Best Picture
| THE WINNER:
Most of the fun comes from Gene Kelly and Donald O'Conner who, separately, offer two of the most famous (and difficult) dance numbers in the history of film. O'Conner's Cosmo Brown gives us the gravity-defying "Make 'em Laugh" about his lifelong desire to be a comedian which comes out through acrobatics that have him literally running up the walls. The routine is done with great energy and a rapid pace, leading to a finally in which one of the walls finally gives way. Kelly, meanwhile, gives us the title number, a rapturous four minutes of soaking wet joy that is going to live forever in movie history. What is different about these dance numbers is that they go far beyond the usual Fred Astaire-style elegance. There was a formality to the numbers that Astaire did with Ginger Rogers, but what makes the numbers in Singin' in the Rain so special is that they seem to well up spontaneously out of the moment. Donald O' Conner's "Make 'em Laugh" comes out of a moment in which he is trying to cheer up Gene Kelly. He begins on a piano then moves through several stagehands carrying props, then onto a vacant set. What is amazing about the dancers in Singin' in the Rain is that they use the entire room as a prop. "Make 'em Laugh" takes place entirely on a set that contains only the props that are used for the number: a couch, a headless mannaquin and O'Conner's body. He dances about the set using his entire body, at one point treating his own face like putty. There's a beautifully choreographed moment when he literally runs up the wall, does a flip and lands on his feet and then does the same thing on the back wall. The payoff of course is that the right wall is made of paper and he simply busts through it. He finishes the number by falling backwards on the floor and, I swear, I am shocked that his stomach isn't rapidly moving up and down. The title dance number works the same way. The only props are a city street, a lamp post, an umbrella and a lot of water. The moment wells up out of a moment when Gene Kelly's Don Lockwood and Debbie Reynolds' Kathy Seldon begin to fall in love. He walks her home and after she disappears upstairs, Lockwood is so overtaken by the rapture of falling in love that he doesn't hide from the rain. He dances with the umbrella, swings around with it open, twirls it like a cain and, at one point, plays it like an impromptu ukulele. Bounding off the sidewalk, he twirls around the lamp post and we get a semi-closeup of Kelly's wide, happy smile. But mostly his prop is the water. According to director Stanley Donen, the puddles that Kelly splashes in are meant to look random but, in reality, they were specifically placed where Kelly would splash into them. It was Kelly who decided how this number would turn out. It had been planned to contain the three leads, but he thought it would work better as a solo number and would perfectly capture the rapturous joy as his character falls head over heels in love. What works is that the moment is pure magic. |
THE WINNER:
John Wayne would have to wait another seventeen years before he received any love from the academy. That was for True Grit, not his best performance, but I am at least thankful that he was recognized for a western. In The Quiet Man, he gives one of his best performances as Sean Thornton, a boxer who was born in Ireland but went to America and now has returned to his ancestral homeland of Innisfree. He wants to settle his roots there and buys his family's cottage from the very unwilling widow Tillane (Mildrid Natwick), who only relents to sell him the property when she finds out that the town hothead, Red Will Danahar (Victor McLaglan), wants it for himself. Danaher, a man whose entire personality seems made up of anger, grudges and bitterness, wants to settle the dispute by knocking Thornton on his keister. |
THE WINNER:
In the 1960s, Booth turned to television where she spent five years in her best known role as Hazel Burke, the lovable maid on the series “Hazel.” She was a Tony Winner, an Oscar winner and an Emmy winner but other than her television success, most everything else about Shirley Booth seems to have passed out of common knowledge. |
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