Gene Kelly – Singin’ in the Rain

August 17, 2012 | Monika | Comments (2)

August 23, 2012, is Gene Kelly's one hundredth birthday, and this year is the 60th anniversary of 'Singin' in the Rain'. Let's celebrate this brilliant dancer and his best-loved film!

  Singin-in-the-rain-crs1

 

Back in the dark ages of the mid 1970’s, when I was a library school student in Toronto, I was a huge fan of Hollywood musicals. The sets, the costumes, the music, and the dancing! What a wonderful escape! I'd watch them on TV, or in theatres if they ever showed them. How fantastic it would be to be able to sing and dance like that.

Hollywood Singing and Dancing A Musical History

At that time, the Ontario Film Institute was located at the Ontario Science Centre. Under the leadership of Gerald Pratley, they would have regular film screenings in the lovely auditorium, and I often went, even though it was a bit of a trek from home.

In August 1975, they ran “Fred and Ginger”, a wonderful series of 15 musical films, and I think I went to just about every show. They weren’t all just starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, of course, but also many  other wonderful musical stars, including Gene Kelly.

Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers

Seeing all those movies up on the big screen, night after night, was absolutely heavenly!

Of course, this just fed into my fantasy of being a musical star! And so, of course, I decided to take tap dance lessons. At the tender age of twenty-something!

Never for a minute did I imagine that I would get past much more than ‘shuffle off to Buffalo’.

 

But somehow, taking the lessons and watching my teachers, hearing the great broadway and movie music that we tried to dance to, connected me to the magical world of singing and dancing that I was so in love with.

Now, I do feel I'm being a bit disloyal to Fred Astaire. I loved his dancing as much as Gene Kelly’s, even though they were so different. But since it’s Gene’s birthday I’m celebrating him today. Fred’s turn will come.

I always wished that they’d danced together more, but the only time was in a number called 'The Babbitt and the Bromide', in the 1946 film, 'Ziegfeld Follies'.

 

 

'Singin in the Rain' was made by MGM studios in 1952. Sixty years later, it’s still fresh and entertaining as ever. The movie is set during the 1920’s when silent films were being replaced by talking pictures, and the leading actors and actresses of the silent era had to either keep up with the trend or be forgotten.

The idea for the film came from Arthur Freed, the head of the unit that produced a host of musical films, including another Gene Kelly hit, An American in Paris, which won a Best Picture Academy award.

Why has 'Singin’ in the Rain' become one of the top regarded and best-loved musical films of all time? Take a look at the most famous scene and see for yourself.

 

Little known fact: Gene Kelly was fighting a bad bout of the flu, and had a high fever while filming this scene.

Here’s 'Good Mornin', another number from the movie that shows Gene working so well with his co-stars, Donald O’Connor and Debbie Reynolds.

 

Little known fact: Debbie Reynolds felt that her dancing wasn’t up to Gene’s standards, and Fred Astaire gave her some coaching to help her out.

Cyd Charisse, who was a classically trained dancer, was chosen to be Gene’s partner in ‘Broadway Melody’, the very innovative and exciting  modern dance sequence.

  

 

The movie has everything – comedy, drama,  romance, vaudeville slapstick, wonderful songs from Broadway shows of the 1920’s, and of course, some of the greatest dance numbers of all time.

The original film version of the song 'Singin in the Rain' was performed by Cliff Edwards, (Ukulele Ike), in a 1929 musical, 'Hollywood Revue'.

 

  

Little known fact: Cliff Edwards was the voice of Jiminy Cricket in Disney's Pinocchio!

 

If you haven't seen 'Singin in the Rain' yet, this is a great time to do it. A new, HD version of the film has been released to celebrate the 6oth anniversary.  Don't forget to listen to the wonderful soundtrack, and take a look at a couple of books about Gene Kelly, MGM, and the wonderful world of movie musicals.

   Hollywood musicals  the 101 greatest song-and-dance movies of all time        Singin' in the rain the making of an American masterpiece         The Rough Guide to film musicals

If you feel like singing too, we have musical film scores and songbooks to borrow at the Toronto Reference Library. Including, of course, the special edition of the Singin' in the Rain score.

The tap lessons are up to you!

   Gene Kelly anatomy of a dancer
 

 

 

 

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