The Gay Divorcee | Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers | The Film That Started It All, More or Less
DVDs:
The Gay Divorcee
The Gay Divorcee
Fred Astaire
,
Ginger Rogers
Turner Home Ent, 2006
average customer review:
based on 26 reviews
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highly recommended
In one of their best loved most charming song-and-dance comedies Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers demonstrate just how they became best known as America's greatest dance team. Includes the Academy Award(R) winning hit "The Continental." Year: 1934 Director: Mark Sandrich Starring: Fred Astaire Ginger Rogers Alice BradyRunning Time: 105 min.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: MUSICALS/MUSICALS UPC: 053939756920 Manufacturer No: T7569
fine early vehicle for Fred and Ginger
The
Gay
Divorcee
has all the qualities of an American 1930s musical: dancing, singing and acting all by very good actors in a glamorous world free of the woes and sorrows of the Great Depression. The plot moves along at a fair pace even though it's razor thin; and the dancing by Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers stuns me with its timing and beauty.
Guy Holden (Fred Astaire), an American professional dancer, happens by chance to meet Mimi Glossop (Ginger Rogers) when they bump into each other on a pier after their ship lands in England. Although Mimi is married she is seeking a divorce and she travels with her Aunt Hortense (Alice Brady) as a chaperone. Naturally, Guy falls immediately for Mimi and tries desperately to look for Mimi in London after Mimi rebuffs him. Also by pure chance, Guy's lawyer friend Egbert 'Pinky' Fitzgerald (Edward Everett Horton) has been hired to work for Mimi to get her that divorce she wants from her often absent husband.
The whole matter eventually leads them all down to the beautiful Hotel Bellavista on the seashore in England; and Egbert arranges for Mimi to "be caught" with another man so that her husband will finally divorce her. Trouble is, Mimi, still annoyed with Guy, falsely believes that Guy is the man she must be caught with and this forces Mimi to spend time with Guy. Conveniently, this being a 1930s Hollywood musical, Mimi finally sees that Guy is the right man for her after all.
Of course, you may think that I've given the whole plot away--but I didn't. Look for Fred to sing "Night And Day" by Cole Porter. Moreover, will Mimi's husband grant her a divorce or not? Will Mimi be able to tolerate things when the real actor hired to pretend to woo her shows up alongside her and Guy? Will she want to spend time alone with the actor instead of Guy? Just how she finally does get that divorce may surprise you. (Well, you KNEW she'd get free so that she could marry Guy.)
The choreography couldn't be better when you see great extensive numbers like The Continental; and when Fred and Ginger dance up onto a table and then back down the table your eyes will pop put! They couldn't have danced any better and it becomes clear that the plot truly is secondary; THIS movie serves to showcase Fred and Ginger's exquisite dancing. In addition, the cinematography exceeds my expectations for 1934 in the extensive Continental dance scene. Great!
The DVD comes with three or four short extras; too bad they don't complement the movie the way they could have done. Look for two shorts entitled "Show Kids" and "Star Night at the Cocoanut Grove;" and there is a "Hollywood On The Air" audio only radio promo.
In short, DON'T miss this movie. With Fred and Ginger dancing like angels it almost seems impossible to ask for anything more. But you DO get more--Alice Brady as Mimi's Aunt Hortense steals a few scenes with her campy behavior and Edward Everett Horton does a stilted dance scene with a young girl that will amuse you, too.
I highly recommend this movie for fans of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers; and people who enjoy classic musicals from the 1930s will be very pleased with The Gay Divorcee as well.
Enjoy!
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The Film That Started It All, More or Less
"The
Gay
Divorcee
," (1934) was the first RKO studio pairing of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers as stars, after they unexpectedly stole the previous year's "Flying Down to Rio." It received five Academy Award nominations: one for Best Picture, and won one, the first ever awarded in that category, for best original song,"The Continental." It set the look and sound of the Astaire-Rogers pictures for this studio, and brought together most of the onscreen, and offscreen, talent that would make them. And it was a great hit: nobody ever invented a better way for depression era audiences to forget their cares.
It was based on a stage play in which Astaire starred, "The Gay Divorce." Screenwriter Dwight Taylor, producer Pandro S. Berman, director Mark Sandrich, cinematographer David Abel, Oscar-nominated art directors Carroll Clark and Van Nest Polglase, and costumier Walter Plunkett gave us a magically elegant looking film, all creamy black and white art deco. The romantic comedy plot was silly, and forgettable,(all mistaken identities, something to do with divorce), just as all future Astaire/Rogers movie plots for this studio would be. The acting company established here would show up in future films, too: Edward Everett Horton as Astaire's befuddled best friend, lawyer Egbert (Pinky) Fitzgerald; Erik Rhodes as the ethnic Italian, (co-respondent Rodolo Tonetti); Eric Blore as the funny working class bloke, sometimes a valet, here a waiter. Only one member of the usual company is missing here, the priceless rubber faced Helen Broderick, always Marge, or Madge, Rogers' female sidekick. That part is here played by Alice Brady, as Rogers' ditsy Aunt Hortense. There are fewer dance numbers, and great songs by brand name composers, than future movies would boast. Horton's character gets to dance; Blore's seems to get more lines than usual; Rhodes' actually gets to sing, and play his concertina. A very young Betty Grable is given a novelty song and dance number. A repeated gag, "Chance is the fool's name for fate," is funny enough.
The movie kept only one song from the stage play on which it was based, Cole Porter's everlasting "Night and Day." When first written, it was considered unsingable, but, as Astaire does it, it's unforgettable, imbued with love and longing. The Astaire/Rogers dance to it wins many votes as most romantic and sexy movie dance ever: Rogers could actually act, while, to quote the feminist Gloria Steinem, dancing backwards and in heels. The duo concludes, wrung out; Astaire offers Rogers a cigarette, perhaps the second sexiest in cinema, after that shared by Bette Davis and Paul Henreid in "Now Voyager."
Then there's "The Continental," seventeen minutes( the movie's only 105!) of sheer black and white musical bliss. Lots of dancing up and down staircases, revolving doors, and chorus boys and girls. That cute bit with the cutout dancers on the revolving record player turntable. And a brief instrumental reprise a bit later, to wrap things up. What a way to go.
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They Waltz Down the Stairs - Sublime!
In spite of the fact that the title seems dated, this is a timeless classic of the dance musical genre. Fresh off their incredible success in FYING DOWN TO RIO, in which they stole the show from the top billed Gene Raymond and Dolores Del Rio (the most gorgeous woman ever to grace the silver screen), Fred and Ginger dance their way into our hearts as well as into film history in this effervescent creation.
All of it works beautifully, from the incredible sets and costumes to the snappy dialogue to the toe tapping songs. But of course we have come for Rogers and Astaire's dancing and, oh boy, do they dance!
Fred and Ginger meet, as they so often do in these films, under somewhat adverse circumstances, as the unhappily married Ginger, meeting her aunt at the pier, gets her hem caught in her aunt (Alice Brady)'s steamer trunk. Fred is immediately smitten; her dress is the worse for his assistance; the die is cast.
Ginger, meanwhile is under whelmed. Fred knows it is like "Looking for a Needle in a Haystack" but he has got to find Ginger, so he roams all over London first on foot, and then in a cute little roadster. He finds Ginger - driving a big Packard, in a wooded area that looks remarkably like Southern California - and they have a brief encounter that does not go all that well.
No matter, Fred's friend, the befuddled soliciter played by Edward Everett Horton says he will whisk Fred off to the seaside and off they go. The reason for the visit is Ginger's divorce case, which in Britain was accomplished by having a paid correspondent, here played in broadly comic pseudo-Italian by Eric Rhodes.
At the seaside, Horton wastes no time "Knocking Knees" with itsy bitsy Betty Grable, proving the addage that some people should never wear shorts (Horton) and some should wear them as much as possible (Grable).
The timing is flawless as Eric Blore as the wacky waiter discusses the merits of tea and crumpets with Horton and whimsy and whamsy with an equally dizzy Alice Brady. All goes swimmingly for Fred finds Ginger; they end up singing and dancing to Cole Porter's "Night and Day" their romantic number that sets the mood for the second half of the film and sets the standard for all romatic dance numbers thereafter. This is one of their duets in which the poetry of their dance style shows to tremedous effect. Smoothly sophisticated and hold-your-breath lovely. It rivals "Cheek to Cheek" in "Top Hat", "never Gonna' Dance" and the "Waltz in Swing Time" in the movie of that name, as well as "Face the Music" in "Follow the Fleet" for their trademark elegance and elan.
By now, Ginger has now more or less succumbed to Fred's charms but all is complicated when Fred (who originated it in conversation with Horton) uses the secret phrase that Ginger expects to be used by the paid correspondent--"Fate is the fools name for chance!" Which Rhodes, by the way has gotten impossibly wrong as "I am fate to take foolish chances with!"
Imagine Ginger's surprise! Has she fallen for someone of such low social standing? Before long they work out that pesky problem and about that time, from their balcony, they hear the strains of the "latest thing over here": "The Continental".
Thereafter ensues one of the longest dance numbers in any musical, and every one of the seventeen minutes is well worth it, as Ginger, Rhodes and (can you do that with your elbows?) Lillian Miles each offer their various interpretations of the lyrics, while beautifully black-and-white costumed dancers dance their legs off. Sometimes the guys and gals are in all black or all white and sometimes a mixture thereof, they dance up and down stairs, on balconies and terraces and in the revolving doors and we are just awestruck.
(By the way Frank Lloyd Wright used the triple pair of revolving doors in his soon to be built deco extravaganza Johnson Wax Buliding; if you want to see this Holywood set reinterprited by America's best architect, go to Racine and take the tour. You'll be glad you did).
The number concludes with Ginger and Fred taking to the floor and trying out this new dance in which you sing and kiss while you're dancing. The moment the rest of the dancers get a load of them, they clear the floor pronto and let them have their moment in the spotlight.
Fred is suave as ever and Ginger is ravishing in her beaded gown which has exactly the right amount of swirl and cling to show off her fabulous legs. Finally, just when you think you have seen it all, they do their interpritation of dances from around the world and end with a breathtakingly lush waltz as they float down a flight of stairs. In the days before bedroom scenes, this kind of a moment was the height of romance, and guess what? It still is.
After that, it is fair to say that the film's climax is defiantly anti, but Fred and Ginger do give us one of their trademark up-and-over-the-furniture dances before the final curtain.
Of course, friends this is an RKO Radio Picture. And nothing could be better than that!
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Excellent musical comedy - perfectly balanced
"The
Gay
Divorcee
" is the second film in the Fred Astaire/Ginger Rogers canon and the first to star them together as the leads. Based on Astaire's Broadway success, the film is a superbly mounted showcase and the precursor of what was to come. Here are some of the highlights:
- Cole Porter's "Night and Day" was the only song retained from the stage musical. It is justly famous for Astaire's seduction of Rogers to dance, worth seeing also for the look on her face at the end. Also, Astaire's superb ability with a song, his interpretation of the lyrics was never more obvious
- A 17 year old Betty Grable drops in, delivers the novelty number "Let's Knock Knees" with Edward Everett Horton, then drops out again, leaving an indelible impression of youth and beauty. She is a better singer too than Rogers.
- The film could stand alone as an hilarious comedy. Astaire has a very light touch and Alice Brady and Erik Rhodes are hysterical.
The print of the film is excellent and there are some entertaining extras, including a short film in odd technicolour set at the Cocoanut Grove, a famous night club in Hollywood. The musical acts are variable. The cartoon celebrates a song "Shake your Powder Puff", a song introduced by Ginger Rogers in one of her early RKO films and the radio promotion highlights the songs from the film. All in all, this is a good DVD and very good value if purchased as part of one of the Astaire/Rogers sets.
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Makes you want to take dance lessons
This wasn't my favorite Astaire/Rogers movie, but it is entertaining and the choreography is never a disappointment. I enjoyed seeing the old character actors on screen once again. The storyline is typical of early Hollywood but seeing Fred and Ginger dance makes it worth a couple hours of your time.
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