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Stanley Donen

 

(born April 13, 1924, Columbia, S.C., U.S.) U.S. film director and choreographer. He began his career in the stage chorus of Pal Joey (1940), where he met Gene Kelly. He and Kelly choreographed Best Foot Forward (1941; film, 1943) and other musicals, and the two codirected On the Town (1949) and the acclaimed Singin' in the Rain (1952). Both films showed off Donen's skill at intensifying a sense of fantasy and served to reenergize the musical film genre. He later directed and produced films such as The Pajama Game (1957), Funny Face (1957), and Damn Yankees (1958). He also branched into nonmusical films such as Charade (1963) and Two for the Road (1967).

For more information on Stanley Donen, visit Britannica.com.

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Director: Stanley Donen
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  • Born: Apr 13, 1924 in Columbia, South Carolina
  • Occupation: Director
  • Active: '40s-'70s
  • Major Genres: Musical, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: On the Town, Bedazzled, Two for the Road
  • First Major Screen Credit: Cover Girl (1944)

Biography

After starting out as a Broadway hoofer in the 1940s, director/choreographer Stanley Donen decided to try movies and went on to work with the greatest dancers and helm several of the most highly regarded musicals to emerge from classical Hollywood. Even after he left the musical genre, Donen's smooth touch earned him several 1960s hits, but his career slowed down in the 1970s and 1980s after several decades in the business.

Born in South Carolina, Donen an dancing as a child. Making his Broadway debut at 16 in the chorus of Pal Joey, Donen soon began a fruitful collaboration with the show's star, Gene Kelly, assisting with the choreography for the show Best Foot Forward in 1941. Following Kelly's lead, Donen then headed to Hollywood, repeating his jobs as assistant choreographer and chorus dancer in the film version of Best Foot Forward (1943). Donen worked steadily as a choreographer for the rest of the decade, including on Kelly's Cover Girl (1944) for Columbia.

After moving to MGM in 1945, Donen continued to collaborate with Kelly, choreographing such films as Anchorbegs Aweigh (1945) (featuring Kelly's dance with cartoon mouse Jerry) and Living in a Big Way (1947). Donen's career kicked into high gear when he began working with storied MGM producer Arthur Freed, co-choreographing and co-writing Busby Berkeley's Kelly and Frank Sinatra musical Take Me Out to the Ballgame (1949). His subsequent trio of Freed-unit musicals became landmarks of the genre. Sharing duties with Kelly, Donen's first film as director, On the Town (1949), reprised the Donen/Kelly/Sinatra magic and opened up the sparkling Broadway hit with dance numbers shot on location in New York, breathing exuberant life into the often studio-bound genre. Serving as sole director on his next film, Royal Wedding (1951), Donen worked with Fred Astaire, producing two of the star's most famous moments as he defies gravity to dance on the ceiling and creates a pas de deux with a hat rack. Returning to the shared director's chair with Kelly, Donen and Kelly made their most renowned film, the classic Singin' in the Rain (1952). Filled with memorable musical and comic moments, including Jean Hagen's inability to act into the mike, Donald O'Connor's slapstick dance "Make 'Em Laugh," Cyd Charisse's sultry Broadway Ballet cameo and (of course) Kelly's solo precipitation revel, Singin' in the Rain's humorous ode to Hollywood's Golden Age showcased Donen and Kelly's visual inventiveness and buoyant touch, becoming the rare reflexive film that worked.

Suffering a creative lag with a cluster of non-Freed musicals in 1952 and 1953, Donen's films nonetheless featured such notable dance moments as the onscreen pairing of top choreographer/dancers Gower Champion and Bob Fosse in Give a Girl a Break (1953). Back on track by 1954, Donen scored another success with the rousing Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954), showcasing Michael Kidd's choreography in CinemaScope. Joining forces with Kelly and the Freed unit one last time, Donen and company crafted the sardonic It's Always Fair Weather (1955). A sequel of sorts to On the Town, It's Always Fair Weather cast a critical eye on the musical's optimism and the encroaching phenomenon of television, and underlined Donen's talent for handling CinemaScope in Kelly, Kidd and Dan Dailey's energetic trash can dance. A flop, It's Always Fair Weather marked the end of Donen's tenure at MGM.

A free agent, Donen confirmed that he was still one of the top directors of the musical with The Pajama Game and Funny Face in 1957. A collaboration with co-director George Abbott and choreographer Fosse, The Pajama Game successfully transferred the show's Broadway luster to the screen, with the location-shot "Once a Year Day" taking full advantage of the medium's capability for staging expansive dance spectacles. Working again with Astaire, Donen made Funny Face a gloriously colorful, chic vehicle for the debonair dancer and his co-star Audrey Hepburn; Kay Thompson's "Think Pink" number threatens to steal the movie. Donen then re-teamed with Abbott and Fosse on another bright Broadway transplant, Damn Yankees (1958), featuring a rare screen turn by Gwen Verdon as the diabolically seductive Lola.

Before the musical swooned in the 1960s, Donen shifted his attention to light comedy in the late '50s, including the smooth Cary Grant vehicles Indiscreet (1958) and The Grass is Greener (1961). Working less often and mostly in Europe as the 1960s went on, Donen expanded his creative horizons beyond his 1950s studio films. Donen blended comedy, romance, and suspense in the Cary Grant/Audrey Hepburn starrer Charade (1963), a successful neo-Alfred Hitchcock mystery. Trying his hand at New Wave techniques, Donen notched a hit with nonlinear marital comedy Two for the Road (1967), assisted by stars Audrey Hepburn and Albert Finney's onscreen chemistry. Donen, Dudley Moore and Peter Cook's blasphemous [\comedy} Bedazzled (1968) became a cult favorite; Staircase (1969) was only notable for centering on a gay relationship between Richard Burton and Rex Harrison.

His brand of stylish classicism increasingly out of synch with the New Hollywood, despite Two for the Road's success, Donen made movies sporadically during the 1970s and early '80s. The subpar screen musical of Antoine de St. Exupery's The Little Prince in 1974 was momentarily enlivened by Fosse's cameo as the Snake. The clever 1930s send-up Movie Movie (1978), featuring a boxing drama and Busby Berkeley-esque musical, was a far better use of Donen's talents. He attempted science fiction with the ill-conceived Saturn 3 (1980) and after the leering comedy Blame It on Rio (1984), Donen left movies, resurfacing occasionally in documentaries and to direct the TV version of A.R. Gurney's Love Letters (1999).

Donen married several times, including to actress Yvette Mimieux. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Stanley Donen
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Stanley Donen
Born April 13, 1924 (1924-04-13) (age 85)
Columbia, South Carolina
Occupation director, producer, choreographer
Years active 1949 - 2003
Spouse(s) Jeanne Coyne (1948-1949)
Marion Marshall (1952-1959)
Adelle Beatty (1960-1971)
Yvette Mimieux (1972-1985)
Pamela Braden (1990-1994)
Donen directed Fred Astaire in Royal Wedding

Stanley Donen (born April 13, 1924) is an American film director and choreographer hailed by David Quinlan as "the King of the Hollywood musicals". His most famous work is Singin' in the Rain, which he co-directed with Gene Kelly.

Contents

Early life

Born in Columbia, South Carolina to Mordecai Moses Donen, a dress-shop manager, and Helen Cohen,[1] both of whom were Jewish. Donen himself became an atheist in his youth.[2] He attended the University of South Carolina. He went to New York City as a teenager and at age sixteen was a dancer in the original production of Rodgers and Hart's Pal Joey, which starred Kelly.

Film career

Donen started at Metro Goldwyn Mayer as a choreographer and dancer in Best Foot Forward (1943) with Lucille Ball. Donen appeared with Kelly in Cover Girl (1944) for Columbia Pictures, for which Donen also directed a sequence of Kelly dancing with his double on a darkened Manhattan street. His first chance to direct an entire movie was an adaptation of the Comden and Green musical about sailors on leave in New York City, On the Town (1949), with some songs by Leonard Bernstein, which Donen co-directed with Gene Kelly. This was the first movie musical to be filmed on location.

With Kelly again, Donen co-directed Singin' in the Rain (1952) and by himself directed such classics as Royal Wedding (1951), where Donen directed Fred Astaire dancing on a ceiling; Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954) with Jane Powell and Howard Keel; Funny Face (1957) a musical romantic comedy with Fred Astaire and Audrey Hepburn; Pajama Game (1957) with Doris Day; Indiscreet (1958) with Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman; Damn Yankees (1958) a musical comedy with Tab Hunter, Gwen Verdon, and Ray Walston.

The demise of the Hollywood musical caused the string of successes Donen had directed to stall. He went on to direct a variety of films, some financially successful, some less so, but none recaptured the mood of his early classics. These included the comedy thriller Charade (1963) with Hepburn, Grant, and Walter Matthau; Bedazzled (1967) a satirical updating of the Faust legend starring and written by British comedians Peter Cook and Dudley Moore; and Two for the Road (1967) a drama with Hepburn and Albert Finney. He also directed the out-of-character science fiction film Saturn 3 (1980) when the film's original director resigned. His last theatrical film to date was the May-December romance Blame It on Rio (1984) with Michael Caine and Demi Moore, though he would go on to do additional work for television, including directing a musical sequence for the TV series Moonlighting, Lionel Richie's music video for "Dancing on the Ceiling", and a made-for-TV movie on ABC entitled Love Letters (1999).

Donen was nominated for five Directors Guild of America Awards, but never nominated for a single Oscar. (He did produce the 58th Academy Awards ceremony in 1986.) In 1998 (for the 1997 awards), Donen was granted an honorary Academy Award "in appreciation of a body of work marked by grace, elegance, wit and visual innovation." In his acceptance speech, he danced with his Oscar statue while singing Irving Berlin's "Cheek to Cheek" and declared one of the secrets to being a great director is "You show up--and stay the hell out of the way. But you gotta show up or else you can't take the credit and win one of these guys." Martin Scorsese presented the award.

Filmography

*:Now in public domain

As Director:

As Choreographer:

Further reading

  • Stephen M. Silverman. Dancing on the Ceiling: Stanley Donen and His Movies, Knopf, New York, 1996

References

External links



 
 
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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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