Wednesday, April 4, 2012

The Tragically Funny Lady

Easter isn't exactly a holiday that people seem to have a particular affinity for. It's not like Christmas or Halloween, where the mere mention of the word brings back happy thoughts of years past. After all, Santa brings endless presents and Halloween promises enough free candy to gorge on until you're sick of it (never). What does Easter have? A giant bunny that brings hard-boiled eggs in a basket...yeah. Nor does Easter seem to inspire filmmakers all that much either. In fact, the two films (The Ten Commandments and The Sound of Music) I most associate with the holiday don't even have anything to do with it. Thanks to the yearly airing of them on network television around this holiday, I will forever associate Easter egg hunts with Anne Baxter and yodeling marionettes. (Recently, the networks have been trying to make The Sound of Music a Christmas thing. Stop trying to make that happen! Poor Easter. Doesn't Christmas already have enough?!) Even this week's choice for The Film Experience's Hit Me With Your Best Shot, Easter Parade, doesn't really have much to do with Easter.

What it does have is every gay man's favorite singer/actress, the legendary, Judy Garland (Sorry, Liza. Mama came first, so you'll have to settle for being every gay's second fav), and iconic movie-musical dancer/actor, Fred Astaire, in the only time the two teamed up on screen together. It also has some pretty great musical numbers from Irving Berlin, including the titular song (which I always associate with the televised Disney Easter Parade. I didn't even know New York had an Easter Parade and I live here) and perhaps, the most famous number, 'A Couple of Swells', in which Judy and Astaire, while dressed as bums, imagine a grand, MTV Cribs-like, lifestyle.

This was my first time watching the film and I couldn't stop grinning like a fool the whole time. There's not much in the way of plot; it's really just a framework for some musical numbers. Almost the entire first ten minutes of the film is a musical number. You get to hear Judy sing, Fred dance–what's not to love? Everything is so colorful and entertaining, you'd have to be a grinch (is there an Easter equivalent?) not to enjoy it. The film was actually a big success at the time of its release in 1948. In fact, it was MGM's biggest hit that year. They sure don't make 'em like this anymore. (God, that makes me sound like a such a early-bird-special-eating geezer. I'm only 30, y'all. The way they were making them when I was younger is Clueless.)

With so many great production numbers, how to pick a favorite shot? Well, I didn't. Not from one of the musical numbers anyway. Leading up to this scene, Hewes (Astaire) has been grooming Hannah Brown (Judy) to take over as his new dancing partner in his act. She is replacing the glamourous, exotic Nadine, played by Ann Miller. (A woman so talented that her tap shoes make sounds even when her feet aren't moving...)He has changed Hannah's name to Juanita and even started dressing her like his previous partner. You see, Hewes said that he could take any girl and make her a star. After picking Hannah out of some chorus girls at a local club, he's beginning to think differently. And Hannah isn't exactly enjoying the whole Vertigo game he's trying to pull. As a test, he tells Hannah that she needs to turn heads and has her walk in front of him to see if she can do it. After her first attempts:




He notices that she is, in fact, causing quite a stir with the fellas–who seem to be straining their necks looking back at her. We soon learn why:



Comedic genius. It's like a cross between a pufferfish and Angelina Jolie. It was such an unexpected choice that I couldn't stop laughing. And that's what struck me the most about Judy in this film and why I ultimately chose that shot–what an effortlessly adept comedienne she was. 

When I think of Judy Garland, the first thing that always comes to mind is the image of a tragic star. She had such soul in her voice and conveyed such rich emotions that it made you want to comfort her. She was such a talent and so damaged that it was heart-breaking to watch the way she destructed. Her life-long addiction to pills ended her life (and amazing career) too soon. She had even attempted suicide just months before filming Easter Parade. Which is why this scene (and her dance rehearsal scenes and her perfect line-delivery) makes the comedy that much funnier. Even with the troubles in her life, she was still capable of bringing joy and entertaining us with her immense talent. 

6 comments:

  1. Nice choice, I almost went with that shot myself. Judy really showed her comedic chops in this film. The whole film is so damn joyous, even the "villain" (Ann Miller, who is adorable).

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    1. ha. it's true about ann. it's hard to be intimidated by a dog-loving tap dancer in neon colors!

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  2. thanks for participating. Judy is really funny in this movie. I also love her first "professional" performance with Don when she can't get anything right. so much funny physical business. Her comedic chops get a workout in in the good ol summertime too.

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    1. thank YOU for having this series. i've really enjoyed taking part in it.

      yeah, that scene is pretty great as well. i love the way the feathers keep falling off the costume. i hope that touch was judy's idea.

      i've never seen in the good old summertime. i'll have to put it in my queue!

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  3. I had completely forgotten about this scene until I read this - and then when you started mentioning it, it leapt back to memory (been a while since I've seen it) and how much it made me laugh when I saw it. I really need to look at more of Judy's films, btw, I've really seen so few of them.

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    1. my favorite judy moments in her other films have a little touch of melancholy to them (like 'somewhere over the rainbow' in OZ and 'have yourself a merry little christmas' in MEET ME IN ST. LOIUS), so it did catch me a little off-guard to remember how funny she was as well. i'm still giggling about the above scene...

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