Tag: Fred Astaire

  • Dance Movie Music to Beat the Winter Blues

    Dance Movie Music to Beat the Winter Blues

    Slip on your dancing shoes and chase away the winter blues. This week on “Picture Perfect,” get those toes tapping with music from movies that include a prominent role for the dance.

    “The Tales of Beatrix Potter” (1971) was inspired by the popular children’s stories, with anthropomorphized animals in hounds-tooth vests and that sort of thing. Conceived for film by Frederick Ashton, it features a buoyant pastiche score by John Lanchery, drawn from various sources, including works of Sir Arthur Sullivan, Michael Balfe, Leon Minkus and Jacques Offenbach.

    Then relive the nightmare vision of “The Red Shoes” (1948). Written, directed and produced by the team of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, this feverish dance film stars Scottish ballerina Moira Shearer. At its center is a story within the story, inspired by the Hans Christian Anderson tale about a girl whose vanity lends demonic power to her ruby footwear, with tragic consequences.

    The music is by Brian Easdale, who conducted his own score. However, for the film’s ballet sequence, Easdale specifically requested the services of Sir Thomas Beecham, who leads the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

    Screenwriter Ben Hecht worked on an astonishing number of Hollywood classics, including “Scarface,” “The Front Page,” “Nothing Sacred,” “His Girl Friday,” and Alfred Hitchcock’s “Spellbound.” Alongside his dozens of screen credits are uncredited contributions for work on films like “Stagecoach,” “Gone with the Wind,” “The Shop Around the Corner,” and “The Thing from Another World.” Because of his versatility, speed, and reliability, he became known as “the Shakespeare of Hollywood.”

    Twice, he was given free rein to direct his own projects. One of these was a quirky ballet-noir, called “Specter of the Rose” (1946). The plot concerns an unbalanced ballet superstar, played by Ivan Kirov – who looks all the world like Steve Martin – who is suspected of murdering his first wife, his former dance partner. If so, will history repeat itself, with his new bride? With dialogue stylized to the point of absurdity, It’s a film that has to be seen to be believed. The music is by Trenton-born “Bad Boy of Music” George Antheil.

    Much more considered is Luchino Visconti’s adaptation of Giuseppe di Lampedusa’s novel, “The Leopard” (1963). Burt Lancaster stars as a fading aristocrat around the time of Italian unification. The film’s memorable ballroom sequence occupies the last third of its three-hour running time. Nino Rota supplied the music.

    Finally, no show which purports to be about dance in the movies would be complete without music representative of Fred Astaire. Therefore, we’ll conclude with the funhouse dance sequence from “A Damsel in Distress” (1937). No Ginger Rogers in this one – rather Joan Fontaine, George Burns, and Gracie Allen. The energetic score is by George Gershwin.

    Regain your tone with tunes from these movies about the dance, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Saturday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Gershwin’s Birthday Astaire’s “Damsel” Dance

    Gershwin’s Birthday Astaire’s “Damsel” Dance

    It’s George Gershwin’s birthday! Here’s the funhouse dance sequence from “A Damsel in Distress” (1937) – Fred Astaire, George Burns, and Gracie Allen monkey around in a barrel, on a lazy susan, down a slide, and opposite their distorted reflections – including some rather Milhaud-like bitonality in the funhouse mirror dance!

    Astaire had known Gershwin for years. He and his sister, Adele, headlined two Broadway musicals – “Lady Be Good!” (1924) and “Funny Face” (1927) – by George and his brother, Ira. Adele married in 1932 and retired from show business. Fred later starred not only in “A Damsel in Distress,” but also in the silver screen musical “Shall We Dance”(1937), both at least partially scored by Gershwin.

    Here are a couple of fascinating documents, set down in 1926, of Fred and Adele singing with Gershwin at the piano.

    Four months before the release of “A Damsel in Distress,” Gershwin died of a brain tumor at the age of 38. Reportedly, his last words were… “Fred Astaire.”

  • Easter Staycation Fred Astaire & Holiday Films

    Easter Staycation Fred Astaire & Holiday Films

    Staying home for Easter this year. Yay!

    That’s right. It’s Fred Astaire and Biblical epics for me.

    Happy Easter!

  • George Gershwin Life in Music Broadway Jazz

    George Gershwin Life in Music Broadway Jazz

    He began his career as a song plugger on New York’s Tin Pan Alley. He was “discovered” by Al Jolson, who gave him his biggest hit. He composed a string of successful stage musicals with lyrics by his brother, Ira.

    Though he had classical training, he was turned away by both Nadia Boulanger and Maurice Ravel, on the grounds that they didn’t want to spoil his natural voice. He played tennis with Arnold Schoenberg, who also refused him lessons. He kept an autographed photo of Alban Berg in his apartment, next to one of Jack Dempsey.

    His musical, “Of Thee I Sing,” was the first to win a Pulitzer Prize. His opera, “Porgy and Bess,” was a failure at its premiere. His songs graced elegant screen comedies of the 1930s. In the concert hall, he was America’s most authentic voice.

    George Gershwin died of a brain tumor in 1937, at the age of 38. Reportedly, his last words were “Fred Astaire.”

    Here are a couple of fascinating documents, set down in 1926, of Fred and Adele Astaire singing with Gershwin at the piano.

    The Astaires headlined two of Gershwin’s Broadway musicals, “Lady Be Good!” (1924) and “Funny Face” (1927). Adele married in 1932 and retired from show business. Fred later starred in the film musicals “Shall We Dance”(1937) and “A Damsel in Distress” (1937), both at least partially scored by Gershwin.

    Gershwin received his only Academy Award nomination for Best Original Song in 1937, for “They Can’t Take That Away from Me,” from “Shall We Dance.” The nomination was posthumous, as Gershwin had died two months after the film’s release.

    The flame that burns twice as bright burns half as long. Happy birthday, George Gershwin.


    PHOTO (left to right): Fred, George and Ira

  • Vintage Gershwin on the Radio This Sunday

    Vintage Gershwin on the Radio This Sunday

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll cap the long Fourth of July weekend with an hour of vintage recordings of the music of George Gerswhin.

    Gershwin occupied a unique place in American music, rising from Tin Pan Alley scrapper to Broadway royalty. From there, he conquered the concert hall and even the opera house, with his blend of popular song, jazz, blues, spirituals and European classical forms.

    Like Franz Schubert a hundred years before, Gershwin managed to churn out an astonishing amount of music over a comparatively brief span. His songs, in particular, have been of enduring interest. His gift of lyricism and invention defied early critics as he bestrode the worlds of popular and classical music like an American colossus.

    Sadly, at the peak of his success, he died of a brain tumor at the age of 38.

    We’ll sample Gershwin’s artistry in recordings of the era, including several songs performed by Al Jolson, Fred Astaire and Ella Logan. (So many excellent recordings to choose from!)

    We’ll also hear the world premiere recording of “An American in Paris” – performed by the Victor Symphony Orchestra (really members of the Philadelphia Orchestra), with the composer himself on the celesta – and the Concerto in F, performed as part of a memorial concert at the Hollywood Bowl, with the composer’s friend, Oscar Levant, as soloist.

    Three of these recordings date from 1937, the year of the composer’s death. All are from his era.

    I hope you’ll join me for “Vintage Gershwin,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    GERSHWIN BONUS! TUNE IN EARLY TO ENJOY MORE SONGS BY GERSHWIN ON “THE DRESS CIRCLE” AT 7 P.M!

    The Dress Circle – Public Radio Dedicated to the Performing Arts


    Fred Astaire singing “A Foggy Day (In London Town),” from “A Damsel in Distress”:

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