- Lady Be Good (1941 film)
Infobox Film | name = Lady Be Good
caption =Eleanor Powell
director =Norman Z. McLeod
producer =Arthur Freed
writer =Jack McGowan Kay Van Riper John McClain
starring =Eleanor Powell
Robert YoungAnn Sothern Berry Brothers
music =Roger Edens Jerome Kern Oscar Hammerstein II George and Ira Gershwin
cinematography =George J. Folsey Oliver T. Marsh
editing =Fredrick Y. Smith
distributor =MGM
released =September 1 , 1941 (U.S. release)
runtime = 112 min
language = English
budget =
imdb_id = 0033803
preceded_by =
followed_by ="Lady Be Good" is the title of an
MGM musical film which was released in 1941.The film starred dancer
Eleanor Powell along withAnn Sothern , Robert Young,Lionel Barrymore , andRed Skelton . It was directed byNorman Z. McLeod and produced byArthur Freed . This was the first of several films Powell made with Skelton.Although Powell received top billing, the main stars of the film are Sothern and Young. They play respectively Dixie Donegan, a would-be lyric writer and Eddie Crane, a struggling composer, who almost by accident write a hit song - Lady Be Good. They go from success to success, writing Gershwin and Kern songs, and marry. But when Eddie starts spending more time in rich New York society than composing, they grow apart and divorce. They eventually realise they are still in love and can't do without each other.
The film takes its title and theme song ("
Oh, Lady be Good! ") from the 1924 George andIra Gershwin Broadway musical, "Lady Be Good", but otherwise has no connection to the play. According to film historianRobert Osborne in his introduction to a broadcast of the film onTurner Classic Movies in August 2006, the film was devised as a vehicle to launch Sothern as a musical star at MGM, however since she and Young were known primarily as light comic stars, Powell was brought in for a supporting role but given the top billing in order to attract audiences.This film's most notable sequence involves an epic tap dance routine by Powell to the melody of Gershwin's "
Fascinating Rhythm " (another song taken from the play). This musical number was later featured in two films in the "That's Entertainment! " documentary series -- in one of the films ("That's Entertainment! III "), behind-the-scenes footage was shown, revealing how this scene was accomplished. In order to allow Powell to dance between a series of pianos without interruption, pieces of the set had to be quietly removed off-camera as she worked her way across the stage. This musical sequence was directed byBusby Berkeley . Another sequence features Powell doing a dance routine with a dog that she herself trained for the number.The film won an
Academy Award for Best Song for "The Last Time I Saw Paris" which was composed byJerome Kern andOscar Hammerstein II .External links
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