writers gone
wild! |
When Fred Met Red Fred Astaire, Red Skelton, and Vera-Ellen Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby are not names to conjure with, unless you're excessively fond of conjuring, but back in 1950 Hollywood didn't have much choice. The great songwriters of America were dead (George Gershwin, Larry Hart, and Jerome Kern) or dying (Irving Berlin1 and Cole Porter). There were hundreds of Gershwin/Berlin wannabes trying to make it on Tin Pan Alley, but somehow the zeitgeist had moved on.2 They just weren't writing tunes like they used to, and it's damned hard to make good musicals without good tunes. Quite sensibly, Hollywood responded by recycling, starting with Berlin, so prolific, and so good, that his œuvre ultimately served as the basis for no fewer than five hit films Alexander's Ragtime Band, Blue Skies, Easter Parade, White Christmas, and There's No Business Like Show Business. Hollywood also raided the treasures of Gershwin (Rhapsody in Blue), Kern (Till the Clouds Roll By), and Hart (Words and Music).
Astaire, who was friends with both Bert and Harry and often thought it would be fun to write songs, was happy with the idea and always claimed that the result, Three Little Words, was one of his favorite films, perhaps because he was so glad not to be working with Ginger any more.3 Fred was cast as lyricist Bert Kalmar, while comedian Red Skelton4 played composer Harry Ruby, with dancer Vera-Ellen as Astaire's partner/wife. Vera-Ellen (her full name was Vera-Ellen Westmeier Rohe, though she sometimes billed herself as Vera Ellen) was a precise, graceful dancer with extensive ballet training, who began working as a Rockette at an early age. She didn't get into films until she was 34, in part because she couldn't sing, but also in part, one guesses, because of emotional problems.5 Although she had an excellent figure, she seemed to feel nervous about being sexy on screen. When dressed in "naughty" outfits, she kept a fixed, little-girl smile on her face that conveyed the opposite of passion.6
Fred and Vera are up again in "Mr. and Mrs. Hoofer," a number, we are told, being performed before President Woodrow Wilson at the Keith's Theatre on 15th Street in DC, two blocks from the White House.7 In contrast to what went before, this is a "modern" number8 that makes no pretense of attempting a period flavor. The choreography, probably from Hermes Pan, is closer to Gene Kelly than Astaire, with lots of balletic touches (which Vera-Ellen could easily handle, unlike most of Fred's previous partners), but also lots of broad humor and mugging.9 The number, which is sometimes enjoyable and sometimes not, ends with an irritating gag. Fred and Vera, heading for the door, go into a furious spin that seems destined to take them crashing into the wall. Guess what? They do crash into the wall, ripping right through a paper backdrop! Definitely too easy.10
Bert has taken to writing songs full-time because he hurt his knee. But after a year of r and r he feels he's ready to get back in step, and we seem to be on our way to classic Fred solo, but after about a minute of excellent tap he tries a knee drop and lives to regret it. Ouch! Not to Fred, but to us! Three Little Words is one of the very few films Fred made that lacks a serious solo performance.13 After Fred's mini-solo, we see Vera-Ellen doing her own solo, "Come on Papa," a semi-enjoyable exercise in French oo-la-la, handicapped by Vera's discomfort when called upon to display overt sex appeal. She much preferred to work her technique rather than her body. Vera's working solo because she and Bert have split up, but naturally Harry brings them together again, uniting them on stage for a rendition of "Nevertheless," a ballad that provides the setting for a brief, elegant dance that has the sentiment, though not the drama, of the great romantic dances that Fred did with Ginger.
Unfortunately, that's it for the dancing, even though the film has another half hour to run. And that's pretty much it for Three Little Words: lots of snappy tunes, a fair amount of good dancing, but nothing great. Bert and Harry were pros, all right, but they were no Irving Berlin.14 AfterwordsWhat about the title? "Three Little Words" (which happen to be "I love you") was, of course, a Kalmar-Ruby tune. There is a running gag, entirely untrue, that Bert couldn't come up with the lyrics for some twenty years. (The picture ends with him singing Harry the lyrics he's finally invented.) "Three Little Words" got the workout of its life in 1944 at the hands of master saxophonists Coleman Hawkins, Tab Smith, Don Byas, and Harry Carney, helped along by master drummer Sid Catlett. The recording is available on a number of collections of Hawkins' work from the forties. In 1957, Stan Getz and the Oscar Peterson trio took "Three Little Words" for another ride. Bert and Harry never sounded so good! Notes1. Berlin wasn't actually dying, but he could make so much money selling his old songs to Hollywood that he couldn't be bothered with writing new ones. Porter, in constant, crippling pain due to a riding accident, achieved a stunning success on Broadway with Kiss Me Kate in 1948 but never reached those heights again.
3. Fred had been reunited with Rogers in his previous film, The Barkleys of Broadway. The Barkleys lost money, while Three Little Words was quite profitable, which may help explain Fred's attitude. 4. Skelton was very successful in films in the forties, but is probably more remembered today for his long-running (1951–1971) television series. His memories of movie life were not always fond ones. Referring to the crowds at Harry Cohn's funeral, he famously said on the air "It just goes to show give the public what it wants and they'll turn out for it." (I remember seeing this as a kid, both because I didn't get the joke and because of the stunned silence from the audience. But Skelton didn't care. He was laughing his ass off.)
6. Cyd Charisse, Vera-Ellen's major dancing competitor in the late forties and early fifties, was quite the opposite, excelling in sultry roles in such famous numbers as the "Gotta Dance" finale to Gene Kelly's Singin' in the Rain and the "Girl Hunt" number with Astaire in The Band Wagon. 7. Since Harry Ruby served as technical advisor for the film, we can assume that this did happen, more or less. 8. Modern for 1950, that is. 9. There seemed to be a belief in the forties and fifties that audiences would laugh at anything as long as they knew it was supposed to be funny. 10. Remember the line that says if you show the audience a gun in the first act it has to go off in the fifth one? It helps a lot if it's a real gun. 11. Yeah, oolong tea is Chinese, not Japanese. Sue Bert and Harry, not me. 12. "Pidgin" is supposedly the Chinese pronunciation of "business." Chinese and British merchants talked "pidgin" when they made their deals. 13. The painfully bad Yolanda and the Thief is another. Dunno why Fred bailed on us, but he did. I guess he was just feeling lazy.
May 2006 | Issue 52 ALSO: Check out other fine articles and reviews by the author. |
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Action! Interviews with Directors
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Interviews
Robert Bresson
Roger Corman (with Bruce Dern
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Clint Eastwood
Douglas Sirk
Robert Wise
Mania Akbari
Lars von Trier
Michael Haneke
Allie Light
Melvin and Mario van Peebles
Otto Muehl
The Brothers Quay
Barbara Kopple
Federico Fellini
Abbas Kiarostami
François Truffaut
Caveh Zahedi
Peter Bogdanovich and
Joseph McBride
on Orson Welles