![]() Have a look at this incredible scene in the video below from the Warner Archive. Dick Powell had become ill with pneumonia and had to be hospitalized and then rest for several weeks as production. One of the quintessential films to be choreographed by Busby Berkeley and certainly one of the best casts to grace a Warner Brothers musical from this period (. Just think of all the hard work and planning they went through- with no CGI to help out. Actor Frank McHugh, who plays Francis in Footlight Parade (1933), is John Wayne 's co-star in The Telegraph Trail (1933), giving McHugh the distinction of playing different characters in this film and in the 'film within the film'. The scene puts special effects in film today to shame. The “By a Waterfall” scene of the film employed the use of a lighted pool with 20 diving platforms and a team of 300 swim dancers in scanty diamanté illusion swimsuitsto create a host of visual effects, many of which were filmed from overhead so as to capture the designs created by the swimmers. He decides that live action “prologues” for films are the ticket to his renewed success and so the folly begins. The film centers around a Broadway director whose career is flopping as audiences cease their trips to the theater in favor of going to the movies. Some of Berkeley’s most memorable film scenes include feats that simply couldn’t be achieved in real life, like the choreography for dancers in giant white Jenny Lind rocking chairs from Gold Diggers of 1933or his extravagant couples dance scene from Fast and Furious (no relation to the modern franchise) featuring dozens of tap dancing women dressed in scandalous harem costumes.īerkeley’s 1933 film, Footlight Parade, was one of these films that set the imagination flying. During the Great Depression many people sought the cheap seats and air conditioning that going to the movies offered, not to mention the escapism of fantasy and whimsy. One of the masters of this latter style was the choreographer, Busby Berkeley, who was able to create movie scenes that literally awed people. If ever there were an art form that speaks in American, it’s the Broadway and Hollywood musical. Film productions ranged from more humble dramas to glamorous musicals filled with every conceivable type of glitter and glitz. Bill Rudman’s Footlight Parade: Sounds of the American Musical is a weekly radio program showcasing the best of Broadway and Hollywood songs from the turn of the 20th century to today. Many Hollywood films of the 1930s could be truly dazzling spectacles.
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