Monday, November 28, 2011

There's No Business Like Show Business (1954)

Director:  Walter Lang
Cast:  Ethel Merman, Dan Dailey, Donald O'Connor, Mitzi Gaynor, Marilyn Monroe, Richard Eastham, Johnnie Ray, Hugh O'Brian, Frank McHugh

Reviewing another Donald and Mitzi movie today!  In this one, Don and Mitzi play a brother and sister in a showbiz family.

THE PLOT (it's late and I should be in bed so I'm copying this one from Wikipedia):  In 1919, Terrance (Dan Dailey) and Molly (Ethel Merman) Donahue, a husband-and-wife vaudeville team known as the Donahues, pursue both a stable family life as well as success with their rendition of Midnight Train to Alabam.
As the years pass and the kids Steve, Katy, and Tim join the act one by one, their act eventually becomes the Five Donahues . Worried that the children will suffer from their nomadic lifestyle, Molly persuades Terry to send them to a Catholic boarding school, but the youngsters, missing both their parents and the thrill of performing, continually try to run away.
Comforted by Father Dineen's assurances that the children are better off with them, Terry and Molly buy a home in New Jersey for their brood, but when the Depression hits Terry and Molly are forced to take whatever jobs they can find, including singing for radio advertisements and working at a carnival.
Eventually, movie theaters come to their rescue by providing live stage entertainment before showings, and the Donahues are back to performing. In 1937, Tim graduates from high school, and the act becomes the Five Donahues once again, with Katy (Mitzi Gaynor) concentrating on dancing, Steve (Johnnie Ray) demonstrating an admirable singing voice, and Tim (Donald O'Connor) being an all-around performer like his father.
The family is a success and have soon hit the top, thrilling audiences at New York's famed Hippodrome Theatre with an extravagant multi-themed performance of "Alexander's Ragtime Band" with each family member being featured in their own segment in addition to the ensemble sections which bookend the piece.
One night after a show, a worried Molly and Terry return home alone while Katy goes out on a date, Steve takes a walk, and the womanizing Tim goes out with an older chorus girl. Katy and Tim both wind up at a nightclub, Gallagher's Golden Pheasant Room, where Tim teases Victoria Hoffman, (Marilyn Monroe) a hatcheck girl about the unnatural elocution her singing teacher has instructed her to practice.
Vicky forgets Tim's wisecracks though, when Eddie, her agent, informs her that he has persuaded famed producer Lew Harris to visit the club. With the help of her co-workers, Vicky gets onstage and impresses Lew and Tim with her singing After You Get What You Want, (You Don't Want It). Backstage, Vicky learns that Tim is one of the well known Donahues but quickly dismisses him in order to talk business with Harris.
Back at the Donahue home, Molly and Terry welcome Katy and then Steve, who informs his family that he wants to become a priest. Terry is distraught over his son's decision, but their discussion is interrupted by the appearance of Tim, who got drunk after he was dismissed by Vicky. Escorting Tim upstairs to sleep it off and nearly drowning him by dunking his head into a large sink to sober him up, Molly worries aloud if he hasn't bitten off more than he can chew. Tim goes to sleep and Molly heads downstairs to deal with Katy being out all night, with her six-dollar and twenty-cent cab ride home, and with Steve's decision to become a priest.

Later, having accepted Steve's choice, the family throws him a farewell party with songs, dances, and impressions, the centerpiece of which is a performance of their parents' old Alabam' act by Tim and Katy. Steve tells the assembly that he hopes everyone will come see his new act when it is worked up in the seminary over the next four year and follows this with an up-tempo jazz-influenced gospel tinged version of If You Believe after which Molly and the gang belt out a chorus of Remember. Molly is crying afterward and Terry is just about to, but they both understand that eventually the bird has to leave the nest and go out on his own.
Katy tells her father not to be so shocked and disappointed, because maybe Steve could end up a cardinal. Wailing in frustration, Terry tells the family that the only cardinal he wants in his family is one who plays ball for St. Louis (the St. Louis Cardinals).
After the party, the rechristened Four Donahues accept an engagement in Miami. Upon arrival, Tim is thrilled to find that Vicky, now known as Vicky Parker, is also appearing there; however she is performing a considerably more sensual version of the same "Heat Wave" number as the family. After falling in complete lust with Vicky's performance, Tim gives his approval for her to perform the number without checking with the family beforehand.
Vicky is a sensation and, although she gently shrugs off his proposals so that she can focus on her career, Tim falls in love with her as a result. Molly, still irate that Vicky "stole" her song, is further irritated upon learning that Harris is staging a Broadway revue around Vicky, and that Vicky wants Tim and Katy to join her without Molly and Terry.
Realizing what a great opportunity this is, Terry persuades Molly to let the kids go and she agrees, on one condition. They have to take the four expensive Cuban costumes as well, originally intended for the family's version of the "Heat Wave" number they let Vicky perform instead. They all share a laugh, and soon Molly and Terry are performing on their own again while Tim and Katy rehearse with Vicky in New York.
Katy begins dating Charlie Gibbs the show's tall and spare lyricist, and after Steve is ordained, he asks whether or not Steve can perform a small wedding ceremony in the near future. Shocked and annoyed, Katy demands to know whom Charlie plans to marry with her brother officiating, and Charlie sweetly tells her that she herself is the candidate. Having heard none of this in advance, Katy is pleasantly surprised and they set the date.
Tim continues dating Vicky, but one night a wardrobe mistress passes in the hallway with a new dress, telling Vicky that Harris selected it as her opening statement. Feeling that the dress makes the most completely inappropriate opening statement not to mention being the most completely wrong shade of purple as well, she phones back to the club and postpones her dinner date with Tim in order to discuss the matter with Harris. The costume designer, a tall, spare haute-couture man chimes in, correcting her that the color is not purple; it's `heliotrope.' Vicky angrily complains that no matter whether the dress is heliotrope, hydrangea, or petunia it's still the wrong shade of purple for her, not to mention the most completely unflattering style. Harris, equally annoyed, reminds Vicky that the dress cost $1400, and that's not heliotrope.
Vicky loses track of time and stands Tim up, and Tim, mistakenly assuming that Vicky is having an affair with Harris, gets drunk and comes back to the theatre where he confronts Vicky about her supposed affair. She is stung by the accusation and annoyed that a fellow performer such as Tim, who was born to the business of performing, should chastise her for trying to follow her love of the theatre and doing whatever it takes to reach her goals. She denies his accusations but also spurns Tim in his drunken state.
Tim leaves the theatre with one of the chorus girls, goes out and gets even more drunk, and becomes involved in a car accident. Molly and Terry learn of the accident just hours before opening night of the show for which Vicky and Katy have been rehearsing and Terry goes down to the hospital to confront Tim about his conduct. Tim rebuffs the advice, whereupon Terry slaps him across the face and storms out.
In the meantime, Molly has gone down to the theatre to be with Katy in this trying time. Lew Harris is beside himself and trying to decide if he should postpone the opening, but Molly, who has been rehearsing extensively with Katy, convinces Harris that while she'll have to fake the dancing, a feat with which she's been getting away for decades, she can go on in Tim's place.
After all is decided the show is a resounding success on opening night. The next day Terry and Molly go back to the hospital to pick up Tim but discover that he has vanished, leaving behind a note apologizing for his behavior. Molly and Terry are both heartbroken but decide to take action.
While Molly continues to perform in the show, the Donahues hire private detectives to search for Tim, and they scour the clubs and bars of New York looking for him. After almost a year, Steve joins the Army as a chaplain, while Molly still blames Vicky for Tim's disappearance.
When Molly tells Terry that the Donahues are being sought for a benefit performance at the Hippodrome before it is closed the following May, Terry shows no interest and instead disappears by train to search for Tim. During the montage, we see him reminisce about all the good times they shared with Tim.
Months later, on the day of the benefit, Katy, who has become close friends with Vicky, arranges for her to share a dressing room with Molly. Annoyed at the arrangement, Molly begins to pack up and head upstairs for some peace and quiet, however, Katy not only tells her mother that she'll be doing nothing of the kind, but that she needs to apologize to Vicky for snubbing her at every turn for the past year.
Incensed at this, Molly demands that Vicky speak up for herself about how true and deep her love is for Tim and Molly buys it.
Finally forgiving Vicky, Molly is also comforted by the arrival of Steve, who, after telling her that Vicky must be quite a girl for putting up with all Tim's shenanigans all this time, tells her not to lose hope. Molly agrees, telling Steve that she was wrong again. As Molly performs the title song, Steve and Katy watch from the wings; then Tim, wearing a US Navy uniform, appears behind them. Katy sees him first and takes him deeply into a silent embrace. His brother Steve follows and together they try to attract Molly's attention onstage, finally succeeding.  

The six principals then march down a flight of stairs out of view and a chorus of men and women all in multicolored flowing attire circle around the perimeter going up and down the stairs singing the title song. The six principals then come up on a platform in the middle thereof, adding their vocals to the chorus, and the film concludes with their finale.      


THE REVIEW:  This film, although a musical, was very powerful to watch, primarily because you expect a musical to be all sunshine and butterflies, and this one, while for the most part it was, wasn't.  I thought it was very powerful film for Donald.  Whereas Singin' in the Rain focuses on the glitz and glamour of movies and everything being perfect (the only problems being casting and bad movies), this film highlights how show business affects the family.  It's like Good Times, only with famous white people.  


I never knew Johnnie Ray was in this movie!  When he came on at the beginning, I found myself laughing like an idiot.  His singing voice was amazing, but all the idiotic poses he was striking were just...idiotic.  I thought it was really brave of Donald to take such a hard slap.  I mean, that slap was HARD.  It was so hard I could feel the stinging in my cheek.  I always love seeing comedians in dramatic roles, and Donald, while he could have been a little less comedic in the dramatic scenes, played it perfectly.  4 out of 5 stars, minus 1 for Johnnie Ray's idiocy in the beginning.              

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Anything Goes (1956)

Director:  Robert Lewis
Cast:  Bing Crosby, Donald O'Connor, Mitzi Gaynor, Zizi Jeanmarie, Phil Harris, Kurt Kasznar, Richard Erdman, Walter Sande

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!  Sorry I haven't posted a review in a while...my computer has been being worked on by Office Depot and the 1920s replacement I was using had no Internet.

What better way to celebrate Thanksgiving (and the return of my computer) than by doing a review of one of Donald O'Connor's best movies?

THE PLOT:  Bill Benson (Bing Crosby) and Ted Adams (Donald O'Connor), a TV star, are writing a new Broadway show.  Everything's all set, they just need a leading lady.  Bill travels to England, while Ted goes to Paris.  Bill signs Patsy Blair (Mitzi Gaynor), while Ted signs Gaby Duval (Zizi Jeanmarie).  The four meet up in Paris and Donald O'Connor, bless his heart and I love him to death, does an absolutely shitty job of covering up his mistake.

Of course, the boys end up falling in love with the girl whom their partner signed (Ted = Patsy, Bill = Gaby), and they perform a series of spectacular song and dance numbers.  In the meantime, Patsy's father Steve (Phil Harris) is a gambler who needs to pay back some debts.  On the cruise back to America, they sort out the mess and come up with a new show called "You're the Top."  It runs for two years successfully.

THE REVIEW:  This movie is just downright adorable.  Of course, it's a Donald O'Connor/Bing Crosby movie, so I was already going into it with high hopes, but it exceeded my expectations.  Donald's song-and-dance number "You Can Bounce Right Back" that he does with the kids is just adorable beyond words, and the "De-Lovely" number with Mitzi is terrific and romantic.  The man was just so sexy and so talented and so...ugh.  I love him and I want him.  I thought it was funny that they made him have such a stuck-up attitude at the beginning.  So much different from Cosmo in Singin' in the Rain.  5 out of 5 stars.  I just love musicals.

Part 1:
Part 2:
Part 3:
Part 4:
Part 5:
Part 6:
Part 7:
Part 8: