Precode Picks #9
42nd Street and Dancing on Precode Ceilings
Let’s say that dancing is your dream and you’ll do just anything to be on Broadway and show your stuff. Many gave wholly enough of themselves to end up with nothing save spent youth and limbs shot for good. I knew a Broadway seeker who ended up teaching what she could no longer perform, aged hopelessly out by thirty. Having been in the Will Rogers Follies was proof of her making the grade. Touching hem of such success was perhaps enough for many, the heaven knows most would subsist on less. I look at background Golddiggers and chorus folk who vaulted if not to heights, then at least to tap, hoof, or speaking jobs elsewhere. One in 42nd Street was Dave O’Brien, he of falling down for Pete Smith shorts, being a cowboy and getting to talk, if not from Shaw or Ibsen, at least for box lunch or enough to cover rent. There was Toby Wing who’d smile winningly in close-up beside Dick Powell while he, and not her, sang, me left to wonder why looker to surpass all lookers Toby didn’t make stardom grade. She surely wondered too, though living to eighty-five was some compensation, signing stills and fielding fan mail even though she’d been more-less retired since the late thirties. “I used to dance for Busby Berkeley” wouldn’t rate a front table at the Mocambo because after all, so many had so danced. Toby glories still for our thinking and talking about her, but what of “youngsters” who slaved eighty-six hours a week for $25, take-it-or leave heard going in and out of auditions, rehearsals for which you’d not be paid, this by far bulk of what your so-called living comprised. Life not ever being fair was etched deeper upon Toby and kin than cow hide stood for the hot iron. They’d complain, even strike, then pay dear for complaining and striking. “Troublemaker” was a term broader than what a thickest Thesaurus tendered.
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| Driven by Whips ... the Life of Depression-Era Chorus Folk |
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| Toby Wing with Dick Powell --- Hers Was Beauty That Doesn't Date |
Chorine reunions --- were there such things? I’d guess competition was such to foreclose friendships, though Rockettes are said to have got together for reminisce. To what … revisit past hardship, struggles, being overworked and underpaid? Hours given to the grind were rule, not exception. Accounts read like Upton Sinclair exposing meat pack abuse going on concurrently, Depression breeding desperation in most walks of life. Motion Picture Herald on 9/16/33 spilled beans re dancing for devils that was presentation houses, specifically Radio City Music Hall, the Capitol, Paramount, other palaces trading dreams for ducats. New York was primary target for Chorus Equity spokeswoman Dorothy Bryant, who with “cold but dramatic precision” relayed cost of dubious fame as tendered by women and men whose bodies had but so much to give. Big reason such conditions persisted was ongoing buyer’s market that was chorus work. If you don’t take our terms, somebody else will. Carrot at the end of very long sticks was Broadway as ultimate get, if not that maybe a specialty where it’s just you plus the orchestra and thousands applauding. So what if it’s all day and most of nights rehearsing (remember: no pay), then they want you back at seven a.m. the next (more likely same) morning. Warner Baxter in 42nd Street warned that’s how it would be, so if you can’t cope, go home if you've got one. What’s refreshing, and bitingly realistic about 42nd Street, its MGM cousin Dancing Lady, plus Golddigging to follow, is warning they gave of price paid to dance. No one would hand you success. Even if you had talent enough to earn it, you’d not necessarily get it. Ask Toby Wing. And how many hours did it take for a pair of rehearsal shoes to fill up with blood? Upton Sinclair may have missed a bet not turning his laser in dance direction. Comedian Georgie Price was for reforms, having suffered in same trenches as dancer peers. He’d push through policy that “ballet girls” would “not be required to stand on their toes more than eight hours at a time.” Eight hours? I can barely stand on mine eight seconds (just tried).
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| Bebe Herself Excelled in Early Musicals, Sidelined Much As Her Character in 42nd Street |
42nd Street and Dancing Lady were but two among many to valorize the struggle of creation, both emphasizing necessity of sacrifice. If that be life itself, then live it, this emphasized by Warner Baxter as Julian Marsh, director supreme of musical revues whose doctor tells him that this latest project, if embarked upon, will be his last. Aura of doom hangs over Marsh throughout and to final 42nd Street view of him a seeming moment before collapse alone in an alley, brave ending to a story honestly told. Musicals of lesser merit would go glib direction, each reliant upon 42nd Street momentum. But how long could copies measure up to the model? Turns out no longer than it took for the PCA to lock down. Major among takeaways was what highlights director Busby Berkeley did with a last seventeen or so minutes where principal songs and dancing were enacted at levels of imagination not experienced so far in movies save those Berkeley himself had worked on to forecast this and even wilder extravaganzas he’d stage as Golddigging was developed. Sixties and into seventies bloom his rose maintained kept not only Berkeley evergreen but Ruby Keeler as both came back to Broadway where just maybe they could make magic same as they had thirty-forty years before. Seemed an impossibility and sure enough it was, but look what the gesture said about staying power of long-ago efforts, whither camp, kitsch, or unintended comedy now, though at least the last was intended, and staged so dynamic as to defy those who’d call such entertainment “light.” 42nd Street and follow-ups Golddiggers of 1933 and Footlight Parade were elephants behind whom pygmies would march once Code enforcement withdrew hope of worthy encores. Truth-tellers faced high enough hills before restrictions got tighter, working many times harder to simulate life and people living it.
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| Joan Faints with Fatigue, So Let's Give Her a Two Minute Break to Recover and Get Back to Work |
42nd Street ennobled hardships of performing. So did Dancing Lady of the following year. Chorines sneak off to sleep behind boxes, so great is their fatigue. Joan Crawford pulls a leg muscle and Clark Gable has to rub it out before brusquely sending her back to the line. All in a life’s work for so long as you last at it, said both films plus innumerable others. Anybody who complained didn’t deserve a chance, so rare and precious were these. Bosses could and probably did argue same at hearings cited earlier. Getting exploited was everybody’s worry from top to bottom, best survival method being not to carp over it. Theatres playing 42nd Street numbered in thousands, but had not power that ordinarily came with numbers. They’d grouse to trades in small print toward back of issues, each saying same things that made all less potent. “Really a wonderful picture” was 42nd Street, “get busy and play it now” they’d add, but then would come the stinger: “I’m getting tired running my theatre for the producers. No more such one-sided contracts will get my signature. If they won’t make me a few dimes, I don’t want them. High film rentals and percentage pictures are a thing of the past for this house.” Success of 42nd Street would only encourage further abuse: “Why do we suckers bite on this 50 per cent thing?” asked an Iowa showman having to empty his till to play Golddiggers of 1933. Maybe the truest precode stories were told by retailers at the end of the line who’d pay dearly for pictures they’d admit were good, realizing the while that this would only make terms stiffer.









8 Comments:
The polka-dot girls in the "42nd Street" finale, including Ruby herself -- implied streetwalkers? At the very least they're out for a good time. Exploited women were always fodder for grim melodramas, but in comedies the implications could be played -- carefully -- as Good Clean Fun. It's strongly implied Guy Kibbee gets nothing on his investment, and he's enough of a Benny Hill cherub to deter imaginings, but who believed sugar daddies were so easily appeased? The auditionee who gives her address as Park Avenue is there for a joke line; she and her situation cease to exist after the laugh. The lecherous cast member who makes a move on Ruby is played straight, perhaps to dramatize the risks to a good girl, but he's also gone before we can reflect how common this is.
Considering what a young wannabe often endured, the irony of playing a chorine, floozie, harem girl, dumb blonde, or other available type can't have escaped anyone.
A few years later in "On the Avenue", similarly attired Alice Faye is leaning on a streetlamp in the cheerful "Let's Go Slumming". In the end, after losing Dick Powell to Madeleine Carroll, she instantly shifts from a sad song to slipping her number to Carroll's father. Faye's character wasn't explicitly bad or even experienced, but since she wasn't the heroine it was acceptable to imply it.
From the 1970s on I paid a guarantee against 50% of my box office to rent films from Disney, Fox, MGM, Paramount, Warner Brothers and Universal. Because I honestly reported my revenue (paid BIG on the percentages) they kept the guarantee low which was great when, now and then, my box office was not so great.
The movies are a business. They are not about enlightening the masses though great motion pictures often do that.
I never saw paying the money due as unfair. I'm surprised many did and do.
I am intrigued, having read them, by those comments you mention from theatre owners who played pictures we recognize today as great to audiences who did not see that greatness. Love going through old motion picture trade publications (quite a few of which were donated by you, John). They are both informative and inspiring.
Really enjoyed this latest piece of yours. It motivated me to rewatch "42nd Street", a movie I've always liked. Last night's viewing only solidified that feeling. It's so easy to see why this picture delighted audiences in its day, fusing - as it does so brilliantly - movie musical fancifulness and Depression era grit. It's not absolutely perfect. I can always do without Ned Sparks' dentist drill dialogue delivery. But pretty much everything else works like gangbusters. Bebe Daniels has some fine moments. As does George Brent.
This is a guy who sometimes tends to disappear into the woodwork in his films. But when he's on (as in "Jezebel" and especially "The Rains Came") he's really on. And I find Dick Powell's genial up and at 'em approach in "42nd Street" completely irresistible. Powell's got pretty low billing in "42nd Street" but I'm not surprised he pretty much leap-frogged to stardom right away. It's great that the picture's tremendous success encouraged Warner Bros to let Busby Berkeley do his thing on an extravagant basis for awhile. The musical numbers he created for "Footlight Parade", "Dames" and "Gold-diggers of 1935" still have the capacity to stagger audiences. And the movies themselves remain sharp, funny and endlessly entertaining. As a matter of fact, I think I might just haul one of them out for a rewatch tonight.
Ken, you made my day with "Ned Sparks' dentist drill dialogue delivery."
Comparing the premiere of "42nd Street" to Roosevelt's inauguration (as that ad atop the page does) takes chutzpah the size of the real 42nd Street.
These excellent movies are nearing the centennial of their first release; and it is difficult to believe that they are not yet part of the public domain.
Dan Mercer considers reality chorines faced (Part One):
From your take on the likes of "42nd Street" and "Gold Diggers of 1933" and the like, the Warner Bros. might have looked more to their own soundstages and rehearsal halls than back stage Broadway, given that there was little difference between them. The montage of exhausted dancers going through their paces in "42nd Street" might as well have been taken from life at the studio as a Julian Marsh production.
As what a show biz life might have been like at the time, I caught a glimpse of it in Vivian McGill, one of those chorines who enjoyed a brief career on Broadway. I had come across a publicity portrait of her made in 1927 by the De Mirjian Studio when she was appearing in the chorus of "The Love Call." The studio's technique was evident in her sparkling eyes, apparently looking back to some unseen admirer, a hand in a playful dancer's gesture, and a pose suggesting movement and vivacity, rather than the static quality that many Broadway portraits from that time have. She was quite pretty, with blonde hair and very English features of a sort that I find appealing, and I found that I had a certain curiosity as to what had become of her.
From what I could find on-line, though, she apparently had only a minor career on stage, with appearances in the "ensemble" of two other shows, which is to say, the chorus line, and small speaking parts in a revival of J. M. Barrie's "The Admirable Crichton" and another play in 1931 that ran for four performances. Then she dropped out of sight for several years, until, to my surprise, she played the role for which she is best known, if at all, in a motion picture that was exhibited by schlockmeister Dwan Esper as "Sex Madness."
Part Two from Dan Mercer:
"Sex Madness" provides a clue as to what she had been doing between stops. There is a scene in it featuring a burlesque show, with chorines going through a basic routine while lechers in the audience ogle them. McGill appears at the rear of the ensemble. Given the budget of the movie, there was little possibility of even a show as cheap as this one having been staged for it. Almost certainly, it was taken from a working stage production, and though she might have been inserted into it, I imagine that it probably worked the other way around, and that she was recruited from the show for the movie. For a showgirl out of work during the Great Depression, burlesque would have seemed the better of many of the other possibilities available to her. As Bela Lugosi intoned as Dracula, "There are far worse things awaiting man than death."
"Sex Madness," was actually filmed in 1937 by Joseph Seiden under the title, "Human Wreckage." Seiden was a New York-based film maker who made a few Yiddish-language films and was a cameraman at some major boxing matches in the twenties and thirties, such as the famous "long count" fight between Gene Tunney and Jack Dempsey. McGill plays a young woman in it who comes to the big city to make a career in show business, but finds herself on the casting coach where, as she later tells a doctor, she gave herself away. She contracts a sexually transmitted disease and is taken advantage of by quacks who promise her a cure, when legitimate medical practice of the time could only offer her the lengthy and uncertain results of Dr. Ehrlich's "magic bullet." So, it's of a class with Edgar G. Ulmer's earlier "Damaged Lives." Dwan Esper's association came by the way of theft, when he began exploiting it as he did some other films he didn't own the rights to.
I won't claim that Vivian McGill is a wrongfully forgotten talent, but if she conveys an innocence and gaiety that seems naive, as to acting technique, it is well-suited to the role and rather appealing. In a scene where she is contemplating suicide, however, she transcends technique and the limitations of the picture and becomes rather more than that, someone who is very real and affecting, a sort of Juliet for the one night only crowd. Had she made her way to Hollywood, I could imagine her playing leads for the likes of Tiffany or Chesterfield, or in series Westerns, and maybe even done something better with a few breaks. As it was, though, she disappeared once more, with remaining no trace that I've been able to find.
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