Aunt Minnie fills Jack in on her most demanding patron, Sharvenka, a Polish countess who, like so many of us, "has spurned the hollow mockeries of society and gone in for nightclub entertaining. Shes got the finest figure in Europe and has to have it dressed, at least partly."
Gingers "act" as Sharvenka (we learn later that shes really "Lizzie Gatz") is a feature-length parody of actress Lyda Roberti10, who created the Sharvenka role on Broadway, seasoning it heavily with her own thick Polish accent and easygoing sexuality. In the guise of Sharvenka, Ginger escapes for once the "good girl" roles to which the Astaire-Rogers films otherwise confined her.11 She has so much fun that she makes a much better Lyda Roberti than Roberti herself did, being prettier, funnier, and sexier, in addition to being a better singer and dancer.12
A little later, Ginger gives us a sample of what she can do as Sharvenka in the delightful "Ill be Hard to Handle," which contains "no mercy" lines like "If you complain, this is one little Jane who will leave you flat." When she finishes the lyrics she adds a few jive flourishes (loosely, "Scavutz, scavutz, a razzamatazza"), wets her forefingers on her tongue and then rubs them ostentatiously with her thumbs, a gesture Ive never seen anywhere else, live or on the screen.13
Once shes finished singing, Ginger shifts to her "Liz" persona as she and Fred reminisce about their youth, growing up in Indiana.14 They then move to the dance floor for one of the most charming and effortless dances on film. Rogers, elegantly slender in a sort of black-and-white jumpsuit, is simply the embodiment of girlish enthusiasm and grace.
AFTERWORDS
There is an excellent Fred & Ginger site maintained by "Elizabeth," an indefatigable 23-year-old from Oklahoma City by way of Princeton. The "Afterwords" section for The Gay Divorcee article (Bright Lights #28) contains additional information and links for Fred and Ginger.
There does not seem to be a first-rate website devoted to Jerome Kern. If you want to hear more of his work, one place to start is Ella Fitzgeralds "The Jerome Kern Songbook,"17 although there are many other CDs that collect his compositions. Till the Clouds Roll By, a 1947 all-star biopic devoted to Kern, starring (among others) Judy Garland, Frank Sinatra, and Lena Horne, starts with a bang about 20 minutes of highlights from Show Boat but the rest of the films big production numbers leave me cold.
Show Boat itself has been filmed three times, in 1929, 1935, and 1951. The first version, part silent and part "talkie," is maddeningly unavailable. The 1936 version is the most famous, thanks to the presence of Paul Robeson as "Joe."18 In 1988, EMI recorded an "opera-style" version of Show Boat, including every piece of music Kern ever wrote for the show, which was reworked a number of times over the years. The recording, now available as a 3-CD set, reproduces all of the excruciatingly "period" dialogue from the original show, down to the last "dis," "dat," and "gwine."19 The set also includes an extensive history of the musicals development.
ROBERTA REDUX
Lovely to Look At, the 1952 remake of Roberta, now even more obscure than the original film, is itself well worth a look, with plenty of Kern tunes (more than were in Roberta) and good performances all around from Kathryn Grayson, Howard Keel, Red Skelton, Ann Miller, and Marge and Gower Champion. (A thirty-something Zsa Zsa Gabor is also along for the ride.)
Wisely, the film makes no attempt to follow Roberta. Other than a balky elevator, the only real link between the two films is choreographer Hermes Pan,20 who was Freds right-hand man throughout the Ginger years. Pan choreographed the big production numbers for the Astaire-Rogers films, among others, and danced Gingers parts in the early rehearsals. He also dubbed Gingers taps on occasion.
The dancing in Lovely to Look At is all first-rate. Ann Miller, usually a boring and mechanical tap specialist, gives a funny, sexy new slant to "Ill Be Hard to Handle,"21 joined by eight young gentlemen wearing wolf masks.22 The Champions23 appear in three numbers. The first two, "I Wont Dance" and "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes," definitely look back to Fred and Ginger, but the "Jewel Thief" number, perhaps the best of the three, has a more contemporary flavor.
For some reason, none of the production numbers in Lovely to Look At have the "swing from the heels" flavor of the big numbers in Roberta. This is especially surprising because Keel and Grayson, with their operatically trained voices, were quite capable of pulling out all the stops. Even the fashion show finale, an invitation to excess if there ever was one, is "rich but not gaudy," advice better suited to real life than the movies. (However, animal lovers will be pleased to know that there is no fur showing in this film.)
NOTES
1. Roberta owes its obscurity to the fact that it was remade in 1952 as Lovely to Look At. As a consequence, it was taken out of circulation and never appeared on TV during the pre-cable era, unlike The Gay Divorcee, Top Hat, Swing Time, and Shall We Dance, which constitute the real Fred & Ginger uvre for those growing up in the first TV generation.
2. Kern wrote the music for Show Boat as well as the Astaire/Rogers film Swing Time, along with many other shows. Otto Kahn did the lyrics for Roberta, with some help from Dorothy Fields and Jimmy McHugh.
3. Scott is the nominal lead, because hes romancing the top-billed Irene Dunne. The films structure looks back to the first Astaire-Rogers film, Flying Down to Rio, in which the stars played second fiddle to Gene Raymond and Dolores del Río. Scott was probably added to get some beefcake on the screen. In real life, of course, it was Fred who was married, while Scott was odd-coupling it with Cary Grant.
4. The Wabash is the longest river in Indiana, not that thats much of a distinction. The Wabash owes its notoriety largely to two songs that appeared at the turn of the twentieth century, "On the Banks of the Wabash" by Paul Dresser, older brother of novelist Theodore Dreiser; and a "hobo" song, "The Wabash Cannonball" (amusingly, one website lists Dreiser as the author of the "Cannonball"). In the twenties, a jazzed-up version of Dressers tune, known as "(Back Home Again in) Indiana," was also very popular.
5. The tune that Fred "plays" is an almost unrecognizable version of "Indiana" (see footnote above).
6. Dunne was one of the biggest stars of the thirties, most remembered for her roles opposite Cary Grant in The Awful Truth, perhaps the best of all the screwball comedies, and My Favorite Wife (where she almost abandoned Cary for Randolph Scott). She also played Magnolia Hawks in the classic 1936 version of Show Boat, her performance unfortunately marred by what is perhaps the worst blackface in the history of film, a disgrace to the white race and indeed all of humanity. You can download pics of her from bombshells.org, which also has some nice links to other sites.
7. The classic 1939 Greta Garbo film Ninotchka (the one film for which she will be remembered) explores this milieu. The 1957 musical version, Silk Stockings, with music by Cole Porter, was Astaires last musical. It was the only time he was really outdanced by his costar (Cyd Charisse), which was perhaps one reason why he decided it was time to hang it up.
8. Her plucked eyebrows alone are worth the price of admission.
9. The thought of appearing in the same picture with a bunch of fashion models must have intimidated her. Following Roberta she gained back about half the weight shed lost.
10. Roberti, whose career was sadly cut short by a heart attack at age 32, had limited talents but took an unlimited delight in being on stage. She appeared in a string of revue-type musicals during the thirties, including The Kid from Spain (with Eddie Cantor) and Million-Dollar Legs (with Jack Oakie and W. C. Fields).
11. Rogers, who was a Christian Scientist in private life, clearly thought of herself as a "good girl" and probably preferred this kind of role, though she frequently played bad girls in her pre-Fred days.
12. One rather hopes that Roberti didnt see the film.
13. Perhaps its Polish.
14. "Youve got to have a title to croon over here," Ginger tells Fred to explain her transformation. "Crooning" was a manner of singing more or less invented by Rudy Vallee in the late twenties, who realized that the development of the electric microphone allowed a much more intimate singing style than previously used. Vallee quickly became one of the most famous men in America, just below Charles Lindbergh and probably the equal of Babe Ruth. He bombed in early talkies but remained a living legend, similar to Paul McCartney today. He has a nice role in Preston Sturges frenetic 1942 farce The Palm Beach Story and was still enough of a name in 1967 to play Robert Morses boss in How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. Crooners were the most romantic thing going in the early thirties, which is why, in case youve ever wondered, Alfalfa is a "crooner" in The Little Rascals.
15. The lyrics to "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" are only semi-coherent. The idea is that when your hearts on fire, "smoke gets in your eyes." But the melody is terrific. To hear how great kitsch can be converted into great art, track down Thelonious Monks version, recorded in 1954 with Frank Foster and Art Blakey and available on CD from Original Jazz Classics as OJCCD-016-2 (originally released as Prestige 7053).
16. Dunne is in particularly rare form for "Lovely to Look At." She makes her entrance on a balcony, swathed in an enormous white fur that probably cost more than the average American home. She delivers most of the song in extreme close-up, rolling her eyeballs heavenward on the high notes, then arching her brows in exquisite condescension to the adoring peasants below.
17. For some reason, "The Jerome Kern Songbook" is a truncated affair, offering only a dozen songs. Its not really comparable to the "songbooks" Ella did for Irving Berlin, Rogers & Hart, Cole Porter, Harold Arlen, and the Gershwins, which offer a much more complete picture of the composers works.
18. Robeson was criticized by many black groups for accepting a role in what was widely regarded as a racist work. To welcome him aboard, Kern and lyricist Oscar Hammerstein wrote "Ah Still Suits Me" for him an "Ise a lazy so and so and Ah loves it" number.
19. Which is, of course, exactly how black people talked back then.
20. Born in Memphis, Tennessee as Hermes Panagiotopoulos, Pan worked with Astaire for decades, but made many other films as well, including Kiss Me Kate (1953) and My Fair Lady (1964).
21. In the course of the revised lyrics, Miller refers to herself as an "iron butterfly." Sixteen years later, the sixties rock group Iron Butterfly turned out the heavy metal classic "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida," which probably owes nothing to Jerome Kern.
22. A lecherous young man was known as a "wolf" in the forties and fifties (whence "wolf whistle").
23. The Champions, an excellent husband and wife team, had a lot of classical training, though Marge never goes up on her toes, at least not in this picture. Gower seems to have modeled himself quite closely on Fred.
July 2000 | Issue 29
Copyright © 2000 by Alan Vanneman
ALSO: More musicals
home | current
issue |
archives | search | about
us | contact | donate | blog | links