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Roberta

 
Movies:

Roberta

  • Director: William Seiter
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Musical
  • Movie Type: Musical Romance
  • Themes: Fashion World, Opposites Attract
  • Main Cast: Irene Dunne, Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Ginger Rogers, Randolph Scott, Helen Westley
  • Release Year: 1935
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 85 minutes

Plot

Alice Duer Miller's novel Gowns by Roberta was adapted into the 1933 Broadway musical Roberta, with music by Jerome Kern and Otto Harbach. The 1935 filmization of Roberta was slightly adapted to accommodate the dancing talents of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, though their roles are secondary to the characters portrayed by Irene Dunne and Randolph Scott. Dunne plays a deposed White Russian princess who has become a famed Parisian couturier. Dunne is the partner of "Roberta" (Helen Westley), who passes away, leaving her half of the business to American football player Randolph Scott--who of course knows next to nothing about the gown business, and couldn't care less anyway. Astaire co-stars as bandleader Huck Haines, the character played by Bob Hope in the original Broadway production of Roberta. Rogers rounds out the cast as a phony Polish countess who happens to be Astaire's former girlfriend. Many of the songs written for Roberta were retained for the film version, including "Lovely to Look At," "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" and "I Won't Dance;" other tunes are heard as background music. Keep an eye out for a blond Lucille Ball as a fashion model. Withdrawn from circulation for many years due to the 1952 MGM remake (titled Lovely to Look At), Roberta began making the public-domain rounds in the early 1980s. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

Like Flying Down to Rio, Roberta is a film in which Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers play supporting roles -- but provide the real highlights of the film. This is not to slight the film's female star, Irene Dunne, who turns in a good, stylish performance and sounds wonderful when singing a rueful "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" and a charming "Lovely to Look At." But Dunne's love affair with Randolph Scott is less involving, interesting -- just plain less fun -- than that involving the dancing stars. Roberta includes three top notch Astaire-Rogers routines. "I'll be Hard to Handle" is justifiably famous, incorporating a difficult tap duet that turns into a magnificent challenge dance, and ending in a gorgeous swirl of energy that melts into a gentle collapse. In "I Won't Dance," Astaire solos for Rogers, displaying a catalogue of movement that belies the title, and their tender pas de deux to "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" is delicate and lovely. When not singing -- or displaying eye-catching fashions -- Roberta tends to drag a bit, but the musical moments, Dunne's way with a phrase, and Astaire and Rogers make it well worth the wait. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide

Cast

Victor Varconi - Ladislaw; Claire Dodd - Sophie; Luis Alberni - Voyda; Ferdinand Munier - Lord Delves; Torben Meyer - Albert; Adrian Rosley - Professor; Lucille Ball - Girl; Candy Candido; Virginia Carroll; Lynne Carver; William B. Davidson - Purser; Mary Forbes - Mrs. Teal; Grace Hayle - Reporter; Maxine Jennings; Howard Lally; Donna Mae Roberts - Mannequin; Zena Savina - Woman; Gene Sheldon; Kay Sutton; Mike Tellegen - Cossack; Dale Van Sickel - Dance Extra; Judith Vosselli; Hal Borne; Jane Hamilton; Rita Gould - Bits; Wanda Perry; Sam Savitsky - Cossack; Diane Cook; William Dunn - Orchestra; Muzzy Marcellino

Credit

Carroll Clark - Art Director, Van Nest Polglase - Art Director, Fred Astaire - Choreography, Hermes Pan - Choreography, Bernard Newman - Costume Designer, William Seiter - Director, Willaim Hamilton - Editor, Otto Harbach - Composer (Music Score), Jerome Kern - Composer (Music Score), Max Steiner - Musical Direction/Supervision, Edward J. Cronjager - Cinematographer, Pandro S. Berman - Producer, Thomas K. Little - Set Designer, Sam Mintz - Screenwriter, Jane Murfin - Screenwriter, Glenn Tryon - Screenwriter, Allan G. Scott - Screenwriter, Alice Duer Miller - Book Author, Otto Harbach - From Musical by, Jerome Kern - From Musical by
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Wikipedia: Roberta (1935 film)
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Roberta

Theatrical release poster
Directed by William A. Seiter
Produced by Pandro S. Berman
Written by Jane Murfin
Based on the musical by Jerome Kern and Otto Harbach and a novel by Alice Duer Miller
Starring Irene Dunne
Fred Astaire
Ginger Rogers
Randolph Scott
Music by Jerome Kern, conducted by Max Steiner
Cinematography Edward Cronjager
Editing by William Hamilton
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures
Release date(s) March 8, 1935 (1935-03-08)
Running time 106 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Roberta is a 1935 musical film by RKO starring Irene Dunne, Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, and Randolph Scott. It was an adaptation of a 1933 Broadway theatre musical of the same name, which in turn was based on the novel Gowns by Roberta by Alice Duer Miller. It was a solid hit, showing a net profit of more than three quarters of a million dollars.

The film kept the famed songs "Yesterdays" and "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" from the play, along with a third song, "I'll Be Hard to Handle". But it replaced three others ("The Touch of Your Hand", "Something Had To Happen" and "You're Devastating") with Jerome Kern's "I Won't Dance" and "Lovely to Look At", which both became #1 hits in 1935, the latter being nominated for the Best Song Oscar. These new numbers have remained so popular that they are now always included in revivals and recordings of Roberta. Other songs from the show were omitted from the film.

Roberta is the third Astaire-Rogers film, and the only one to be remade with other actors. MGM did so in 1952, entitling the new Technicolor version Lovely to Look At. Indeed, with an eye to a sequel, MGM bought Roberta in 1945, keeping it out of general circulation until the 1970s.

Contents

Plot

John Kent (Randolph Scott), a former star football player at Harvard, goes to Paris with his friend Huck Haines (Fred Astaire) and the latter's dance band, the Wabash Indianians. Alexander Voyda (Luis Alberni) has booked the band, but refuses to let them play when he finds the musicians are not the Indians he expected, but merely from the state.

John turns to the only person he knows in Paris for help, his Aunt Minnie (Helen Westley), who owns the fashionable "Roberta" gown shop. While there, he meets her chief assistant (and secretly the head designer), Stephanie (Irene Dunne). John is quickly smitten with her.

Meanwhile, Huck unexpectedly stumbles upon someone he knows very well. "Countess Scharwenka", a temperamental customer at Roberta's, turns out to be his hometown sweetheart Lizzie Gatz (Ginger Rogers). She gets Huck's band an engagement at the nightclub where she is a featured entertainer.

Two things trouble John. One is Ladislaw (Victor Varconi), the handsome Russian doorman/deposed prince who seems too interested in Stephanie. The other is the memory of Sophie (Claire Dodd), the snobbish, conceited girlfriend he left behind after a quarrel over his lack of sophistication and polish.

When Aunt Minnie dies unexpectedly without leaving a will, John inherits the shop. Knowing nothing about women's fashion and that his aunt intended for Stephanie to inherit the business, he persuades Stephanie to remain as his partner. Correspondents flock to hear what a football player has to say about feminine fashions. Huck gives the answers, making a lot of weird statements about the innovations John is planning to introduce.

Sophie arrives in Paris, attracted by John's good fortune. She enters the shop, looking for a dress, but is dissatisfied with everything Stephanie shows her. Huck persuades her to choose a gown that John had ordered discarded as too vulgar. When John sees her in it, they quarrel for the final time.

John reproaches Stephanie for selling Sophie the gown. Terribly hurt, Stephanie quits the shop. With Roberta's putting on a fashion show in a week, Huck takes over the design work, with predictably bad results. When Stephanie sees his awful creations, she is persuaded to return to save Roberta's reputation.

The show is a triumph, helped by the entertaining of Huck, Countess Scharwenka, and the band. (A pre-stardom Lucille Ball, with platinum blond hair, appears uncredited in her first RKO film[1] as a model in the fashion show[2].) The closing sensation is a gown modeled by Stephanie herself. At the show, John overhears that she and Ladislaw are leaving Paris and mistakenly assumes that they have married. Later, he congratulates her for becoming a princess. When she informs him that Ladislaw is merely her cousin and that the title has been hers since birth, the lovers are reunited. Fred and Ginger do a final tap dance sequel.

Cast

Musical numbers

RKO publicity still of Astaire and Rogers performing "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes"
  • The Pipe Organ Number Astaire performing on the hands of his band arranged as a keyboard
  • Let's Begin Comedy song and dance number by Astaire, Candy Candido and Gene Sheldon (Bernardo on the future Zorro television series), with band
  • Yesterdays Sung by Dunne, with guitar and string bass accompaniment
  • I'll be Hard to Handle Double dance by Astaire and Rogers, a tap number in which they "talk with their feet." (Repartee expressed in dance steps)
  • Lovely to Look At Dunne solo and Rogers & Astaire dance
  • I Won't Dance Song by Rogers, Astaire at piano; followed by a solo dance to the melody by Astaire
  • Smoke Gets in Your Eyes Sung by Irene Dunne (reprise danced by Ginger and Fred)
  • Russian Lullaby Sung by Dunne with balalaika orchestra
  • Fashion Pageant Parade of models in an array of costumes to a medley of songs, with Astaire as master of ceremonies
  • Touch of Your Hand Sung by Dunne
  • Finale Dance Astaire and Rogers[3]

References

  1. ^ Frew, Tim (2001) [1996] (Trade paperback). Lucy: A Life in Pictures (First paperback ed.). New York: Barnes & Noble Books. p. 35. ISBN 0-7607-2866-6. 
  2. ^ a b Roberta cast at Internet Movie Database
  3. ^ http://www.reelclassics.com/Teams/Fred&Ginger/fred&ginger3.htm

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