Tag Archives: M-G-M

Astaire & Rogers and the 1930s Aesthetic Part One: Flying Down to Rio

Daily News ad for Flying Down to Rio at Radio City Music Hall, December 20, 1933.

Advertisement for Flying Down to Rio, New York Daily News, December 20, 1933. From newspapers.com.

December 21, 2023 marked the 90th anniversary of the opening of Flying Down to Rio, the first film to team Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. Over the next six years, Astaire and Rogers starred in eight more R-K-O films together. Not only did these films showcase their incredible dancing, they also a showcased 1930s design trends. Driving for Deco will take a look at all nine films.

Pre-History

Fred Astaire

By the time R-K-O teamed Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire in Flying Down to Rio, both were veterans of show business. Astaire, born on May 10, 1899 in Omaha Nebraska and his older sister, Adele began taking dancing lessons at a very early age. By the end of 1905 they started trouping in vaudeville.

Fred and Adele Astaire at the start of their vaudeville career, 1906.

Fred and Adele Astaire, 1906. Image from Wikipedia.

By the early 1920’s, they made the leap to Broadway headliners in such shows as Lady Be Good (1924), Funny Face (1927), Smiles (1930) and The Band Wagon (1931).

Adele and Fred Astaire in The Band Wagon, 1931.

The Band Wagon (1931), Adele Astaire’s last show. Photograph from the New York Public Library Digital Collections.

After achieving great success on both the Broadway and London stage, Adele retired in 1932 to marry Lord Charles Cavendish. For the first time in his life, Fred was now a solo performer. Astaire was nervous about performing without his sister. In The Gay Divorce, Astaire teamed with Claire Luce and the show was hit. Opening at the end of November, 1932 and closed in July 1933.

Fred Astaire and Claire Luce dancing in the stage production of The Gay Divorce.

Fred Astaire and Claire Luce in The Gay Divorce, 1932. Image from Pinterest.

It was during the run of The Gay Divorce that Astaire made a screen test for producer David O. Selznick, who at that time was head of production at R-K-O. While Astaire waited for R-K-O to cast him in a film, the studio loaned him to M-G-M where he made his motion picture debut in Dancing Lady, starring Joan Crawford and Clark Gable.

Joan Crawford and Fred Astaire in his debut film, Dancing Lady (1933).

Joan Crawford with Fred Astaire in his motion picture debut, Dancing Lady (1933). Even in his first film Astaire is in top hat, white tie and tails. Frame grab from Warner Bros. DVD.

After filming Flying Down to Rio, Astaire went to London for the West End run of The Gay Divorce, closing after a respectable run of 180 performances. Astaire did not need to worry about continuing his career solo. Although Fred Astaire did not know it at the time, The Gay Divorce would be his last Broadway and West End show.

Ginger Rogers

Ginger Rogers had only been a show business professional for only eight years when she was teamed with Astaire in Flying Down to Rio. Born on July 16, 1911 in Independence, Missouri, some of Rogers’ childhood was spent in Kansas CIty, before moving to Fort Worth, Texas in 1920.

Ginger Rogers at one year old.

Ginger Rogers at age one. Image from backlots.net.

Rogers’ mother Lela left her daughter in her parents care in 1915 when she went to Hollywood with an essay she had written in hopes of turning it into a film. This led to a job as a script writer at the Fox Film Corp. Lela eventually returned to her family and in the 1920s became theatre critic for a Forth Worth newspaper. This exposure to theatre at an early age led Rogers to pursue a career in show business.

Circa 1930 photo of Lela and Ginger Rogers.

Lela and Ginger Rogers, circa 1930. Photo from backlots.net.

Winning a Charleston contest in 1925, whose prize was a six month tour on the Orpheum vaudeville circuit, began Rogers’ show business career. At seventeen Rogers married vaudevillian Jack Pepper and they formed the team “Ginger and Pepper”, within a year their teaming and marriage was over and she went on touring as a solo again. When her tour reached New York City, she stayed. Landing jobs singing on the radio, led to her Broadway debut in the musical Top Speed.

Advertisement for Girl Crazy.

Advertisement for Girl Crazy. Image from Ebay.

Within two weeks of the shows opening, Rogers was offered the lead in Girl Crazy with music by George and Ira Gershwin.  In a bit of foreshadowing, Fred Astaire was hired to help with some of the choreography for the show. Girl Crazy catapulted Rogers to stardom at age 19.

Ginger Rogers and the male quartet in the 1930 Broadway production, Girl Crazy.

Ginger Rogers and male quartet in Girl Crazy (1930). Image from gershwin.com.

Making her screen debut in the 1929 short subject A Day of a Man of Affairs, Rogers made two more shorts in 1930 before signing a seven year contract with Paramount. While at Paramount, she made five films at their Astoria, New York studio before getting out of her contract and moving with her mother to Hollywood. In Hollywood, Rogers signed a three picture deal with Pathé then freelanced, making films for a number studios. Her movie breakthrough came at Warner Brothers with her roles in 42nd Street (1933) and Gold Diggers of 1933 (1933). After shooting Gold Diggers Rogers signed a long-term contract with R-K-O and was soon cast in Flying Down to Rio.

 

Hermes Pan

Hermes Pan, circa 1940.

Hermes Pan (1909 – 1990), circa 1940. Image from wikipedia.org.

There were many talented people who contributed to the success of the Astaire-Rogers films. But, arguably, the most important contributor was Hermes Pan. Born in 1909 to a Greek immigrant father and mother with English – Scot-Irish heritage in Memphis, Tennessee. The family moved to New York City in 1923 a year after his father’s death. At 19, Pan’s dancing career began professionally when he landed a job in the chorus of the Marx Brother’s Broadway show Animal Crackers. Pan worked with Ginger Rogers in Top Speed, in 1930. Soon Pan and his sister Vasso moved to Los Angeles. There he found work in the movies as an assistant dance director at R-K-O. In 1933 he met Fred Astaire (who Pan bore a strikingly similar appearance too) on the set of Flying Down to Rio. Astaire was trying to figure out a step for The Carioca and Pan was invited over to assist Astaire. From that point on a long professional relationship and friendship was born. Pan would assist Astaire in creating the choreography for a number of his future musicals. Pan would also learn Ginger Rogers’ steps and teach them to her while Astaire was working on his solo routines.

R-K-O Radio Pictures

1937 photo of the R-K-O Radio Pictures studio.

R-K-O Radio Pictures Studio, at the corner of Melrose Avneue and Gower Street in Hollywood, California, 1937. Image from calisphere.org.

In 1928, four fully vertically integrated movie studios dominated Hollywood. By the end of the year, a new player joined M-G-M, Paramount, Fox and Warner Bros., one whose parent company, R.C.A., created to exploit their new sound on film system, Photophone.

FBO Studio in Hollywood, 1926.

Aerial photograph of the FBO Studio in Hollywood, California, 1926. Photo from hollywoodphotographs.com.

In late 1927, with all the major film studios aligned with Western Electric’s Vitaphone or Movietone sound systems, David Sarnoff needed a foothold in Hollywood for R.C.A. Photophone. Sarnoff approached Joseph P. Kennedy to install Photophone in Film Booking Office of America’s studio (FBO). During negotiations R.C.A. acquired a substantial interest in FBO. A year later, Sarnoff merged the Keith-Albee-Orpheum (KAO) vaudeville circuit with FBO. And on October 23, 1928 announced the creation of Radio-Keith-Orpheum (RKO), the first Hollywood studio created specifically to produce talking pictures. Street Girl, R-K-O’s first official release hit the screen on July 30, 1929.

Street Girl (1929) lobby card.

Lobby card of R-K-O’s first official release, Street Girl, starring Betty Compson and Jack Oakie. Image from imdb.com.

R-K-O had its first mega-hit with the release the screen adaptation of the Ziegfeld musical Rio Rita in the fall of 1929.

Title card for the 1929 version of Rio Rita.

Title card for 1929’s Rio Rita. Frame grab from the Warner Archive DVD.

R-K-O would receive their only best picture Academy Award with the 1931 version of Cimarron.

Title card from 1931's Cimarron.

Title card of 1931’s Cimarron. Frame grab from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

After these early successes, R-K-O’s over spending on theatres and increased production, combined with the deepening Depression, caused the studio to fall on very shaky financial ground. After David O. Selznick took over as head of production in 1931 the studio began to regain some fiscal solvency. Selznick’s green lighting of Merian Cooper and Ernest Schoedsack’s production of King Kong (1933) restored the studio’s financial health.

King Kong title card.

King Kong title card. Frame grab from Warner Bros. Blu ray.

Soon after the release of King Kong, Selznick left R-K-O for M-G-M, in his place Merian C. Cooper took over as head of the studio’s productions. And one of the first films made under Cooper’s tenure would be Flying Down to Rio.

Musical Films

With synchronized sound finally becoming successful in the late 1920s, the one genre that had alluded motion pictures, the musical, finally became a viable option. With the release of M-G-M’s Broadway Melody in February of 1929, the musical film took off.

Charles King and chorus in title number from The Broadway Melody.

Charles King and the chorus performing the title number in The Broadway Melody, 1929. Frame grab from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

All the Hollywood studios put musicals into production, and the public loved them. These films matched the giddy mood of the late 1920s. But by the summer of 1930 with the glut of musicals in release, combined with the deepening Depression, audiences began to reject them. From a high in 1930 with 79 musicals hitting theatres the number dropped to 7 in 1932, the darkest year of the Great Depression. When Franklin Roosevelt won the 1932 presidential election, optimism, if not actual economic prosperity, started to slowly return. In this atmosphere, Warner Bros. took a gamble and produced 42nd Street.

Main title for 1933's 42nd Street.

Main title of the Warner Bros. 1933 mega-hit 42nd Street. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Its enormous success made the other studios follow their lead and musicals once more were on movie screens. And R-K-O put into production their most expensive film of the 1933-1934 season.

Flying Down to Rio

R-K-O Radio Pictures Logo.

R-K-O Radio Pictures logo (1933). Frame capture from Warner Bros. DVD.

Flying Down to Rio main title card.

Main title card for Flying Down to Rio (Thorton Freeland, US 1933). Frame Capture from Warner Bros. DVD.

On August 23, 1933 production started on a musical film at the R-K-O studio that no-one  thought would create the most popular dancing team in movie history. Principal photography took only five weeks and wrapped up on October 6th. With an extra week or so of retakes shot between late October and November 7th.

 Dolores del Rio, Gene Raymond and Raul Roulien are the top three billed stars of the film.

The plot is typical of musicals of the early 1930s. Boy meets girl, girl is engaged to boy’s best friend,  how will it all end?

The other major plot point concerns Belinha’s father not being able to secure an entertainment permit for his new hotel in Rio de Janeiro. Without the permit the entertainment needs to take to the air, with dozens of chorus girls on the wings of airplanes. It sounds silly and it is. But it is also a lot of fun and entertaining.

Chorus girls take to the sky over Rio.

Chorus girls take to the sky to entertain the guests of the Hotel Atlantico. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Directed by Thorton Freeland and with music by Vincent Youmans and lyrics by Gus Kahn and Edward Eliscu and produced by Merian C. Cooper.

Art Direction

Like most R-K-O films of the 1930s Van Nest Ploglase and Carroll Clark are credited as Flying Down to Rio’s art directors.

The film opens up in Miami, Florida, where Roger Bond and his Yankee Clippers are performing at the fictitious Hotel Hibiscus.

The opening establishing shot of Miami in Flying Down to Rio.

Miami establishing shot at the opening of Flying Down to Rio. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

The Streamline Moderne style of architecture that one associates with Miami was still a few years away, with the opening of the Reef Apartment-Hotel in 1935. At the time of Flying Down to Rio, Spanish Colonial Revival architecture was the predominate style of Miami. And the sets of the Hotel Hibiscus, while having a few Art Deco touches, is mostly a weird amalgam of primarily Spanish style and some Venetian set pieces, including a canal and gondola. As  seen in the “Date Grove” where the Yankee Clippers are playing.

The Date Grove of the Hotel Hibiscus.

The Date Grove of the Hotel Hibiscus. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

The main lobby does have geometric Art Deco elevator doors. These can been seen in the background, as a very late-for-the-broadcast Roger Bond (Raymond) and Fred Ayres (Astaire) run through the lobby.

The Art Deco elevator doors can been seen in the background of the Hotel Hibiscus set.

The Art Deco elevator doors of the Hotel Hibiscus set. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

After the band gets fired from their Hotel Hibiscus gig, they land a job in Rio de Janeiro and the action shifts to South America. But much like the rest of the film, the art direction stays mostly Spanish Colonial Revival and Mediterranean. Typical of early 1930s films, the audience is introduced to the new local through a series of stock shots of Rio de Janeiro.

Introduction shot of Rio de Janeiro.

Establishing aerial shot introducing the audience to Rio de Janeiro. Frame grab from Warner Bros. DVD.

Roger Bond’s house in Rio keeps with the Spanish Revival style. The only modern piece in it is a Manning-Bowman Carafon thermos set (1931-1940), seen in the background sitting on  a traditional cabinet.

The set of Roger Bond's house in Rio.

The set of Roger Bond’s house in Rio. A Manning-Bowman Carafon set is on the cabinet in front of the window. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

This Manning-Bowman thermos sold well in the 1930s and were used as props in many films of the decade. A complete set with tray and glasses can be found in the Yale University Art Museum.

Manning Bowman Carafon set in the Yale University Art Museum's collection.

Manning-Bowman Carafon set, with tray and glass. Photograph from the Yale University Art Museum.

Now the action shifts to the Carioca Casino. Carioca is a word that refers to the citizens of Rio de Janeiro. This is the moment that made Flying Down to Rio a sensation: the first, on-screen dance of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. It also introduces something that would dominate in the next three Astaire-Rogers films, “the Big White Set”. These enormous, mostly white sets would be the setting for the films big production numbers, which in this film is “The Carioca”.

Establishing shot of the Carioca Casino.

The establishing shot of the Carioca Casino. A stock shot of Rio de Janeiro with an optically added sign for the Carioca Casino placed on a building. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Again, the set is inspired by Spanish style architecture with its tile and wood work. It is also has an open air garden look with trees and rough wood railings and a butterfly motif.

The interior of the Carioca Casino.

The establishing shot of the Carioca Casino, showing couples dancing the Carioca. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

The Carioca, as a dance, is a combination of samba, maxixe, fox trot and rhumba, all-the-while dancing with foreheads touching. Watching these couples, the Astaire and Rogers characters decide to give it a try and do so on the stage located just below the orchestra. Of course they’re a huge hit and in that one number they steal the film away from the three top billed leads.

After the solo dance by Astaire and Rogers, the number continues. First the white dance chorus, followed by Etta Moten (1901 – 2004) singing “The Carioca” then the Afro-Brazlian dance chorus comes in, before going back to Astaire and Rogers doing a tap version on the stage which now revolves and ending with a couple of semi-overhead shots of the all the performers in the number.

The white dancing chorus

Etta Moten singing “The Carioca”.

The Afro-Brazlian dance chorus’ turn at “The Carioca”.

Full chorus closing the number.

Full chorus closing the number. All frame grabs from the Warner Bros. DVD.

After a few more scenes playing up the the romantic plot triangle, the film gets to the Aviators Club, the only truly moderne set in the movie.

Spinning propeller toy introduces the audience to the Aviators Club in Flying Down to Rio.

Spinning propeller toy introduces the audience to the Aviators Club. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Of course here most of the set pieces are based on aviation themes. The table supports are made to look like the ropes holding the basket of a hot air balloon. Hanging over a section of the dining room are private tables inside a replica a dirigible gondola. The orchestra plays from a hot air balloon basket that lifts up and floats over the dance floor. There are chrome railings and a large compass rose on the dance floor.

Establishing shot of the Aviators Club's dining room and dance floor.

Establishing shot of the Aviators Club’s dining room and dance floor. Frame grab from Warner Bros. DVD.

Julio greets Fred as he arrives at the club and clearly seen in the background is a very iconic piece of furniture. A Biltmore chair designed by the famed KEM Weber for Albert Chase McArthur’s Arizona Biltmore in 1928.

Fred's arrival at the Aviators club gets upstaged by KEM Weber's Biltmore Chair in the background.

Julio greets Fred when he arrives at the Aviators Club. To the left of Fred is KEM Weber’s Biltmore Chair. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

A 1929 photograph of the Arizona Biltmore's lobby feature KEM Weber's chairs.

Lobby of the Arizona Biltmore, circa 1929. A number of the KEM Weber chairs can be in this photo. Photo from the Arizona Biltmore – a Waldorf Astoria Resort.

Soon after Fred arrives, the orchestra lifts up over the dance floor and plays a reprise of “When Orchids Bloom in the Moonlight”, first heard earlier in the film when Roger serenades  Belinha on a secluded beach.

The balloon basket bandstand.

The orchestra crammed into the balloon basket bandstand. Two wonderful modernist floor lamps are along the wall in the background. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

As the orchestra plays, the dancers emerge from the “airship” gondola and begin their tango.

Then the camera goes overhead, à la Busby Berkeley, showing the orchestra floating over the dance floor. The basket’s support ropes add geometric patterns to the shot.

During the number, Belinha gets up from the table, going out onto the terrace and is soon followed by Julio. Julio sings a chorus of “When Orchids Bloom in the Moonlight” to Belinha, while rear projected scenes change during the song behind them. And for the only time in any of the R-K-O Astaire / Rogers films, color is used. During this one moment the film employs tinted film stock, whose colors change with the shifting backgrounds.

Julio serenading Belinha on the terrace in pre-tinted color stock.

Roger comes upon Belinha and Julio and realizes for the first time that his best friend is his hitherto unnamed rival for Belinha. Belinha gets out of the awkward situation by dancing at tango with Fred concluding the number.

Belinha and Fred dancing a tango to bring the number to its end.

Belinha and Fred dancing a tango that brings the “When Orchids Bloom in the Moonlight” production number to a conclusion. All the above frame grabs are from the Warner Bros. DVD.

The sequence ends and it isn’t long that before we see the band and chorus girls rehearsing on the grounds of the hotel. To a reprise of “Music Makes Me”, Fred Astaire has his first on screen solo dance.

Fred’s solo to the reprise of “Music Makes Me”. Frame grabs from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Because Belinha’s father has still failed to obtain an entertainment  license for the hotel, no-one is allowed to perform anywhere on the grounds. So the chorus girls take to the skies for the “Flying Down to Rio” finale.

Skywriters announcing the Yankee Clippers to the hotel guests.

Skywriters announcing the Yankee Clippers to the hotel guests. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

The chorus Planes come into sight.

The chorus planes come into sight over the hotel. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

While on the ground Fred sings while the band plays “Flying Down to Rio”. Then Fred waves to Honey  to begin the aerial show.

Honey signals to the girls to begin the show.

Through the use of mock up planes suspended from the sound stage roof, wind machines and rear projection the illusion is created that the chorus is flying a few thousand feet above Rio de Janeiro.

Frame grabs from Flying Down to Rio are from the Warner Bros. DVD.

All the above frame grabs are from the Warner Bros. DVD.

The conclusion of the aerial show.

The delighted hotel guests at the conclusion of the aerial show. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Of course the show is a great success and the hotel is saved. Roger, not wanting to hurt his best friend, decides to take the Pan American Airways Yankee Clipper flying boat back to the States. The interior of the Sikorsky S-40 flying boat is the only other modern set piece in the film, but while modern does not really have any characteristics of Art Deco styling.

The Sikorsky S-40 flying boat ready to leave for the State at the end of Flying Down to Rio.

The Pan American Yankee Clipper flying boat (Sikorsky S-40) ready to depart for the States. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Julio, knowing Roger is on the plane and knowing that Belinha is in love with Roger, does the noble thing. He takes Belinha on board and sits her across from Roger.

Once airborne he asks the captain to marry Roger and Belinha, then parachutes out of the plane.

The film was a massive hit and helped bolster R-K-O out of financial difficulties. Of course what secured Flying Down to Rio’s place in film history was the teaming Astaire and Rogers. Their dancing of the “Carioca” started a craze that spread rapidly in 1934. And created a demand for another Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers teaming. It was no accident that the film’s last shot is on Astaire and Rogers and not the three top billed stars.

The Closing Shot of Flying Down to Rio.

Flying Down to Rio’s closing shot is on Fred and Ginger. Frame grab from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Before the end of 1934 Astaire and Rogers would be seen together on the screen again, this time in their first starring film with wonderful Art Deco sets. The Gay Divorcee will be the subject of part two in this series.

End Credit frame grabs from the Warner Bros. DVD.

 

Anthony & Chris (The Freakin’, Tiquen Guys)

 

Sources

Croce, Arlene. The Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers Book. Vintage Books, A Division of Random House, New York, 1977

Jewell, Richard B. RKO Radio Pictures A Titan is Born. University of California Press Berkeley and Los Angeles, California, 2012.

Lasky, Betty. RKO The Biggest Little Major of Them All. Prentice-Hall, Inc. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1984.

 

 

 

 

 

 

A Star is Born at Eighty Five

April 20, 1937 A Star is Born opened at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood. And just in time for its eighty fifth anniversary, Warner Archive has released a wonderful new Blu ray disc of the film. Hugely successful on its release in 1937, there have been three remakes of the film since, in 1954, 1976 and 2018. But the original still holds its own against the newer versions.

 

David O. Selznick

Circa 1935, black and white studio portrait of David O. Selznick.

David O. Selznick, circa 1935. Image from wikipedia.

A Star is Born was the third release from Selznick International Pictures. An independent studio established in 1935 that distributed films through United Artists. Selznick, born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1902, entered the film industry, working for his father in 1923. During the late 1910s Lewis J. Selznick was a major producer in the motion picture industry. And in the early 1920s his sons, Myron and David, started working for their father. The bankruptcy of Lewis Selznick’s studio and his reversal of fortune, emotionally affected both sons. Myron’s revenge took the form of a high power talent agent, making producer’s pay dearly for talent. And David, becoming one of the biggest producers in Hollywood.

 

1920s amber tinted Paramount Pictures logo.

1920s Paramount Pictures logo. Image from logosfandom.com.

Going to Hollywood in 1926, David Selznick’s career took off like a rocket. Starting as an assistant story editor at M-G-M, by 1928 he joined Paramount as an assistant to B. P. Schulberg, head of production at the west coast studio.

 

RKO logo.

R-K-O Radio Pictures Logo from the early 1930s.

In 1931 Selznick became head of production at R-K-O. During his two years there, he produced such films as A Bill of Divorcement (1932), The Animal Kingdom (1932) and King Kong (1933). One of his productions What Price Hollywood? (1932) would serve as a blue print for A Star is Born.

 

Early 1930s M-G-M logo.

M-G-M logo from the early 1930s.

In 1933, Selznick’s father-in-law, Louis B. Mayer, lured Selznick to M-G-M, where he would have semi-autonomy running a production unit. Between 1933 and 1935 Selznick’s string of hit films continued with Dinner at Eight (1933), Manhattan Melodrama (1934), Anna Karenina (1935) and A Tale of Two Cities (1935).

But what Selznick really wanted was a studio of his own. As early as 1931 he tried to set up an independent studio in partnership with director Lewis Milestone. But at the last minute the deal fell through.

 

Selznick International Pictures

The Selznick International Pictures logo.

The Selznick International Pictures logo. Featuring the studio administration building in Culver City, California. Image from martinturnbull.com.

By the middle of 1935, Selznick was ready to take the plunge into independent production. Selznick finished his M-G-M career on a high note, producing A Tale of Two Cities. Once that film wrapped production, he moved down the street into the R-K-O Pathe studio. There he set up Selznick International Pictures. Millionaire John Hay “Jock” Whitney provided financial backing for Selznick. Whitney also invested in Pioneer Pictures, a studio created to produce films in the new three-color Technicolor process. Pioneer contracted with Technicolor to produce four films over two years. But their first two films, Becky Sharp (1935) and Dancing Pirate (1936) were disappointments at the box office.

 

Unlike Pioneer, Selznick’s first independent film, Little Lord Fauntleroy (1936) was a box office success. Whitney saw Selznick as the way to honor Pioneer Pictures contract to Technicolor. As a result Selznick produced his next two films in color. The Garden of Allah (1936), mostly set in the Sahara Desert was a natural for color photography.

 

1936 poster for The Garden of Allah.

The Garden of Allah (1936), poster. Image from alamy.com

But the next Selznick International film, a behind the scenes look at Hollywood, would be just fine in black and white. However, the film would be the first three-color Technicolor film to take place in a modern urban setting.

A Star is Born

A Star is Born, main title.

A Star is Born, main title. Image from Warner Archive Blu-ray.

By the summer of 1936 David O. Selznick was very busy. Little Lord Fauntleroy was playing at theatres, The Garden of Allah began production, and Selznick started preparations for his next film. Director William A. Wellman working in collaboration with Robert Carson brought a story outline to Selznick. It was a movie about Hollywood.  Selznick did not care for the story, which at this point was titled It Happened in Hollywood. While at R-K-O Selznick produced What Price Hollywood? in 1932. He was never fully satisfied with this backstage look at the movie industry and he did want to do another Hollywood film. But he felt the Wellman / Carson script was too much of a caricature. Wellman took the script to Selznick’s wife, Irene Mayer Selznick. She was very excited by it and convinced Selznick to go ahead with the project.

On August 6, 1936, Ralph Walker’s Film Daily column “A ‘Little’ from ‘Lots'” ran the following article concerning Selznick’s new film –

 

Article from the August 6, 1936 Film Daily.

The Film Daily, August 6, 1936. Image from mediahistoryproject.org.

At this point,  Wellman and Carson finished their second draft and Selznick was possibly thinking of using British actress Merle Oberon for the lead.

 

William A. Wellman in the trailer for A Star is Born.

William A. Wellman (with arm over the Technicolor camera) and the camera crew pretending to direct A Star is Born from the trailer for the film. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

Wellman, a director since the silent movie days, directed Wings the mega-hit that won the first Academy Award for best picture. He was a no nonsense man who brought films in on time. Other Wellman hits include, Beggars of Life (1928), The Public Enemy (1931) and Call of the Wild (1935). A Star is Born, would be Wellman’s forty fifth film and his first in Technicolor.

Just before signing with Selznick, Wellman directed Small Town Girl (1936) at M-G-M, starring Janet Gaynor. Wellman, suggested to Selznick that Gaynor would be great for the role of the aspiring actress, Esther Blodgett. In the late 1920s she was one of the most popular stars in Hollywood. And she was the recipient of the first best actress Academy Award for her work in 7th Heaven (1927), Sunrise (1927) and Street Angel (1928). But by 1936 Gaynor’s career was on the wane.

 

Janet Gaynor, color photograph, circa 1937.

Janet Gaynor, circa 1937. Image from mptvimages.com.

 

As the summer of 1936 turned into autumn, Selznick was under pressure to get started on the film. With only five Technicolor cameras in Hollywood, production had to begin no later than October 31st. By late September, Selznick hired Algonquin Round Table, alum, Dorothy Parker and her husband Alan Campbell to prepare the script.

 

Motion Picture Daily, September 28, 1936.

Motion Picture Daily, September 28, 1936, Pg. 12. Image from mediahistoryproject.org.

 

While Parker and Campbell worked on the screen play, Selznick signed Frederic March for the role of the alcoholic movie star, Norman Maine, in the now titled A Star is Born. In the late 1930s, March was one of the most popular stars in Hollywood.

 

Frederic March, circa 1932.

Frederic March, circa 1932. Image from pinterest.com.

Originally signed by Paramount in the late 1920s, during the conversion to talkies, March, with his stage training was a hit in films. In 1932 he won a best actor Academy Award for Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931). Going freelance at the expiration of his Paramount contract, March continued in a string of hits, that include Les Miserable (1935), Anna Karenina (1935) and Anthony Adverse (1936).

 

Film Daily, October 2, 1936. Image from mediahistoryproject.org.

 

With the October 31st start date looming, Selznick began to line up all the members of his production team, including art director Lyle Wheeler (1905 – 1990), a graduate of USC. After graduation Wheeler found employment as a magazine artist and industrial designer. Selznick hired Wheeler in 1936 which started him on his career as an movie art director.

 

Film Daily October 24, 1936. Selznick hires Lyle Wheeler.

Film Daily “A ‘Little’ from ‘Lots'” column, October 24, 1936. Image from mediahistoryproject.org.

 

A Star is Born, would be Wheeler’s first film. He would go on to create the sets for Gone With the Wind (1939), Laura (1944), All About Eve (1950) and The King and I (1956) among others.

 

Film Daily October 24, 1936. Selznick hires Lyle Wheeler.

Lyle Wheeler, 1939 with his sketches for the sets of Gone With the Wind. Image from imdb.com.

 

Filming started right on the October 31, 1936 deadline. It went smoothly and wrapped on December 28th, with only a few days of re-takes needed in mid-January, 1937.

 

William Wellman and Janet Gaynor.

William Wellman and Janet Gaynor having fun on the A Star is Born set. Image from alamy.com.

 

The Technicolor camera crew on location with William Wellman, Janet Gaynor, Adolphe Menjou and Fredric March.

On location with the Technicolor camera crew with Wellman, Janet Gaynor, Adolphe Menjou and Fredric March. This picture shows how enormous the Technicolor camera was in its sound-proof blimp. Image from alamy.com.

 

It was obvious that A Star is Born was a hit at its premiere at the Chinese Theatre and at its New York City opening at the Radio City Music Hall, on April 22, 1937. This film had everything going for it, it was only the seventh feature film to be released in the new three-color Technicolor process. The supporting cast, which included Andy Devine, May Robson, Lionel Stander and Adolphe Menjou, were all top notch. And the two main stars gave great performances, so much so that it briefly revived Janet Gaynor’s career.

 

Janet Gaynor and David O. Selznick after a screening of A Star is Born.

Janet Gaynor and David O. Selznick after a screening of A Star is Born (possibly the premiere) and obviously delighted by the audience’s reception of the film. Image from alamy.com.

The Set Design

Wheeler’s work on A Star is Born really displays the fine thought he gave to his set design. Even by the mid-1930s most Americans had not embraced the modern style sticking instead to traditional furnishings for their own homes. They considered modern design somewhat decadent and for the city slicker. Wheeler uses this dichotomy of taste in his set design. Ultra modern sets are used to represent the Hollywood personalities and the studio. But for the protagonists home, it is all traditional furnishings, to make them down to earth and relatable to the majority of the movie going audience. But let’s look at how Lyle Wheeler designed the various sets to invoke character of place.

The Blodgett Farm 

This North Dakota farmhouse is definitely 30 years behind the times. Everything about it is old fashioned. Janet Gaynor’s character of Esther, longs to break away for this place of Tiffany style lamps and cast iron heater in the living room.

 

The living room of the Blodgett farmhouse in North Dakota.

J. C. Nugent, A. W. Sweatt, Janet Gaynor and Clara Blandick in the living room of the Blodgett farmhouse. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

Blodgett farmhouse dining room.

May Robson comes into the living through the dinning room, with the Tiffany style hanging light over the table. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

The Beach House

After Esther becomes a star and she marries Norman, they settle into their beach house out in Malibu. Unlike Norman’s bachelor home, director Casey Burke’s home and the studio, the beach house is restrained traditional in style. Here Wheeler blended Chippendale and colonial with some moderne lamps. There is exposed painted white brick and wallpaper. It is all lovely and a little dull and for the majority of 1930s audiences very relatable.

 

The Beverly Hills House

The audience never gets to see inside, Norman and Esther’s Beverly Hills house. This was one of the few location shoots used in the production of A Star is Born. The house is not moderne in style, it is typical of the Spanish style architecture in southern California, stucco with a tile roof. And being Hollywood, of course it has the obligatory swimming pool.

 

The backyard of the Beverly Hills house in A Star is Born.

The beautiful backyard of the Norman and Esther’s Beverly Hills house. Image from Warner Archive Blu ray.

A Hollywood swimming pool.

The typical Hollywood star’s swimming pool. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

 

Casey Burke House

The first taste of Hollywood glamour in the film comes when Esther is waitressing a party at the home of fictitious director Casey Burke. Burke is played by former silent film star and ex-husband of Mary Pickford, Owen Moore (1886-1939). For these sets, Wheeler went full out with then current moderne trends in decoration. 1936 was also a turning point in style going from streamline moderne to a more relaxed country club style. So while Burke’s house has rough hewn stone columns of the country club aesthetic, there is also blonde wood furniture (also a new trend in the mid-1930s) and lots of glass block.

 

The first glimpse of the Casey Burke home in A Star is Born.

First glimpse of the Casey Burke house. Notice the blonde wood, side table and herring bone pattern draperies. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

The living room of movie director Casey Burke.

Living room of Casey Burke’s house, with painted white rough hewn stone wall and columns. But note the great machine age bridge lamp in the corner. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

Oliver Niles on phone next to staircase with a glass block wall.

Oliver Niles, played by Adolphe Menjou, on a gold telephone (only in the movies) with a moderne staircase featuring a glass block wall. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

More use of glass block in the Casey Burke home set.

Esther serving Norman Maine hors d’oeuvres. More use of glass block. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

The kitchen in the Casey Burke house.

A 1937 dream kitchen, modern metal cabinets, a sleek linoleum floors and a General Electric monitor top refrigerator. Also notice the Sunbeam coffee service on the counter down front. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

Norman Maine’s Bachelor Bedroom

Norman Maine’s bachelor digs were quite different from the house he shared with Esther. There was nothing old fashioned or traditional about his bedroom, with its tufted head board and built into the ceiling lighting. Also notable in this set is the use of wood veneer on the curved wall behind the bed. Wheeler continues his use of blonde wood for the furniture in this set, too.

Norman Maine's bedroom.

Norman Maine’s bedroom, very befitting of a big Hollywood star. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

Closer view of Norman Maine's bed.

Closer view of bed and veneer wall. Nice bedside lamp with looks to be a suede covered lampshade.. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

Norman Maine reading the telephone directory that was on his bedroom dresser.

Fredric March as Norman Maine looking through a telephone directory at his bedroom dresser. Nice metal lamp with a great shade on the side table just in front of March. And in the background a Gilbert Rohde chair designed for the Heywood-Wakefield Company. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

 

Oliver Niles’ Bedroom

The one and only time that the audience sees this set is when Norman Maine (Fredric March) calls up his producer Oliver Niles (Adolphe Menjou) in the middle of the night. Niles, Casey Burke and Norman Maine must have used the same interior decorator, so many of the same furnishings and designs trends can be seen across all he sets. Like the same wall blonde wood side table from Casey Burke’s house, is Oliver Niles night stand. As well as the same gold telephone.

Oliver Niles's bedroom.

Oliver Niles (Adolphe Menjou) in a great set of purple and lavender striped pajamas. The night stand is the side table seen earlier in the Casey Burke set. Nice Telechron or General Electric clock on the night stand. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

 

The Studio

For the studio sets, here is where Lyle Wheeler went full blown moderne. And where he and Selznick had a big argument over the look of one particular set. Selznick wanted the film to be as realistic depiction of Hollywood as possible, but in one instance the reality just was not attractive as Wheeler pointed out –

David and I had an absolutely huge argument about the set for the studio commissary. He wanted the original MGM commissary to be used the way it used to be, a really junky place. I said that no one in the world really knows what it looks like; I said it’s a mistake to show that piece of junk that we ate our breakfast and lunch in. He said no, that was the feeling he wanted, and I wouldn’t give in, and he said “You do it the way I want it.”

So I did, and the day before we were to shoot he came down and said, “You’re right, build the other one.” So I had already designed it, it was based on the new one that Cedric Gibbons hand designed at MGM, so I used that as the model and used a lot of glass brick, which was just then coming in, and big circle windows so that you could see people going by . . . we tore the old one down in ten minutes and you’d never believe the number of people we had in the crew that built the new one. We worked all night but we had it up and dressed the next day, ready for shooting. 

            Lyle Wheeler quoted in David O. Selznick’s Hollywood, Ronald Haver, Borzoi Books, 1982.

The Commissary

The commissary as it appears in A Star is Born.

The commissary as rebuilt by Lyle Wheeler. Featuring the big round windows and moderne chrome tube furniture. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

The commissary counter.

The commissary counter. This shot shows off some great moderne hanging lights and a blonde wood cashier counter. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

 

The Dialogue Coach’s Studio

The dialogue coach's office.

Esther (Janet Gaynor) reciting from Shakespeare during elocution lessons for the dialogue coach (Edwin Maxwell). More chrome tube furniture and lamp with a great louvered shade. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

The dialogue coach's studio.

Another one of the nice lamps with the louvered shade behind the dialogue coach played by Edwin Maxwell. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

 

Oliver Niles’ Office

This set, probably depicts the office the David O. Selznick dreamed about. It is subdued, refined and very modern. The walls are the same wood paneling that was used behind Norman Maine’s bed. There is comfy looking green velvet covered chairs and a sofa. Uplighter torchieres around the room give it a warm glow that only indirect lighting can do. Niles’ desk, with its burled wood veneer, is what every big executive in the 1930s coveted. A wonderfully modern glass lamp with a frosted shade sits prominently on the desk. And along one wall is a brand new, 1936 Philco radio bar.

 

Oliver Niles at his office desk.

Oliver Niles signs Esther Blodgett to a contract. Great burled wood desk with a stylish glass lamp. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

Oliver Niles and secretary at his desk.

Another shot of the desk in Oliver Niles’ office. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

Exiting the office to the anteroom.

Secretary exiting to the front office with its glass block window. Notice the wall paneling. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

Oliver Niles' office with his uplighter torchieres and a Philco Radio bar.

A torchiere stands down front, while against the wall in the back is the 1936 Philco Radio bar.

More of Oliver Niles' office.

Comfy looking green velvet furniture, a great uplighter torchiere and more glass block in Matt Libby’s (Lionel Stander) office. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

 

A Star is Born Opens

1937 A Star is Born lobby card.

A 1937 lobby card for A Star is Born. Image from imbd.com.

After opening at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre and the Radio City Music Hall, A Star is Born went into general release on April 24, 1937. The film was a big hit with critics and the movie audience. At the Academy Awards it received seven nominations, including best actress, best actor, best director and best picture. It won two Oscars, one for best original story and an honorary award for color photography.

 

Re-issues and Public Domain

Costing $1,173,639 it earned over $2,000,000 by the end of 1939, giving the studio a profit of $181,000. Because of the huge amount of money earned by Gone With the Wind and Rebecca, David O. Selznick had to dissolve Selznick International Pictures in 1943 for tax reasons. And with this, the rights to A Star is Born as well as several other films reverted to Jock Whitney. Whitney then sold the rights to Film Classics, Inc. for re-issue.

Daily News story about Jock Whitney selling the rights of A Star is Born, 1943.

From Ed Sullivan’s “Little Old New York” column in the New York Daily News, July 21, 1943. Article from proquest.com.

Film Classics Inc. re-released  A Star is Born in September of 1943. And here’s is where the trouble with the visual quality of the film begins. To make the most money it could from a six year old film, Film Classics made new color prints in Cinecolor, a cheaper alternative to Technicolor.

 

Cinecolor was a two-color process vs. the three-color photography that Technicolor offered. Because Cinecolor only used red and blue color records, the color in the release prints was compromised. There were no greens or yellow in  Cinecolor prints. Another film sold by Jock Whitney to Film Classics, Inc. was Becky Sharp, which was also re-issued in Cinecolor prints. Below are examples from a Cinecolor two-color print vs. the Technicolor restoration done by the UCLA Film and Television Archive for a comparison the color between the two systems.

With declining revenue from A Star is Born, Film Classics sold the rights to producer Edward L. Alperson who intended to remake it. Then in 1953, Alperson sold the rights to the film to Warners Bros. And with this sale the original Technicolor negative went to Warner Bros. But in 1965 Warner Bros. did not renew the copyright registration and the original version of A Star is Born fell into public domain.

 

Home Video

Because, A Star is Born fell into public domain, it meant that it could be broadcast on TV without having to pay for the rights. And when the home video industry started in the late 1970s, any video company could put it out on tape again without having to pay for rights. So the market became flooded with different VHS tapes of the film. These tapes ranged in quality from good to down right awful. Here is an example of some of the companies releasing A Star is Born to the home market.

This is where I first made my acquaintance with the film. I purchased a VHS tape of A Star is Born in 1980 for $79.95 ($279.00 in 2022). And the quality was terrible. The image was so washed out that the actor’s faces were white blobs with two dark spots where their eyes were and an occasional third dark spot when they opened their mouths to talk. Through the years I would end up buying at least nine different copies of the film in every format. From VHS to laser disc, then back to VHS when Kino International released the film copied from David O. Selznick’s personal print.

The laser disc release of A Star is Born.

Image Entertainment laser disc release of A Star is Born. Image from etsy.com.

The Kino VHS tape.

The Kino VHS edition of A Star is Born.

In the early 2000s Kino released it on DVD. and finally in 2012 on Blu ray.

By then I thought I was finished buying the 1937 A Star is Born. But, never say never.

 

Warner Archive Blu ray

Warner Archive Blu ray.

Warner Archive Blu ray.

Now the Warner Archive has released a new Blu ray, made from the original three-color Technicolor negatives. The good news is A Star is Born has never looked this good on home video. Online there have been comparisons to Warner Archive’s version to the Kino Lorber release. These comparisons are unfair. Warner Archive has access to the original negatives while Kino made their discs from a vintage Technicolor print. Here is where I can speak with a bit more knowledge than most, I know the print that Kino used. I work in film preservation at the George Eastman Museum, where David O. Selznick’s print is held. Selznick’s print was not an original 1937 print, it was made for him in 1946. And it is on British Kodak stock, so it was probably made from duplicate negatives at Technicolor’s London laboratory. This print is darker and bluer than the original release prints. Kino lightened up the image for the video master.

Now, does this new Blu ray look the way the film did to audiences in 1937, probably not. There is a misconception about the look of Technicolor films from the 1930s. During the mid to late 1930s Technicolor feature films were not overly bright with overly saturated colors. For the most part they leaned to the brown side and featured a subdued color palette. And the image on the new Blu ray is very sharp. Technicolor’s method of printing films was similar to lithography, it layered dyes on a blank strip of film using matrices to create a full color image. While Technicolor’s registration was excellent, it still can’t compare to the computer registration used to create the digital master for the Blu ray.

 

I don’t know what the Warner Brother colorists used for a color reference (Technicolor negatives are black and white with latent color records), but the 1937 Technicolor print in the George Eastman Museum’s collection looks very different from the Blu ray. I also must point out the the quality and color of vintage Technicolor prints varied, so the 1937 print I inspected is very different from Selznick’s print from 1946. And it could be very different from what was used as reference at Warner Brothers. Here are comparison frames from the 1937 print vs. the Selznick print vs. the Warner Blu ray –

Studio Logo from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

Studio Logo from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

Opening credits in the Warner Archive Blu ray disc.

Opening Credits from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

 

The Blodgett farmhouse, Warner Archive Blu ray.

Warner Archive Blu ray – The Blodgett farmhouse.

 

So here are some final thoughts about the Warner Archive Blu ray disc of A Star is Born. Like I said earlier in this post, this is definitely the best this film has ever looked on home video. Does it replicate the look of the film in 1937, well not really. If you are a fan of the film, should you upgrade to this new Blu ray, absolutely, not only does it look fantastic, the sound is excellent and the disc comes with many extras, including the original trailer and two Lux Radio Theatre broadcasts.

 

The final close up of A Star is Born.

“. . . this is Mrs. Norman Maine!” The final shot of A Star is Born. Image from the Warner Archive Blu ray.

The end credit on A Star is Born.

End credit for the 1937 A Star is Born. Image from Warner Archive Blu ray.

 

Anthony & Chris (The Freakin’, Tiquen’ Guys).

 

Sources

Film Daily

Motion Picture Daily

The New York Daily News

David O. Selznick’s Hollywood