Okay, look. When I was young and watching old movies and cartoons, the images were black and white. Color hadn't come along yet, but once it did, the images started to change. It took awhile for things to go color, you know. The black and whites had had such images. And style. So when I was young and dreaming along with the movies, a world of release and joy and sometimes intense emotional moments would engulf me, a world of singing and dancing where a callow youth could save and redeem himself with the right production number. You might say that I began to acquire a philosophy. The pinnacle of it all was a well to do guy in dinner tie and tails and nightclubs where the only light is a soft neon glow. Brash and charming, confident with a soupcon of a stylish high society thief. Fred Astaire, song and dance man, ruled the American Dream. For well to do folks at least. As the color musicals stared to air, there was another dancing man. Part gymnast, same charm, much more athletic. Occasionally a pompous fool in a sweet musical comedy sort of way. Earthier. Working class. But as much as I liked Gene Kelly (even with the pompous parts), the world I chose was one of glowing blacks and whites, where witty bon mots were conversation. Where every now and then, if you live your life right, one might step out onto the black onyx dance floor and experience one of those moments you hang on to forever, the ones that make life worth continuing.
In the meantime, I feel a need to comment on one of those "trial balloons" floated just a day or two after my last post. It noted that "insiders" had been told by Newt Gingrich that he was running for president in 2012.
Newt Gingrich? The man who co-authored the Contract on America? The same Newt Gingrich who tried to hound and impeach Bill Clinton out of office for a sexual indiscretion - while he was having an extramarital affair with a House of Representatives staffer 23 years his junior?
Is this satire or is it serious?
Is this satire or is it serious?
2 comments:
This is amazing! I didn't know a VHS of "The Curse of Fred Astaire" existed! You see, I don't care if the film is trash and unwatchable -- I was IN IT! I've never seen it, or me, dancing in the two little scenes I was in. And I've been told that the master and all the prints were destroyed in a fire, so I didn't think there was any chance I'd ever see any of it! If you have the tape, or your friends do, or you know of a way to get hold of one (I still have a VCR!), would you do me the favor of letting me know at "creativedigi@aol.com?"
BTW, I completely agree with you about the great man himself. My father was a fan before me, and I became one on my own, after watching and loving his films. So debonair, so charming, such a DANCER! I wish the world of Fred Astaire still existed somewhere, also. Alas, that lifestyle seems to be extinct.
gigi z
i have a vhs copy. i wrote and recorded the score along with john czerkowitz. if you contact me i'll try to copy it.
one song, "famous and rich" was deleted, i may have a
rehearsal version. i live in colorado near boulder and would be happy to do what i can.
the film is truly retro and campy to the extreme. contact me at hueyislo@gmail.com.
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