[March 17th
is St. Patrick’s Day, a holiday
that is apparently a far
bigger deal in the U.S. than in Ireland. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy a
handful of famous Irish American cultural figures, leading up to a post on some
wonderful Irish American literary voices!]
On stand-out
moments from three of the legendary Irish American dancer’s biggest
hit movies.
1)
Anchors Aweigh (1945): Anchors
co-starred a very
young Frank Sinatra, and it would be interesting to compare it to another,
significantly darker (perhaps in part because it was released after the war was
over) World War II-set naval film co-starring a slightly
older Sinatra, From Here to Eternity
(1953). But in truth, Anchors will
always be known first and foremost for the famous sequence in which Kelly dances “alongside”
Jerry Mouse (of Tom and Jerry fame). Besides being pretty advanced in its
combination of animation and live action (more than forty years before Who
Framed Roger Rabbit?), the
sequence foreshadows the kinds of intertextuality, playfulness, and multimedia
elements that would come to define post-war, postmodern American art.
2)
An American in Paris (1951): Full disclosure, I watched all of American for a high school project where
I used clips from all the Best
Picture Oscar winners over a period of the 1940s and 50s, and I can’t remember
a darn thing about it other than the very long climactic ballet
dance featuring Kelly and Leslie Caron from which I drew my chosen clip. But in
reading up on this acclaimed and hugely popular musical, what I find most
interesting is that it’s an adaptation of a 1928 George Gershwin
orchestral piece of the same name. American culture in the 1920s was of
course defined in many ways by the expatriate experience, by artists
and others (many WWI vets) living
in places like Paris yet still thinking of themselves as Americans. The
same is apparently true of Kelly’s World War II vet protagonist in the film,
and it’d be interesting to think further about the similarities and differences
between these two eras and their expatriate communities.
3)
Singin’ in the Rain (1952): Not sure I need to say too much
about a film so acclaimed that Sight & Sound
put it 20th on their 2018 list of the greatest films
of all time, and so beloved that the famous titular dance sequence with
umbrellas was just recently part of a very different (and also very
popular) pop culture moment. But I will say this: the film’s plot, which
focuses on three silent film stars attempting to make the move to “talkies” in the
late 1920s, and thus parallels quite interestingly the fraught place of
movie musicals in an era of increasing cinematic realism, is one of the
more thoughtful and historically nuanced of any film from the period (much less
any musical). Indeed, I would say the same about Kelly’s oeuvre overall—in less
than a decade he made all three of these thematically complex and historically
resonant movies, belying any sense of him as simply or solely a song-and-dance
man (unbelievably
talented as he was at the dancing).
Last Irish
American tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Irish Americans you’d highlight?
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