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16 Jan

American Paris Gene Kelly

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American in Paris featured a Black and White Ball as a turning point in it is final act, which became a ordinary theme for balls and fundraisers. The San Francisco Symphony held it is primary Black and White Ball in 1956, which proceeds as the premier annual ball today. In New York, after the 1958 release of Truman Capote’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s starring Audrey Hepburn, Capote kept his own famed Black and White bash at The Plaza, which was chronicled in Deborah Davis’s 2006 volume Party of the Century.

And Funny Face influenced America’s most influential First Lady, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy. Four years after the film’s release, Jackie’s initial official trip to Paris embodied the apotheosis that Audrey Hepburn underwent in Funny Face after her earlier persona is vividly remade. Dressed in a luscious red Givenchy gown, Hepburn emerges into an all white scene at the Louvre from behind Winged Victory; her arms raise the gown material around her like exotic butterfly wings.

Like Audrey’s character, Jackie had also been a bookish intellectual at the Sorbonne in Paris prior to her 1952 Newport wedding to then Senator Jack Kennedy. Like Audrey Hepburn, Jackie was also born in 1929 and 5’7 ½” tall and slim, multi-lingual, artistic and athletic, soft spoken, and likewise a client of Audrey Hepburn’s life-long friend and collaborator, couturier Hubert d’Givenchy. Jackie refined numerous of their ideas, and her own, under the tutelage of her advisor and friend, Vogue editor, Diana Vreeland, who later ran MOMA’s Costume Institute at Jackie’s behest. Vreeland was portrayed in Funny Face as the reputation Maggie Preston, editor of Quality Magazine, played by Kay Thompson who was best known as the author of the Eloise series with regards to a girl who lives at the Plaza Hotel. While a college student, Jackie Kennedy won Vogue’s Prix d’Paris contest for organizing an entire magazine edition. In her submittal she imagined herself as “art conductor of the world.” Which in a manner she became as Camelot’s Queen.

Jackie was beloved in France, the world’s capital for style. Two million French citizens crowded the streets waving American flags, screaming, “Viva Jacqui!” for the duration of the Kennedy’s official 1961 State visit there. The normally reserved President de Gaulle, the French press, and public were in particular rhapsodic over Jackie’s televised consultations given in flawless French. Funny Face indicated what Jackie was by nature. And, Jackie’s favored ceremonial color, white, chosen for her ethereal Inaugural gown, closed both American in Paris and Funny Face with the female leads dressed in white tulle gowns waltzing off in the arms of their prince, with Hepburn wearing the chicest wedding dress ever designed.

Art, Music, Dancing, Awards:

American in Paris and Funny Face both applied eye-popping cinematography, bright set and art design and featured Gershwin songbooks. The male and female leads in each film started out their careers basi in dancing, rather than singing or acting. At 39-years old, Gene Kelly, requested 19-year old dancer Leslie Caron for her debut film as his love interest in American in Paris. And 57-year old Fred Astaire partnered with then 27-year old Audrey Hepburn as her condition for accepting the role. Audrey had studied dance all around childhood, keeping fervently to dreams of a ballet career. After WWII when she and her mother fled Holland for London, it was a little dancing role there that won her a screen test for Willy Wilder’s Roman Holiday with Gregory Peck. Hepburn won the Best Actress Oscar for Roman Holiday in 1953, four years before she filmed Funny Face, and the same year she won a Tony for the title role of Gigi on Broadway, likewise after being spied by accident; this time crossing a hotel lobby in the south of France. Author, Collette, honed-in on Hepburn and cried out, “There’s my Gigi! As Willy Wilder said regarding Audrey Hepburn, “God kissed her on the cheek and there she was.”

Funny Face won an Oscar for Best Art Direction, Cinematography, Costumes by Givenchy, and Original Screenplay by Alan Lerner (who ofttimes teamed with long-term collaborator Frederick Lowe to write hits like Gigi, My Fair Lady, Brigadoon, Paint Your Wagon, and Camelot, which of course became synonymous with the Kennedy Administration.) Plus a Director’s Guild Award for great directorial accomplishment by Stanley Donen, likewise a choreographer (and who later directed Gene Kelly in Singing in the Rain, and Audrey Hepburn and Cary Grant together in Charade, with regards to which Donen said there was never a more enchanting couple in film history.) Funny Face also won a Palme D’Or at Cannes. And a Laurel Award from the Writer’s Guild of America for Best Written American Musical.

American in Paris was nominated for eight Oscars and received six, including Academy Awards and Golden Globes for Best Picture and Best Director; a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor, Gene Kelly. In addition, Kelly received his only Oscar, as an honorary award that year for “versatility as an actor, singer, conductor and dancer, and distinctively for his brilliant achievements in the art of choreography.” The film also received Oscars for Best Cinematography, Best Costume Design, Best Musical Score, Best Writing, Scoring and Screenplay, and Best Editing,

American in Paris’ 18-minute phantasmagoria at the end cost half-a-million to produce, making it one of the longest and most highpriced dance pieces in film history. Producer Arthur Freed was MGM’s famed czar of musicals and lured then Broadway talent Vincent Minnelli to direct a heap of of the greatest films of the 20th Century, including American in Paris where so a heap of scenes echo with Minnelli’s stagecraft, as do others like his Meet Me in St. Louis, Kismet, Brigadoon, and Gigi.

The tonal divergences in the two films is that Funny Face is the wittier, more sophisticated film, with a more absorbing plot that holds up with repeated viewings. Astaire and Hepburn were much more elegant, deft and subtle. Gene Kelly himself said that Astaire was the more aristocratic dancer and that his own dancing reflected his background in athletics and gymnastics, plus his everyman Pal Joey persona . He termed Astaire the Cary Grant of dance, to his Marlon Brando. Kelly aimed for a distinct American look. Astaire, and Hepburn were European at heart. Ironically, Leslie Caron, while being French herself, very much echoes Kelly’s exuberantly American style.

The costumes in Funny Face were hands down superior. Audrey Hepburn’s iconic effigy remains undated fifty years later. In fact, conductor Stanley Donen said that Audrey Hepburn was much more regarding fashion than acting or dancing. One of Audrey’s rare disagreements with any conductor occurred when Donen insisted she wear white socks along with the skin tight black slacks and sweater in her solo dance number in the Paris beatnik club. She was scaled down to tears from fear the white socks would “break the line.” Hepburn spoke of the importance of the silhouette and that clothes will have to be a sleeked down vase that holds the flower. The idea of the white socks she thought was ruinous, though later, she admitted it had worked.

At MGM Arthur Freed acquired the American in Paris title from Ira Gershwin. It was from one of three of George Gershwin’s symphonies, (the other two were Porgy and Bess, and Rhapsody in Blue) and became the title song. Tragically, the prolific musical talent George passed from physical life much too young in 1937 at age 38 following surgery for a brain tumor to see one of his symphonies made into a major film.

Funny Face’s Marketing Snafu

Hepburn had just finished King Vidor’s War and Peace (1956) and wanted something light like Roman Holiday (1953) or Sabrina (1954.) She was in Paris when she introductory received the Funny Face script. Her firstborn husband, Mel Ferrer said that she in general took three days to decide, but read and accepted Donen’s project, which was in the first place named Wedding Day, in just two hours. Her mother said Funny Face was “Audrey, all the way through,” while Musical Film Magazine called Funny Face the most “directorially ravishing of all American films,” and Rex Reed said it was the “Best fashion show ever recorded on film.” But the merchandising posters fail to project any of that.

American in Paris had superior film posters. Funny Face posters failed in two ways. First, they were varied and accordingly never cemented one single strong ‘brand’ in the public’s mind that conveyed the unforgettable story in a glance. Second, it was a wondrous colorful film yet most of the poster images were muddied. It was Audrey Hepburn’s firstborn American film not to gross in the top ten of films in the year of it is release. For a great deal of film fans her titles: Roman Holiday, Sabrina, Breakfast at Tiffany’s, conjure distinct images, while Funny Face does not.

For me, An American in Paris relies on flamboyance, and seems larger because of it is theatricality, even though Funny Face is only ten minutes shorter and beautifully cohesive. And while the budgets for both films were similar, numerous scenes in American in Paris were shot on stage sets. Funny Face, filmed for the most part on location, sustains an authenticity that makes looking at it a pleasure, again and again.

I can not watch the metamorphosis of Hepburn’s reputation without recalling that this was the little girl in Nazi occupied Holland who saw her family broken apart, her lovely home ruined, her uncles taken out and shot, who was starved and existed on flower bulbs. She’d been grabbed by a machine-gun toting guard and put on line for a bus bound to a work camp, and as luck would have it broke away. As a child she aided the WWII Dutch resistance, grew to become a great humanitarian, an Ambassador for UNICEF, and my favored actress.

A fighter strips down to the barest essentials, the essence. Audrey Hepburn’s childhood was a fight to survive the horrors of war. As Hubert d’ Givenchy said, she became a “very precise person,” and this shows in her acting that always conveys the essence.

For me, Funny Face personifies charm, magic, beauty and the idea that when we open our eyes to eternal things everything changes.

I find extreme value in what takes me to the lovely places. Audrey Hepburn in Funny Face. One of my all-time favored films. And that’s a wrap.


American Paris Gene Kelly

American Paris Gene Kelly Pic

American Paris Gene Kelly

American Paris Gene Kelly Pic

American Paris Gene Kelly

American Paris Gene Kelly Image

American Paris Gene Kelly

American Paris Gene Kelly Image


Most helpful client reviews

85 of 85 people found the following review helpful.
5Special Edition gets Ultra-Resolution Process
By Dave
Warner Brothers’ proprietary Ultra-Resolution routine has brought new life to such classics as “The Wizard of Oz,” “Gone With the Wind,” Errol Flynn’s “Robin Hood,” and “Singin’ in the Rain.” By going back to the firstborn three-strip technicolor negatives and realigning them digitally, the color and detail blows away anything that clients have seen in the past with home video. “An American In Paris” has now undergone the same process. For those that have a blu-ray player, be sure to order this version, An American in Paris [Blu-ray]. Here is a list of extras that are the same on both versions:

Disc 1:
1.33:1 Full Screen with Original Mono audio * Tech Specs for Blu-ray version: Video is 1080P 1.33:1 * Audio is English, French, Spanish (Both Castilian and Latin), German and Italian DD1.0 * Subtitles (Main Feature): English, French, Spanish, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, German, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian, Portuguese, Swedish * Subtitles (on Select Bonus Material): English, French, Spanish, Dutch, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese
1938 MGM short: Paris on Parade
1951 MGM cartoon: Symphony in Slang
Theatrical trailer

Disc 2:

2002 American Masters Documentary: Gene Kelly: Anatomy of a Dancer (Gene Kelly – Anatomy of a Dancer)

`S Wonderful: The Making of An American in Paris, an all new documentary, formulated specially for this release. A dynamic history of the making of the film, which reveals how George and Ira Gershwin’s classic songs, the dazzling art of the French impressionists and the uttermost teamwork of MGM’s legendary “Freed Unit” came together to develop a musical masterpiece. Featuring ten new interviews, including co-stars Leslie Caron, Nina Foch, and Kelly’s widow. A very enlightening piece; Caron’s memories are in all probability the most interesting, with Foch running a close 2nd. Caron’s remarks when it comes to co-star Georges Guétary being handsome but not too bright seem to be echoed by Kelly’s widow, who says Gene expended more time attempting to instruct him how to graciously walk down a set of steps than on anything else in the film. It is adverse that Maurice Chevalier could not have taken that role as in the first place intended. You also realize just how revolutionary this movie was (artistically), specially because of the 17-minute ballet tacked on at the end of the movie. Even Irving Berlin disapproved for the duration of an on-set visit, which didn’t support the selfassurance of Vincente Minnelli at all.

Outtakes:
Georges Guetary performing Love Walked In (not missed in the movie at all!)

Audio Outtakes: Alternate Main Title, But Not for Me (Guetary), But Not for Me (Levant Piano Solo), Gershwin Prelude #3, I’ve Got a Crush on You, Nice Work if You Can Get It, ‘S Wonderful

Radio Interviews: Johnny Green, Gene Kelly, Gene Kelly & Leslie Caron;
Gene Kelly and Leslie Caron promotional radio consultation with Dick Simmons

Not all of the introductory musical recording stems have pulled through over the years, preventing a true stereo/5.1 restoration of the soundtrack; instead, a restored mono version is being made available.

Most are intimate with the movie; storywise, it is a little creaky and hasn’t inevitably pulled through well over the years: Kelly is an American artisan living in Paris. He falls in love with a young girl (Leslie Caron) who is in a loveless kinship with one of his best friends (Guétary). Kelly is also in more or less of a loveless kinship with his financial sponsor (Nina Foch). You may probably guess the rest.

The glowing color, fantastic music by Gershwin (arrangements by the gifted Conrad Salinger), and the awful choreography of Gene Kelly will keep this one a classic for years to come in spite of a predictable plot. Just the ending ballet alone is a masterpiece; the art of Toulouse Lautrec and Utrillo comes to life with Gene Kelly & Leslie Caron dancing their hearts out to a lot of of the most imaginative choreography (Kelly’s) in years. The Freed Unit at MGM was at their peak when this movie was made, and this is one of the last great ones that it created.

It is a real shame that with how fantastic the picture is (the colors in a literal sense leap off the screen, and it genuinely adds to the appreciation of what an artistically gorgeous visual feast this movie is) that the sound cannot match. Although it is clear and free of problems, the Gershwin music just begs for a 5.1 or 7.1 surround track; unfortunately, due to the age and availability of the firstborn elements, this is not possible.

57 of 61 persons found the following review helpful.
5S’Wonderful
By James Ferguson
A glorious movie that showcases Gene Kelly’s breathtaking talent. Forget the absurd story and just watch him dance and dance and dance. He does more with a turn of a shoulder than most dancers may do with their whole body. This movie also introduced the lithe and lovely Leslie Caron as the object of Kelly’s affection. The film builds to it is dramatic hallucinatory conclusion as Kelly dances his way all over a Paris dreamscape, that brings all the parts of innovative dance together in a tour-de-force that was unexampled in musicals of that time. You can’t aid getting swept away in the feel-good spirit of this movie. It was another time and place.

24 of 24 humans found the following review helpful.
4Familiar Gershwin Tunes and Masterful Finale of Color and Dance Still the Main Attractions Here
By Ed Uyeshima
The dazzling seventeen-minute dance sequence of George Gershwin’s 1928 orchestral piece, “An American in Paris”, is an indisputable masterwork. Choreographed with precision and unparalleled flair by Gene Kelly, the vibrant combining of color, music and dance is still eye-poppingly startling as the piece is broken down into scenes inspired by chosen master artists – Dufy in the opening Place de la Concorde piece, Manet in the flower market, Utrillo in a Paris street, Rousseau at the fair, Vincent Van Gogh in the spectacular Place de l’Opera piece, and Toulouse-Lautrec for the Moulin Rouge where Kelly wears his widely known and esteemed white bodysuit. The 97 minutes that precede this finale are not as exciting, not by a long shot, but there are sure charms to be had in observing the entire 1951 Oscar-winning musical.

Director Vincente Minnelli and screenwriter Alan Jay Lerner have fashioned a breathtakingly sophisticated if rather slight romantic story focalized on Jerry Mulligan, a former G.I. who has remained in Paris after the end of WWII attempting to make a living as a painter. With his braggadocio manner and athletic dancing style, Gene Kelly may be concurrently ingratiating and irritating as a screen personality, but he seems to find his oeuvre as the carefree Jerry. The love-triangle plot is concentered on Jerry’s involvement with Milo Roberts, a self-proclaimed art patron but a sexual predator when it comes to young artists. On their original date in a crowded Montmartre nightclub, Jerry unapologetically falls for Lise, a young woman who turns out to be the fiancee of Henri, a professional entertainer and friend of Jerry’s pal, Adam, an out-of-work concert pianist. Romantic complicatednesses ensue until the inevitable ending but not before assorted classic Gershwin songs are performed.

The best of these is the most imitated – a swooningly romantic song and dance to “Our Love Is Here to Stay” along a faux-Seine River in a blue hazy mist with yellow fog lights. The way Kelly and Leslie Caron circle each other is transcendent as they approach each other tentatively at introductory and then synchronize beautifully to the music leading to the final clinch. Few films have so elegantly and succinctly shown two persons falling in love. “I Got Rhythm” and “S’Wonderful” spotlight Kelly’s nimble tap-dancing and agreeable singing, while “Embraceable You” is danced impressively by Caron in a five-scene montage of Henri’s all-over-the-map description of Lise to Adam. Designed to show off Caron’s dancing versatility, the sequence is similar to the one in “On the Town” where Vera-Ellen showed off her substantial dancing accomplishments when Kelly’s sailor reputation described his multi-faceted imaginativeness of Miss Turnstiles.

As Lise, the nineteen year-old Caron (in her introductory film) dances superbly all around and handles her role with unformed charm with her acting talent not to bloom for assorted years. Looking rather glamorous, Nina Foch plays older as the manipulative Milo and manages to be likeable sufficient for us to care when it comes to her fate, while Oscar Levant is just his sardonic self as Adam. Performing an refined and tasteful “I’ll Build a Stairway to Paradise”, George Guetary plays Henri so agreeably that you feel bad that he does lose the girl at the end. This is not the best all-around MGM musical, but there is surely sufficient movie magic to make this rather worthwhile. The 2000 DVD holds a reasonably pristine print but little else in terms of extras.

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