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The “Death” of the American Movie Musical COM 329, Contemporary Film See also: AMC’s web site on Musicals/Dance Films Musicals/Dance Films.

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Presentation on theme: "The “Death” of the American Movie Musical COM 329, Contemporary Film See also: AMC’s web site on Musicals/Dance Films Musicals/Dance Films."— Presentation transcript:

1 The “Death” of the American Movie Musical COM 329, Contemporary Film See also: AMC’s web site on Musicals/Dance Films Musicals/Dance Films

2 The movie musical as one of the most popular genres

3 The movie musical as one of the most popular genres:  1.RKO in the 1930s  Astaire and Rogers  Busby Berkeley  Mostly “backstagers” (all diegetic music)

4 The movie musical as one of the most popular genres:  2.MGM in the 1940s and 1950s  The Freed Unit  Many “integrated” musicals (some operatic)  Gene Kelly et al. Arthur Freed The Freed Unit circa 1945, with Roger Edens on piano, flanked by Arthur Freed (left) and Conrad Salinger, with Kay Thompson singing to a rapt Jerome Kern (seated).

5 The movie musical as one of the most popular genres:  3.Roadshow musicals in the 1950s and 1960s  e.g.:  South Pacific (1958)  Porgy and Bess (1959)  The Sound of Music (1965)  Camelot (1967)  Oliver! (1968)  Funny Girl (1968)

6 The movie musical as one of the most popular genres:  4.Best Picture Academy Award winners  Four in the 1960s:  West Side Story (1961)  My Fair Lady (1964)  The Sound of Music (1965)  Oliver! (1968)

7 Factors related to the failure of the movie musical

8 Factors related to the failure of the movie musical:  1.Loss of “stable” of dancers, musicians, choreographers, etc., due to the weakening Studio System Busby Berkeley and dancers Max Steiner conducting the King Kong studio orchestra

9 Factors related to the failure of the movie musical:  2.Dual acting/singing system  Dubbing of singing voices works for playback singers in contemporary Bollywood, but in Hollywood in the 1950s/1960s, not so much  The wonderful case of Marni Nixon, who sang for:Marni Nixon  Deborah Kerr in The King and I (1956)  Natalie Wood in West Side Story (1961)  Audrey Hepburn in My Fair Lady (1964)  Marilyn Monroe in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953)—but only the “high notes”  Etc.

10 Factors related to the failure of the movie musical:  3. Failure of some big budget musicals  The Sound of Music (1965), a huge success, raised unrealistic expectations; musicals that followed did not give the same return on investment...Why? See #4 for a partial answer  Examples of notable failures:  Goodbye Mr. Chips (1969)  Hello, Dolly! (1969)  Man of La Mancha (1972)  Lost Horizon (1973)  Mame (1974)  New York, New York (1977)  For a nice, comprehensive list, see AMC’s Musicals/Dance Films,AMC’s Musicals/Dance Films, Part 5

11 Factors related to the failure of the movie musical:  4.Star power over musicianship (forget the dubbing!)  Guys and Dolls, 1955 (MGM, D: Joe Mankiewicz; music and lyrics by Frank Loesser) with Marlon Brando, Jean Simmons  Marlon Brando: “Luck Be a Lady Tonight” Marlon Brando: “Luck Be a Lady Tonight”  Marlon Brando & Jean Simmons: “I’ll Know” Marlon Brando & Jean Simmons: “I’ll Know”

12 Factors related to the failure of the movie musical:  4.Star power over musicianship  My Fair Lady, 1964 (Warner, D: George Cukor; by Lerner & Loewe) with Rex Harrison, Audrey Hepburn  Rex Harrison: “I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face” Rex Harrison: “I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face”

13 Factors related to the failure of the movie musical:  4.Star power over musicianship  Camelot, 1967 (Warner, D: Josh Logan; by Lerner & Loewe) with Richard Harris, Vanessa Redgrave

14 Factors related to the failure of the movie musical:  4.Star power over musicianship  Goodbye, Mr. Chips, 1969 (MGM, D: Herbert Ross; songs by Leslie Bricusse) with Peter O’Toole, Petula Clark  Peter O’Toole: “What a Lot of Flowers” Peter O’Toole: “What a Lot of Flowers”

15 Factors related to the failure of the movie musical:  4.Star power over musicianship  Hello, Dolly!, 1969 (Fox, D: Gene Kelly; music and lyrics by Jerry Herman) with Barbra Streisand, Walter Matthau  Walter Matthau: “It Takes a Woman” Walter Matthau: “It Takes a Woman”

16 Factors related to the failure of the movie musical:  4.Star power over musicianship  Man of La Mancha, 1972 (UA, D: Arthur Hiller; lyrics by Joe Darion and music by Mitch Leigh) with Peter O’Toole, Sophia Loren  Peter O’Toole: “The Impossible Dream” and Peter O’Toole: “The Impossible Dream”  Sophia Loren: “Dulcinea” (reprise) Sophia Loren: “Dulcinea” (reprise)

17 Factors related to the failure of the movie musical:  4.Star power over musicianship  Paint Your Wagon, 1969 (Paramount, D: Josh Logan; by Lerner & Loewe) with Lee Marvin, Clint Eastwood, Jean Seberg  Clint Eastwood: “I Talk to the Trees” Clint Eastwood: “I Talk to the Trees”  Lee Marvin: “I Was Born Under a Wandrin’ Star” Lee Marvin: “I Was Born Under a Wandrin’ Star”

18 And then came...

19  1.What Thomas Schatz calls the “music movie” (e.g., Saturday Night Fever, 1977) And then came:

20  2.The teen musical (e.g., Grease, 1978; Footloose, 1984; Dirty Dancing, 1987; High School Musical, 2006)

21 And then came:  3.Notable exceptions  Bob Fosse in the 1970s (Cabaret, 1972; All That Jazz, 1979)  Disney’s animated musicals  Great scores in the 1950s (e.g., Cinderella, 1950; Peter Pan, 1953; Sleeping Beauty, 1959)  Great success with Beauty and the Beast (1991)…with many more to follow

22 And then came:  4.Alan Parker’s bold experiments (e.g., Bugsy Malone, 1976; Fame, 1980; Pink Floyd The Wall, 1982; The Commitments, 1991; Evita, 1996)  Real mixture of all musical types—backstagers, integrated musicals, operatic Sir Alan picks up his knighthood in 2002

23 And then came:  5.Post-MTV musicals (e.g., Baz Luhrmann’s Moulin Rouge!, 2001, The Great Gatsby, 2013)

24 And then came:  6. The franchise musical (e.g., The Producers, 2005; Hairspray, 2007)

25 And then came:  7.Autotuning—a way to tolerate star power over musicianship? (e.g., Moulin Rouge!, 2001; Les Miserables, 2012)  Ewan McGregor: “Your Song” Ewan McGregor: “Your Song”  Russell Crowe: “24601” Russell Crowe: “24601”

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