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The Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers book

af Arlene Croce

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Fascinating facts and production details about the nine (plus one) Astaire-Rogers movies and marries them to a dazzling, comprehensive analysis of all the Fred and Ginger numbers from those films.
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beautifully illustrated movie-by-movie analysis of the films of these two pros with one another, with expert commentary by dance critic arlene croce. who can put in words responses to the ephemeral art form that is dance. the magic of this little volume is that croce is also a fan ... which animates her language in delightful ways. as an added bonus, the top right hand and top left hand corners of the book pages are essentially "flip books" .. flip one way and you have LET YOURSELF GO from FOLLOW THE FLEET .. flip the other way and you have THE WALTZ IN SWING TIME from SWING TIME. enchanting.
1 stem msteketee | Aug 17, 2009 |
Movie criticism suffered a loss when, in the mid-sixties, Miss Croce abandoned the field and gave most of her energies to dance criticism; now she has joined her two major talents. No one has ever described dance in movies the way she does: she’s a slangy, elegant writer; her compressed descriptions are evocative and analytic at the same time, and so precise and fresh that while bringing the pleasure of the dances back she adds to it. There is a sense of pressure in her style that has something like the tension and pull of the dances themselves. Her descriptions are original and imperially brusque in a way that keeps the reader alert; one responds to her writing kinesthetically, as if it were dance...

For Miss Croce, in the best Astaire-and-Rogers films (The Gay Divorcee, Roberta, Top Hat, Follow the Fleet, Swing Time) something happened that “never happened in movies again” — “dancing was transformed into a vehicle of serious emotion between a man and a woman.” And from this, I think, flow my disagreements with her. We have had many happy arguments about dance and movies; I suspect that they hinge on temperament. Miss Croce (she is the editor of Ballet Review) is a perfectionist — a romantic perfectionist. I, too, find Astaire and Rogers rapturous together, but Miss Croce’s romanticism about the two leads her to ascribe a dance perfection to them. I think that Astaire’s dry buoyancy comes through best in his solos, which are more exciting dances than the romantic ballroom numbers with Rogers. Miss Croce says Rogers’ “technique became exactly what she needed in order to dance with Fred Astaire, and, as no other woman in movies ever did, she created the feeling that stirs us so deeply when we see them together: Fred need not be alone.” Well, that’s maybe a bit much.
tilføjet af SnootyBaronet | RedigerNew Yorker, Pauline Kael
 
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About four minutes into the movie Shall We Dance, Fred Astaire shows Edward Everett Horton a flip book of Ginger Rogers dancing and says, “I haven’t even met her, but I’d kinda like to marry her,” which is exactly what a movie audience of 1937 would have expected him to say.
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There has always been a strong element of precocity in the Rogers personality—something startlingly out of tune with her cute face and figure—and when she makes her entrance in 42nd Street with her monocle and Pekinese, or when she bursts into pig Latin in the middle of “We’re in the Money” in Gold Diggers of 1933, the effect is almost eerie. She not only wears the monocle, she wears the Von Stroheim wince that goes with it.
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Fascinating facts and production details about the nine (plus one) Astaire-Rogers movies and marries them to a dazzling, comprehensive analysis of all the Fred and Ginger numbers from those films.

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