City, the Dark Castle revenge thriller being directed by Albert Hughes. Warner Bros. is distributing.
Gyllenhaal would replace Dominic Cooper, who was previously cast but exited due to a scheduling conflict with another project, Cities.
Gary Oldman and Amber Heard already have been cast in the pic, about a small-time hood (Gyllenhaal) who is framed and sent to prison by a drug trafficker, only to relentlessly exact revenge years later to get back the woman he loves. A May production start in Berlin is being planned. Chad St. John wrote the script. Joel Silver and Andrew Rona are producing. Douglas Urbanski and Ethan Erwin are exec producing.
Jake Gyllenhaal in "Source Code" (2011) directed by Duncan Jones
Gyllenhaal last starred in Source Code, which grossed almost $150 million wordwide, and has David Ayers’ cop drama End of Watch in the can. He is repped by WME and Bloom Hergott. Source: www.hollywoodreporter.com
UPDATE: "It looked good there for a day but Jake Gyllenhaal’s deal to star in the Albert Hughes-directed Motor City has veered off the road. Talks fell apart, over scheduling, I hear. The actor wanted to push the dates and financier Dark Castle did not. They are putting together lists for another actor to star in the film in the role of an ex-military man who is framed and sees his life and gal taken away by the bad guy. Gary Oldman and Amber Heard are already set in the Chad St. John-scripted film. Source: www.deadline.com
Thursday, March 08, 2012
Gene Kelly and Frank Sinatra in "Pal Joey"
Gene Kelly plays Gabey, the sailor on a 24-hour shore leave frantically looking for his dream girl, "Miss Turnstiles" of the month, Ivy Smith (Vera-Ellen) in the film "On the Town" (1949)
Roger Scruton argued that any instance of sexual desire possesses an individualising intentionality. By this he means that sexual desire is founded upon the thought of the other as the specific individual he or she is. That is, there can be no sexual desire which exists and then ‘attaches’ itself to a specific individual. From this account it also follows that there cannot be any such sexual desire as an unfocused desire for no particular man or woman.
Vera-Ellen and Gene Kelly in "On the Town" (1949) directed by Stanley Donen & Gene Kelly
Scruton considers the case of the sailor storming ashore with the thought ‘woman’ in his mind: he might be thought to desire a woman, but no particular woman. Scruton claims that until the sailor actually meets a specific woman he desires, he desired no woman; he was rather in the condition of desiring to desire. Such a view of sexual desire has to find an adequate response to such phenomena as that of Casanova, described by Stefan Zweig: 'Sex goes through the rhythm of the year, in man and woman, ceaselessly changing - the rhythm of the sun in his relation to the earth'. -"Sexual Desire" by Christopher Hamilton - Richmond Journal of Philosophy (2004)
No mere pretender was Kelly, playing with happiness. Rather he was happy, often to the extent of appearing fully flushed. A most joyous, most happy dancing fella! A filmic Puck. A modern-day Pan. Full of dancing life force, and most contagious in his exuberance and merriment. -Pittsburgh Post Gazette (1967)
"Pal Joey" starring Frank Sinatra, Kim Novak and Rita Hayworth, directed by George Sidney in 1957, is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of Twilight Time with an AVC encoded 1080p transfer in 1.85:1.
The pluses far outweigh the negatives here, with some incredibly lushly saturated color, and excellent fine detail which brings out every nuance in the stunning Jean Louis costumes. Bonus features: Isolated score track, Backstage and at Home with Kim Novak featurette, Original theatrical trailer, and Liner notes by Julie Kirgo.
In the last week of 1952, Frank Sinatra went into Columbia’s Hollywood studio and recorded three songs in high style. Axel Stordahl arranged and conducted, and for the first time Bill Miller was sitting at the piano. The first number, Rodgers and Hart’s “I Could Write a Book,” marked a new artistic peak. This song had debuted on Broadway in 'Pal Joey' in 1940, starring Gene Kelly.
Gene Kelly and Frank Sinatra with Esther Williams in "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" (1949)
Gene Kelly was unlike anybody Sinatra had met in Hollywood. Handsome, tough, cheerful, and athletically brilliant, Kelly was a walking paradox: a blue-collar jock who happened to be a superlative dancer, the opposite of the slim, ethereally elegant Fred Astaire. Sinatra was intimidated by Kelly's sheer dancing ability. -"Frank: The Voice" by James Kaplan (2011)
Gene Kelly in "Pal Joey" on Broadway (premiered on December 25, 1940, at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre). Directed by George Abbott with choreography by Robert Alton, the opening-night cast included Gene Kelly as Joey Evans, Vivienne Segal as Vera, and June Havoc as Gladys. Van Johnson and Stanley Donen were also in the cast.
Gene Kelly and Vivienne Segal in 'Pal Joey' on Broadway - “In Our Little Den of Iniquity” number.
Joey Evans, as an unsympathetic antihero, is a striking departure from the usual musical comedy formula. Richard Rodgers said: "Joey was not disreputable because he was mean, but because he had too much imagination to behave himself, and because he was a little weak."
In Chicago in the late 1930s, Joey Evans, a second-rate dancer and nightclub MC, a charming "heel" with big plans, schemes to get his dream –his own nightclub– "Chez Joey". He meets young and naive Linda English outside a pet shop, and, impressing her with his grandiose lies, they are romantically attracted ("I Could Write a Book"). In the nightclub, the older, wealthy but bored married socialite, Vera Simpson comes in with her friends and becomes interested in Joey as the chorus girls are doing a song-and-dance number ("That Terrific Rainbow").
"This young man is genuinely life-saving to Pal Joey for, if the chief part were not properly cast, the new musical show might have been too merciless for comfort. Mr Kelly combines a certain amount of straightforward personal charm with the realism of his portrait so that Joey actually achieves the feat of being at once a heel and a hero". -Herald Tribune (1940)
"In terms of a Broadway man, Gene Kelly was playing a tricky role: a very brash, cocky, sure person, who was very randy with the girls, but who was needy and not well educated, which made him funny. He was an energetic, fresh, aggressive Irish-American presence, which had a great charm". -Stanley Donen
"Scratch a heel and you find Gene Kelly, who isn’t a heel at all. As Joey Evans in the new musical comedy 'Pal Joey', Gene is about the heeliest heel that ever stepped on a neck, but off-stage he’s a friendly Irish lad who started a dancing school to help pay his way through Pittsburgh University, barnstormed night clubs from New York to Dallas and made himself known to Broadway as the hoofer in William Saroyan’s 'Time of Your Life'. -The Day (1941)
Joey is thoroughly nasty – a braggart, a cheat, a wastrel who takes things as they come and is always on the lookout for ‘mice’ (young women). “Yes,” said Gene Kelly as he finished a midday breakfast, “Joey isn’t bad – he just doesn’t know the difference. He’s an ignorant, low class bum with nothing but good looks and a good line”. -New York Times (March 1941)
"There is one scene where the ingénue, Leila Ernst, comes on, and she wears a blue dress that is not as blue as her eyes. It is a bright blue, but not as bright. You know, that fascinates me. Every night I look at her eyes instead of putting myself over as I should be putting myself over all the time.” -Gene Kelly
In an interview to the Los Angeles Times in 1994, Gene Kelly talked about his affinity for his leading ladies. "You must make the lady look good," he said. "If she looks good I think the dance will look good".
Roger Scruton argued that any instance of sexual desire possesses an individualising intentionality. By this he means that sexual desire is founded upon the thought of the other as the specific individual he or she is. That is, there can be no sexual desire which exists and then ‘attaches’ itself to a specific individual. From this account it also follows that there cannot be any such sexual desire as an unfocused desire for no particular man or woman.
Vera-Ellen and Gene Kelly in "On the Town" (1949) directed by Stanley Donen & Gene Kelly
Scruton considers the case of the sailor storming ashore with the thought ‘woman’ in his mind: he might be thought to desire a woman, but no particular woman. Scruton claims that until the sailor actually meets a specific woman he desires, he desired no woman; he was rather in the condition of desiring to desire. Such a view of sexual desire has to find an adequate response to such phenomena as that of Casanova, described by Stefan Zweig: 'Sex goes through the rhythm of the year, in man and woman, ceaselessly changing - the rhythm of the sun in his relation to the earth'. -"Sexual Desire" by Christopher Hamilton - Richmond Journal of Philosophy (2004)
No mere pretender was Kelly, playing with happiness. Rather he was happy, often to the extent of appearing fully flushed. A most joyous, most happy dancing fella! A filmic Puck. A modern-day Pan. Full of dancing life force, and most contagious in his exuberance and merriment. -Pittsburgh Post Gazette (1967)
"Pal Joey" starring Frank Sinatra, Kim Novak and Rita Hayworth, directed by George Sidney in 1957, is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of Twilight Time with an AVC encoded 1080p transfer in 1.85:1.
The pluses far outweigh the negatives here, with some incredibly lushly saturated color, and excellent fine detail which brings out every nuance in the stunning Jean Louis costumes. Bonus features: Isolated score track, Backstage and at Home with Kim Novak featurette, Original theatrical trailer, and Liner notes by Julie Kirgo.
In the last week of 1952, Frank Sinatra went into Columbia’s Hollywood studio and recorded three songs in high style. Axel Stordahl arranged and conducted, and for the first time Bill Miller was sitting at the piano. The first number, Rodgers and Hart’s “I Could Write a Book,” marked a new artistic peak. This song had debuted on Broadway in 'Pal Joey' in 1940, starring Gene Kelly.
Gene Kelly and Frank Sinatra with Esther Williams in "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" (1949)
Gene Kelly was unlike anybody Sinatra had met in Hollywood. Handsome, tough, cheerful, and athletically brilliant, Kelly was a walking paradox: a blue-collar jock who happened to be a superlative dancer, the opposite of the slim, ethereally elegant Fred Astaire. Sinatra was intimidated by Kelly's sheer dancing ability. -"Frank: The Voice" by James Kaplan (2011)
Gene Kelly in "Pal Joey" on Broadway (premiered on December 25, 1940, at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre). Directed by George Abbott with choreography by Robert Alton, the opening-night cast included Gene Kelly as Joey Evans, Vivienne Segal as Vera, and June Havoc as Gladys. Van Johnson and Stanley Donen were also in the cast.
Gene Kelly and Vivienne Segal in 'Pal Joey' on Broadway - “In Our Little Den of Iniquity” number.
Joey Evans, as an unsympathetic antihero, is a striking departure from the usual musical comedy formula. Richard Rodgers said: "Joey was not disreputable because he was mean, but because he had too much imagination to behave himself, and because he was a little weak."
In Chicago in the late 1930s, Joey Evans, a second-rate dancer and nightclub MC, a charming "heel" with big plans, schemes to get his dream –his own nightclub– "Chez Joey". He meets young and naive Linda English outside a pet shop, and, impressing her with his grandiose lies, they are romantically attracted ("I Could Write a Book"). In the nightclub, the older, wealthy but bored married socialite, Vera Simpson comes in with her friends and becomes interested in Joey as the chorus girls are doing a song-and-dance number ("That Terrific Rainbow").
"This young man is genuinely life-saving to Pal Joey for, if the chief part were not properly cast, the new musical show might have been too merciless for comfort. Mr Kelly combines a certain amount of straightforward personal charm with the realism of his portrait so that Joey actually achieves the feat of being at once a heel and a hero". -Herald Tribune (1940)
"In terms of a Broadway man, Gene Kelly was playing a tricky role: a very brash, cocky, sure person, who was very randy with the girls, but who was needy and not well educated, which made him funny. He was an energetic, fresh, aggressive Irish-American presence, which had a great charm". -Stanley Donen
"Scratch a heel and you find Gene Kelly, who isn’t a heel at all. As Joey Evans in the new musical comedy 'Pal Joey', Gene is about the heeliest heel that ever stepped on a neck, but off-stage he’s a friendly Irish lad who started a dancing school to help pay his way through Pittsburgh University, barnstormed night clubs from New York to Dallas and made himself known to Broadway as the hoofer in William Saroyan’s 'Time of Your Life'. -The Day (1941)
Joey is thoroughly nasty – a braggart, a cheat, a wastrel who takes things as they come and is always on the lookout for ‘mice’ (young women). “Yes,” said Gene Kelly as he finished a midday breakfast, “Joey isn’t bad – he just doesn’t know the difference. He’s an ignorant, low class bum with nothing but good looks and a good line”. -New York Times (March 1941)
"There is one scene where the ingénue, Leila Ernst, comes on, and she wears a blue dress that is not as blue as her eyes. It is a bright blue, but not as bright. You know, that fascinates me. Every night I look at her eyes instead of putting myself over as I should be putting myself over all the time.” -Gene Kelly
In an interview to the Los Angeles Times in 1994, Gene Kelly talked about his affinity for his leading ladies. "You must make the lady look good," he said. "If she looks good I think the dance will look good".
Wednesday, March 07, 2012
Gene Kelly in "Combat Fatigue Irritability"
Hollywood legend Gene Kelly stars in this 1945 Navy training film dramatizing the condition known at the time as "combat fatigue." The film delves into the symptoms and treatment of what we now call Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Kelly had been commissioned a year earlier as a Lieutenant Junior Grade in the United States Navy. Source: Naval History and Heritage Command, Photographic Section, UMO-1
Tuesday, March 06, 2012
Gene Kelly: romantic leader, gender performance in musicals
Gene Kelly, Jean Hagen and Donald O'Connor in "Singin' in the Rain" (1952) directed by Stanley Donen & Gene Kelly
“Singin’ in the Rain” (1952), called by many the best musical ever made, splashes us not only with the rain falling on Gene Kelly’s dance number, but a collage of 1920s era styles in clothing, slang, and movie business. The dance numbers poke gentle fun at the speech coaches, the stunts, a montage of flappers, college boys, gossip columnists, and Hollywood parties.
William Holden and Gloria Swanson in "Sunset Blvd." (1950) directed by Billy Wilder
In “Sunset Blvd.” (1950), Gloria Swanson’s own ornate, decaying Hollywood mansion also has a movie screen in her living room where she views only her own silent pictures. Swanson shows us her own youth, her own career down the tubes, the dark side of the bubbly era, and the fallout after the destruction. “Singin’ in the Rain” is as giddy as a senior class play, and “Sunset Blvd.” is an obituary.
Judy Garland and Gene Kelly in “For Me and My Gal” (1942) directed by Busby Berkely.
Like “Yankee Doodle Dandy”, made in the same year, “For Me and My Gal” (1942) combines the world of vaudeville with a world at war. The loss of innocence comes wrapped in spats over high button shoes, song and dance.
Judy Garland stars, with Gene Kelly in his first film, and George Murphy. Garland's partner is a nice fellow who gives her up to the rakish Gene Kelly so that she gets to be a vaudeville star.
Mr. Kelly is fresh as paint and full of applesauce. His character Harry Palmer seems an arrogant opportunist when he sucks up to an operatic headliner in her own railroad car.
We have the traditional vaudevillian mélange of acts, the whistle stops in small towns across the country, uncomfortable train upper berths, and the ever-constant desire to headline at New York City’s Palace Theater. It’s a rough and ready world, the chosen way of life of special people.
When Miss Garland’s kid brother is killed in battle, she leaves Kelly and the act, and their troubled romance, to go to France and perform for the troops. Kelly, who has kept himself out of the Army with a rather rash “accident”, sinks as low as he finally can in her eyes.
To redeem himself, he hops over to France as well to perform, and ends up being a hero. World War I is significant for the backdrop of a movie about vaudeville, as it was probably the first war that professional entertainers joined together in a voluntary troupe, sort of quasi-official units, to visit the troops. They also sold Liberty Bonds and raised money for Red Cross and other various charity drives. This would all be repeated on a grander scale for World War II.
At first, Gene Kelly balks at joining them, “You don’t think I’m going over there and sing a bunch of silly songs while all those guys are getting their heads shot off?” But he changes his mind, becomes a hero and finds redemption. Even if he had not become a hero, he still would have been doing his part.
Ernest Hemingway wrote in “A Farewell to Arms” that “Perhaps wars weren’t won anymore. Maybe they went on forever. Maybe it was another Hundred Years War.” The other tragedy of World War I was, obviously, its legacy of an imperfect peace that led to World War II.
After all the song and dance, though the war was won, the generation that won it, particularly its chroniclers in prose and poetry, art and music, would forever be known as 'The Lost Generation'.
The movie gives us some newsreel footage of General Pershing and the victory parades. Judy and Gene are reunited at the end, at the Palace Theater at a servicemen’s show, both of them in uniform.
“For Me and My Gal” just ends with boy getting girl, and an audience made entirely of soldiers cheering them on, like those fellows in the poster marching past the window to some unforeseeable future.
"Classic Films and the American Conscience" essay by Jacqueline T. Lynch (2012)
"We loved each other. I was married at the time and we had no so-called affair, she was a deep friend of my wife and me, and we were very very close to her. And I loved her dearly as a friend" -Gene Kelly on Judy Garland.
“I got started dancing because I knew it was one way to meet girls.” -Gene Kelly
"Gene Kelly is the only hoofer in the world who ever majored in economics" -Picturegoer magazine (1949)
Kerry Kelly Novick, Mr. Kelly's eldest daughter, spoke to Clive Hirschhorn (author of "Gene Kelly: A Biography" in 1974) about Gene Kelly's dedication and concern as a father even at the height of his career: "He wanted so desperately to be an excellent father - and he was".
“Unlike many dancers who, after a few weeks of arduous rehearsing, want to go home and commit Hara-kiri,’ Gene was always ready to come back for more. “I suppose there’s a certain masochism in it,” he said, “but in a way I like the training period, the weeks and weeks of endless rehearsing, much more than the actual shooting - like a sportsman who enjoys the warm-up more than the game. There was something about achieving a perfection during rehearsals, which I found even more exciting than committing that perfection to celluloid. And I imagined everyone I worked with felt the same.” — "Gene Kelly: A Biography" by Clive Hirschhorn
“To Gene, ‘hard work’ is a prerequisite of the job. He saw nothing unusual in working between ten and twelve hours a day, for how else could one achieve perfection? “I only wish,” he said, “that I could have started out in pictures at twenty-one and not thirty, and given myself ten more years of discovery and fun. For that’s what hard work is to me: discovery and fun.” —‘Gene Kelly: A Biography’ by Clive Hirschhorn
"In bold contrast to Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly pronounced sexual difference in terms of the primary oppositions of masculine and femenine. He focused on the erotic interplay of the male and female in the choreography, distinguished each, and then dominated with his own (often solo) masculine display -thus interrupting the flow with a show-stopping, highly theatricalized performance of gender". -"Tap Dancing America: A Cultural History" by Constance Valis Hill (2010)
Cyd Charisse: "Singin’ In The Rain" was the justification of my career as a dancer.
Cyd was always thought of as a sedate, dignified, lovely person without too much personality until Gene saw her as a sultry, tempestuous siren type and worked with her in “Singin’ In The Rain.” Few can ever forget that torchy, sexy dance she did with Gene in that picture. The dance quickly catapulted her into the front ranks. People began wondering where she’d been all their lives. -Silver Screen magazine (June 1954)
"I don't think steps in dance routines should be the same for both boys and girls... There's something missing from a dance when its moves are interchangeable" -Gene Kelly
"The one area in which Gene Kelly was superior to all other male dancers in the movies was as a romantic lead. The women in the audience might fantasize about dressing up and going out to a cosmopolitan supper club escorted by Fred Astaire and spending the evening dancing and dining with him, but they hoped that Gene Kelly was around to take them home". -Vaudeville Old And New (2006) by Frank Cullen, Florence Hackman and Donald McNeilly.
-You're just too charming! You're just too great! You're just too faultless! You're just too first-rate! To win you, dear heart, is all I wish! Well, thank you Casanova 'Cause you're just my dish! You're just too luscious, Too very, very sweet! You're just too sexy! When you turn on the heat! You're just too brilliant! You're just too bright! You're just too perfect! You're just too top-flight! Of all fair damsels 'tis thee I toast! Well, thank you, Barry Nichols, 'cause you're just the most, You're just too darling! Too very, very, very nice! You're just too dreamy! You're super-paradise! So it's no wonder I love you as I do, For I've got to say in ev'ry way You're just too, too! -"You're Just Too Too!" (Lyrics by Cole Porter) Performed by Gene Kelly and Kay Kendall
Gene Kelly as Barry Nichols and Kay Kendall as Sybil Wren in "Les Girls" (1957) directed by George Cukor
“Singin’ in the Rain” (1952), called by many the best musical ever made, splashes us not only with the rain falling on Gene Kelly’s dance number, but a collage of 1920s era styles in clothing, slang, and movie business. The dance numbers poke gentle fun at the speech coaches, the stunts, a montage of flappers, college boys, gossip columnists, and Hollywood parties.
William Holden and Gloria Swanson in "Sunset Blvd." (1950) directed by Billy Wilder
In “Sunset Blvd.” (1950), Gloria Swanson’s own ornate, decaying Hollywood mansion also has a movie screen in her living room where she views only her own silent pictures. Swanson shows us her own youth, her own career down the tubes, the dark side of the bubbly era, and the fallout after the destruction. “Singin’ in the Rain” is as giddy as a senior class play, and “Sunset Blvd.” is an obituary.
Judy Garland and Gene Kelly in “For Me and My Gal” (1942) directed by Busby Berkely.
Like “Yankee Doodle Dandy”, made in the same year, “For Me and My Gal” (1942) combines the world of vaudeville with a world at war. The loss of innocence comes wrapped in spats over high button shoes, song and dance.
Judy Garland stars, with Gene Kelly in his first film, and George Murphy. Garland's partner is a nice fellow who gives her up to the rakish Gene Kelly so that she gets to be a vaudeville star.
Mr. Kelly is fresh as paint and full of applesauce. His character Harry Palmer seems an arrogant opportunist when he sucks up to an operatic headliner in her own railroad car.
We have the traditional vaudevillian mélange of acts, the whistle stops in small towns across the country, uncomfortable train upper berths, and the ever-constant desire to headline at New York City’s Palace Theater. It’s a rough and ready world, the chosen way of life of special people.
When Miss Garland’s kid brother is killed in battle, she leaves Kelly and the act, and their troubled romance, to go to France and perform for the troops. Kelly, who has kept himself out of the Army with a rather rash “accident”, sinks as low as he finally can in her eyes.
To redeem himself, he hops over to France as well to perform, and ends up being a hero. World War I is significant for the backdrop of a movie about vaudeville, as it was probably the first war that professional entertainers joined together in a voluntary troupe, sort of quasi-official units, to visit the troops. They also sold Liberty Bonds and raised money for Red Cross and other various charity drives. This would all be repeated on a grander scale for World War II.
At first, Gene Kelly balks at joining them, “You don’t think I’m going over there and sing a bunch of silly songs while all those guys are getting their heads shot off?” But he changes his mind, becomes a hero and finds redemption. Even if he had not become a hero, he still would have been doing his part.
Ernest Hemingway wrote in “A Farewell to Arms” that “Perhaps wars weren’t won anymore. Maybe they went on forever. Maybe it was another Hundred Years War.” The other tragedy of World War I was, obviously, its legacy of an imperfect peace that led to World War II.
After all the song and dance, though the war was won, the generation that won it, particularly its chroniclers in prose and poetry, art and music, would forever be known as 'The Lost Generation'.
The movie gives us some newsreel footage of General Pershing and the victory parades. Judy and Gene are reunited at the end, at the Palace Theater at a servicemen’s show, both of them in uniform.
“For Me and My Gal” just ends with boy getting girl, and an audience made entirely of soldiers cheering them on, like those fellows in the poster marching past the window to some unforeseeable future.
"Classic Films and the American Conscience" essay by Jacqueline T. Lynch (2012)
"We loved each other. I was married at the time and we had no so-called affair, she was a deep friend of my wife and me, and we were very very close to her. And I loved her dearly as a friend" -Gene Kelly on Judy Garland.
“I got started dancing because I knew it was one way to meet girls.” -Gene Kelly
"Gene Kelly is the only hoofer in the world who ever majored in economics" -Picturegoer magazine (1949)
Kerry Kelly Novick, Mr. Kelly's eldest daughter, spoke to Clive Hirschhorn (author of "Gene Kelly: A Biography" in 1974) about Gene Kelly's dedication and concern as a father even at the height of his career: "He wanted so desperately to be an excellent father - and he was".
“Unlike many dancers who, after a few weeks of arduous rehearsing, want to go home and commit Hara-kiri,’ Gene was always ready to come back for more. “I suppose there’s a certain masochism in it,” he said, “but in a way I like the training period, the weeks and weeks of endless rehearsing, much more than the actual shooting - like a sportsman who enjoys the warm-up more than the game. There was something about achieving a perfection during rehearsals, which I found even more exciting than committing that perfection to celluloid. And I imagined everyone I worked with felt the same.” — "Gene Kelly: A Biography" by Clive Hirschhorn
“To Gene, ‘hard work’ is a prerequisite of the job. He saw nothing unusual in working between ten and twelve hours a day, for how else could one achieve perfection? “I only wish,” he said, “that I could have started out in pictures at twenty-one and not thirty, and given myself ten more years of discovery and fun. For that’s what hard work is to me: discovery and fun.” —‘Gene Kelly: A Biography’ by Clive Hirschhorn
"In bold contrast to Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly pronounced sexual difference in terms of the primary oppositions of masculine and femenine. He focused on the erotic interplay of the male and female in the choreography, distinguished each, and then dominated with his own (often solo) masculine display -thus interrupting the flow with a show-stopping, highly theatricalized performance of gender". -"Tap Dancing America: A Cultural History" by Constance Valis Hill (2010)
Cyd Charisse: "Singin’ In The Rain" was the justification of my career as a dancer.
Cyd was always thought of as a sedate, dignified, lovely person without too much personality until Gene saw her as a sultry, tempestuous siren type and worked with her in “Singin’ In The Rain.” Few can ever forget that torchy, sexy dance she did with Gene in that picture. The dance quickly catapulted her into the front ranks. People began wondering where she’d been all their lives. -Silver Screen magazine (June 1954)
"I don't think steps in dance routines should be the same for both boys and girls... There's something missing from a dance when its moves are interchangeable" -Gene Kelly
"The one area in which Gene Kelly was superior to all other male dancers in the movies was as a romantic lead. The women in the audience might fantasize about dressing up and going out to a cosmopolitan supper club escorted by Fred Astaire and spending the evening dancing and dining with him, but they hoped that Gene Kelly was around to take them home". -Vaudeville Old And New (2006) by Frank Cullen, Florence Hackman and Donald McNeilly.
-You're just too charming! You're just too great! You're just too faultless! You're just too first-rate! To win you, dear heart, is all I wish! Well, thank you Casanova 'Cause you're just my dish! You're just too luscious, Too very, very sweet! You're just too sexy! When you turn on the heat! You're just too brilliant! You're just too bright! You're just too perfect! You're just too top-flight! Of all fair damsels 'tis thee I toast! Well, thank you, Barry Nichols, 'cause you're just the most, You're just too darling! Too very, very, very nice! You're just too dreamy! You're super-paradise! So it's no wonder I love you as I do, For I've got to say in ev'ry way You're just too, too! -"You're Just Too Too!" (Lyrics by Cole Porter) Performed by Gene Kelly and Kay Kendall
Gene Kelly as Barry Nichols and Kay Kendall as Sybil Wren in "Les Girls" (1957) directed by George Cukor
Robert Pattinson in Paris with girlfriend Kristen Stewart
Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart in Paris (at Sardegna, a Tavola Italian restaurant), on 4th March 2012
EXCLUSIVE - Robert Pattinson in Paris with girlfriend Kristen Stewart!!! We spotted the Twilight star Robert Pattinson and his girlfriend Kristen Stewart having a romantic lunch in the city of love! Robert came to Paris to visit his love interest, Kristen is in town for the Paris Fashion Week as the new face of Balenciaga.
EXCLUSIVE - Robert Pattinson in Paris with girlfriend Kristen Stewart!!! We spotted the Twilight star Robert Pattinson and his girlfriend Kristen Stewart having a romantic lunch in the city of love! Robert came to Paris to visit his love interest, Kristen is in town for the Paris Fashion Week as the new face of Balenciaga.
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