THE RODGERS & HAMMERSTEIN COLLECTION: Blu-ray (2oth Century-Fox/Magna, 1945-1965) Fox Home Video
“I know the world is filled with troubles and many
injustices. But reality is as beautiful as it is ugly. I think it is just as
important to sing about beautiful mornings as it is to talk about the slums. I
just couldn't write anything without hope in it.”
– Oscar
Hammerstein II
It’s been said
a collaborative partnership is very much like the ideal marriage. Certainly,
this seems to have been the case for Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II,
whose symbiotic union generated a creative flurry unparalleled in Broadway’s
history. Yet, even the word ‘prolific’
seems at once fitting, yet grossly inadequate to summarize the team’s
contributions to the American theater. Today, Rodgers and Hammerstein are justly
celebrated for their provocative, ground-breaking and trend-setting
entertainments. The movies that ultimately live on beyond this stagecraft are,
in fact, lavish reflections from an exceptionally fertile period for this
composing duo.
Throughout
their tenure, Oscar Hammerstein would wax affectionately how he had toiled for
weeks on a lyric, only to have Rodgers sit as his piano and perfectly score his
words in a mere few hours. It is rumored Rodgers wrote ‘June is Bustin’ Out All Over’ for Carousel in the time it took his wife and daughter to attend a
Saturday matinee. Rodgers always protested the insinuation his contributions
somehow came more easily, citing that by the time he actually began to tickle
the ivories, several months of intense discussion about character and
motivation had already transpired, facilitating a good solid understanding and
anticipation of the song’s mood, tempo and pacing. “I think the moment of creation should be a spontaneous one,”
Rodgers clarified, “But I have to do an
awful lot of thinking for an awful lot of time before I actually do a few
notes.”
Together,
Rodgers and Hammerstein wrote a staggering nine shows (five; Oklahoma!, Carousel, South Pacific, The King and I and The Sound of Music becoming immediate
cultural touchstones, long since legendary - a tally made even more impressive
when one stops to consider that from 1943 to 1959 they produced one new hit for
the stage every other season and, in between, managed to pen a memorable film
score for the 1945 remake of State Fair.
They also create a musical for television; Cinderella
starring, then relative unknown, Julie Andrews. Cumulatively, these efforts
earned the duo 35 Tony Awards, 15 Academy Awards and a pair of Pulitzers –
along with a host of Grammies and Emmys.
After
Hammerstein’s death from cancer in 1960, Rodgers attempted to ‘link up’ with
other major lyricists. Despite such luminaries as Stephen Sondheim and Alan Jay
Lerner as his collaborating partners, Rodgers never again found the ideal muse
for his intricate compositions. Simply
stated; theirs’ can truly be said to have been a partnership of equals: Rodgers
and Hammerstein – organic in fruition, dramatic on stage, their enduring
longevity unlikely to be surpassed any time soon – if ever.
The first of
many seminal works to emerge from Rodgers and Hammerstein; Oklahoma! had its Broadway debut on March 31, 1943. With its
integrated score, stirring choreography by Agnes De Mille and seemingly effortless
social commentary, the play was an immediate critical and financial success,
departing from the conventional Broadway musical format; hummable songs
sandwiched between the necessary evil of a threadbare plot. Based on Lynn
Rigg’s, Green Grows the Lilac, (and original titled by R&H as Away
We Go! Oklahoma!), the play’s most notable departure was its first act
finale – a lavish and prolonged dream sequence ballet.
In Hollywood, Oklahoma!’s staggering success did not
go unnoticed. 20th Century-Fox studio mogul, Darryl F. Zanuck had for some time
been contemplating a musical remake of one of his biggest moneymakers from the
1930s; State Fair (1933). The novel
by Philip Stong had translated into a winning melodrama for Will Rogers and
then, Fox ingénue Janet Gaynor. The 1945 Technicolor remake would add a lush
R&H score to State Fair’s
already folksy ornamentation and become the new film’s coup de grace. State
Fair (1945) is the story of the lovable Frake family. Patriarch, Abel
(Charles Winninger) has his heart set on prize hog, Blue Boy winning the
coveted Blue Ribbon, while ma’ Melissa (Fay Bainter) is aiming to make the best
minced meat preserves in the county.
Meanwhile,
their offspring Wayne, (teen heartthrob and recording sensation, Dick Haymes)
and sis’, Margie (Fox ingénue, Jeanne Crain) are a pair of teenagers utterly
bored by their platonic relationships back home. To all, this journey to the
state fair will bring some new revelation.
Pa and Ma will fulfill their dreams and the children will have theirs’
disillusioned – both for the better. At the fair, Margie meets newshound, Pat
Gilbert (Dana Andrews) and Wayne has his head turned by travelling chanteuse,
Emily Edwards (Vivian Blaine), who will ultimately break his heart, but allow
him to return to his ever-devoted best gal, Eleanor (Jane Nigh) the sadder but
wiser man.
State Fair is that rare slice of idealized Americana that
Hollywood so readily celebrated throughout the war years; exuberantly fleshed
out by Rodgers and Hammerstein’s debut score featuring such standards as ‘It Might As Well Be Spring’, ‘Isn’t It Kind’a Fun?’ and ‘It’s a Grand Night For Singing’. Interestingly, neither Rodgers nor
Hammerstein was particularly keen on returning to film work – each having had a
bad experience working in the movies apart from one another a decade earlier.
However, after screening the 1933 State
Fair in New York, both felt the story and its endearing characters
warranted a second glance. A deal was struck whereby the duo could remain in
New York while they wrote the score. Zanuck agreed.
Jeanne Crain,
initially discovered by Orson Welles, had since become a Fox contract player
with modest success in non-musicals. Zanuck cast Crain in a non-speaking role
in The Gang’s All Here (1943) and
then, as the lead in Home in Indiana
(1944) – which became a huge hit. But Margie Frake presented a quandary for
Crain, who admittedly could not sing a note. Hence, Louanne Hogan was hired to
dub Crain’s vocals – a move that proved so successful, Crain went on to have a
lucrative ‘singing’ career at Fox.
In writing the
lyrics for State Fair, Oscar
Hammerstein was briefly befuddled by his choice of love ballad for Margie.
Hammerstein had desired to write a lyric about a girl suffering from Spring
fever, thus, her inability to enjoy or even relate to the things and people she
once cherished in her life. The concept was solid, except Hammerstein was quick
to discover state fairs are held only during the autumn months. With a bit of
imagination, Hammerstein revisited his concept; the result – the Oscar-winning
classic ‘It Might As Well Be Spring.’
“I wrote it all out first,”
Hammerstein would muse affectionately years later, “It took me several weeks. Then I gave it to him (Rodgers) and two
hours later he called me up and said, ‘I’ve got it.’ I could have thrown a
brick through the phone.”
When State Fair was released, it proved very
popular. Though some of the more highbrow critics were quick to misjudge the
score as not living up to the standards of Broadway’s Oklahoma! most were laudatory in their praise for Rodgers and
Hammerstein’s first – and, as it would turn out, only – exclusively filmic collaboration. With the folksy charm of
both Broadway’s Oklahoma! and Fox’s State Fair under their creative belts,
Rodgers and Hammerstein turned to a very dark fantasy by Hungarian playwright
Ferenc Molnar. Liliom was the story
of an abusive lover who, after failing to secure happiness for his wife and
young child, unrepentantly commits suicide. He is afforded one opportunity to
return to earth and make peace with them, but badly mangles this opportunity
for redemption and is exiled into purgatory instead.
Hammerstein
was fascinated by it. But Rodgers initially considered Liliom oddly perverse and gruesomely tragic. Furthermore, Rodgers
was quick to remind his partner that fantasy rarely translated well to
stagecraft. Nevertheless, Rodgers did begin the creative process of ‘breaking down’ the elements, suggesting
to Hammerstein the mood might be lightened with a change of locale from
Budapest, in the original, to Maine for their revision. With a name change to Carousel, the protagonist, rechristened
as carnival barker, Billie Bigalow (superbly realized by Gordon MacRae in the
movie) became a tragic figure who, in his desire to secure a future for his
family, makes a grievous decision that inadvertently costs him his life. He is recalled from heaven by the star keeper
(Gene Lockhart) and time travels back to earth for one day; to make a mends for
his past by inspiring his middle-aged wife, Julie (Shirley Jones) and
encouraging his downtrodden teenage daughter, Louise (Susan Luckey) to believe
in herself. In essence, Carousel is
a morality tale, its’ noted optimism and hope at the end, supremely achieved by
R&H’s haunting ballad, ‘You’ll Never
Walk Alone.’
Encapsulating
the passionately emotional arch of Liliom,
Carousel (1956) infused a sense of
the miraculous in the everyday, and even more ironically, within an overriding
element of the tragic. This was mainly Hammerstein’s contribution – inspired by
his Christian faith that, as he would later comment, “…we should all have in ourselves and one another…illuminated in these
words – when you walk through a storm, hold your head up high and don’t be
afraid of the dark. At the end of the storm is a golden sky and the sweet
silver song of the Lord. Walk on through the wind. Walk on through the rain,
though your dreams be tossed and blown. Walk on with hope in your heart and
you’ll never walk alone.”
At the
Broadway debut of Carousel, Ferenac
Molnar confided in Hammerstein that he wished he had thought of their ending
for his novel. Years later, Rodgers
concurred with Molnar’s assessment. “Oscar
never wrote more meaningful or more moving lyrics and to me, my score is more
satisfying than any I’ve ever written…it affects me deeply every time I see it
performed.” Though not the overwhelming critical or financial success that Oklahoma! had been, Carousel nevertheless did respectable
business. Unfortunately, it would be followed by one of duo’s most forgettable
stage efforts; Allegro – a
meandering, speculative piece with socially conscious underpinnings about the
folly of big business. Allegro ran
for a mere 315 performances – disregarded by audiences and badly maligned by
the critics.
If many were
quick to contemplate the future of Rodgers and Hammerstein then, such snap
analyses were laid to rest with South
Pacific. James Michener’s frank, yet somewhat romanticized war stories, Tales
of the South Pacific had been considered box office poison; an opinion
that inadvertently placed the novel on the open market where theater director,
Joshua Logan first discovered it. Unable to shake the notion the novel would
make a great play, Logan passed it on to Rodgers and Hammerstein. Crafting
themes of racial prejudice and moral ambiguity around the characters of an American
nurse, Nellie Forbush (Mitzi Gaynor in the movie) whose love for French
plantation owner, Emile DeBecque (Rossano Brazzi) is brought into question
after she discovers he has Polynesian children from a previous marriage, the
play proved to be Rodgers and Hammerstein most socially aware and emotionally
charged stagecraft to date.
What made the
Broadway premiere of South Pacific
particularly satisfying for Rodgers and Hammerstein was that it was their first
venture as solo producers. For their next project, the duo would be matched by
two enigmatic talents, arguably as formidable as themselves; one a veteran
actress; the other, a virtual unknown on the cusp of his own immortality. In
1946, 20th Century-Fox had debuted the non-musical film, Anna and the King of Siam; a fictionalized account based on the
celebrated memoirs of British governess, Anna Leonowens (later played in
R&H’s The King and I by Deborah
Kerr) – also, a novel written fifty years before by Margaret Landon, about
Anna’s burgeoning romantic feelings toward King Mongkut (spectacularly realized
in all his finery by Rex Harrison in the 1946 film and later, in 1956, given
even more formidable presence by Yul Brynner); a volatile potentate. Enthralled
by Fox’s 1946 film was one of Broadway’s most luminous leading ladies; Gertrude
Lawrence.
Lawrence was
an intercontinental sensation whose recent stage success in Lady in the Dark embodied the height of
chic sophistication. Purchasing the rights to Anna and the King, Lawrence approached Rodgers and Hammerstein to
produce it for the stage with her as its’ star. As the legend goes; Rodgers and
Hammerstein began The King and I in
earnest, only to discover, much to their chagrin, they knew of no actor able to
play the male protagonist. It was during this impasse that longtime friend and
occasional collaborator, Mary Martin arranged for Rodgers and Hammerstein to
audition several actors for the part of the king, including Yul Brynner, who
was then appearing in the play, Lute
Song. Emerging from behind the stage curtain, Brynner sat cross-legged
before R&H with a guitar in hand. He then gave the instrument a mighty
thwack and let out a primal yelp.
Brynner – who
seemed to intuitively radiate savage sexuality – agreed to shave his head for
the part. The results were startling, sensual and instantly iconic. To say
R&H were inspired by Brynner is an understatement. While the first half of
their play undeniably belongs to Gertrude Lawrence – and her sparing with the
king - the last act remains a tour de force for Brynner; also bringing two
secondary characters and their flawed romance to light; the slave girl, Tuptim
(played in the movie by Rita Moreno) and Lun Tha (Carlos Rivas). Both on stage
in, as reincarnated on film, The King
and I was capped off by a startling ballet; a Siamese interpretation of
Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
After tryouts
in New Haven and Boston, The King and I
premiered on Broadway on March 29th, 1951. It was an immediate and overwhelming
success – winning Tony Awards for Best Musical, Actress (Lawrence), Featured
Actor (Brynner), Costume and Scenic Design. However, after playing Broadway for
nearly a year and 1,246 performances, Gertrude Lawrence suddenly fell ill. She
finished the Wednesday matinee in September 1952 and checked into hospital for
what she believed would be a brief respite from jaundice. Instead, doctors
informed the actress she was fatally stricken with liver cancer. That Saturday,
Lawrence died at the age of 54, leaving Brynner to inherit the play’s mantle of
quality as the undisputed monarch of Fox’s movie version in 1956.
It is
interesting to note that, with the exception of State Fair, Rodgers and Hammerstein resisted transforming any of
their plays into movies until the mid-1950's; a decade marred by a decline in
the studio system; the loss to television of the movies’ exclusivity as mass
cultural entertainment. In hindsight, Rodgers and Hammerstein’s apprehension
likely had more to do with the fact they both were constantly busy. Their
hiatus from Hollywood allowed the movie musical to ‘catch up’ to the place where, arguably, live theater had been all
along. But it was the movie’s burgeoning technologies that afforded the Rodgers
and Hammerstein musicals their lushness.
In Oklahoma!’s case, the venture was expedited
by master showman, Michael Todd and his newly patented Todd A-O widescreen
process, meant to rival Fox’s Cinemascope, but moreover, to recreate the
all-encompassing Cinerama experience without its cumbersome 3-camera set up.
For Todd, the appeal of having a Rodgers and Hammerstein musical to mark Todd
A-O’s debut was a stroke of genius and a marketing dream. For Rodgers and Hammerstein,
the overall appeal remained in Todd A-O’s promise to deliver improved image and
sound quality – hence, optimal pictorial presentation. Unfortunately for all,
the early Todd A-O process came with caveats – the most obvious being its large
format 70mm widescreen precluded mass distribution, since most movie houses
were not equipped to show Todd A-O. As a result, Fox studio chief Darryl F.
Zanuck ordered the film to be shot twice: once in Todd A-O and once in Fox’s
Cinemascope, necessitating each scene photographed twice using a two camera set
up.
Director Fred
Zinnemann brought nothing fresh to Oklahoma!
– a startlingly faithful, and occasionally stagnant experience in Todd A-O,
though ironically less obvious in Cinemascope. The roadshow of Oklahoma! at the Rivoli Theater in 1955
became a sensation; the Cinemascope version screened by a wider audience and
equally as embraced. With a cast
including Gordon MacRae, Gloria Grahame, Eddie Albert and Rod Steiger, that
also introduced movie audiences to the talented, Shirley Jones, Oklahoma! became a big and beautiful screen
spectacle. Flush with success, Zanuck
reunited Gordon MacRae and Shirley Jones, rushing Carousel into production to debut Fox’s newly patented Cinemascope
55. Ironically, this widescreen process resembled Todd A-O in its
photographing, reduction printed to standard 35mm anamorphic Cinemascope, later
stretched during projection. As it had proved on the stage, the filmic version
of Carousel did not equal Oklahoma!’s popularity or box office,
though it managed to turn a profit nonetheless.
During these
heady times leading up to the filming of The
King and I (1956) Rodgers and Hammerstein were also involved in two
commercial flops on the stage; Me and
Juliet (1953) and Pipe Dream
(1955). As a result, it was mutually agreed Rodgers and Hammerstein would take
a brief respite from working together. While Rodgers continued to be intimately
involved in the handling of The King and
I, Hammerstein worked independently, adapting 1943’s stage show, Carmen Jones for the screen. On film, The King and I became the beneficiary
of Zanuck’s meticulous supervision; screenwriter, Ernest Lehman assigned the
task of restructuring the play’s content, deleting several songs along the way.
Zanuck spared no expense on the construction of lavish outdoor sets to augment
this story. The alterations to the play met with Rodgers and Hammerstein’s
approval. But it was Yul Brynner’s central performance as the King that truly
captivated audiences, earning him the Best Actor Academy Award; a banner year
for the actor – nominated thrice in a single annum for this, The Ten Commandments, and Anastasia.
With 1958’s
big screen debut of South Pacific,
Rodgers and Hammerstein realized their dream to produce a movie themselves, in
Todd A-O and for Magna Film Corp. Yet, under Joshua Logan’s direction, the film
version of South Pacific remains
something of a curious letdown. Initially, Logan (who also directed the
Broadway original) had toyed with the idea of heightening the magical quality
of Bali Ha’i by using diffused color filters. On stage, the effect of this
mythical island paradise had been achieved with mood lighting and painted
backdrops. On screen, the effect had to be full scale. Ultimately, Logan
settled for an awkward combination of matte paintings for the long shots,
married to an excessive use of smoke effects and color filtering. Logan was so
enamored by the results he elected to use these same filters for virtually
every musical number in the movie.
Hence, when
nurse, Nellie Forbush (Mitzi Gaynor) declares the sky is a bright canary yellow
in ‘A Cockeyed Optimist’, the screen
is immediately bathed in a jaundice hue; ‘Some
Enchanted Evening’ causing the visuals to turn bright orange, and later,
deep magenta for the haunting ballad, ‘This
Nearly Was Mine’. Audiences did not seem to mind. But critics were quick to
lambast Logan’s limited concept of screen subtlety, along with his
exceptionally static visuals. Nevertheless, South Pacific – the movie - would become the most profitable
R&H movie to date…soon to be eclipsed by the phenomenal success of The Sound of Music (1964).
The Von Trapp
Family Singers had already been the subject of two German produced films; Die
Trapp Familie (1956) and Die Trapp Familie in Amerika (1958)
when stage director, Vincent J. Donahue recommended their life story as a
vehicle for Rodgers and Hammerstein alumni, Mary Martin. Perhaps because the
duo were presently involved in adapting South
Pacific into a movie, neither seemed
particularly interested in producing a play based on the Von Trapp’s. However,
Martin could – and would – be very persuasive. Her enthusiasm eventually became
infectious and Rodgers and Hammerstein began work on The Sound of Music.
Premiering at
the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre on Nov. 16th 1959, and running a then record 1,443
performances, The Sound of Music on
Broadway became the show to beat - breaking all previous records set and held
by Rodgers and Hammerstein. Martin took home the Tony for Best Actress. Tragically,
Hammerstein was diagnosed with terminal stomach cancer during the play’s out of
town rehearsals. His relentless pursuit of excellence and his commitment to the
theater outweighed his own health concerns; his last lyric committed to the
project becoming ‘Edelweiss’ - the
show’s poignant farewell anthem to a dying way of life. On August 23, 1960 Oscar
Hammerstein died at age 65 without ever realizing the even greater heights his
last collaborative effort was destined for on the big screen.
In April of
1964, director Robert Wise and a company of sixty descended on Salzburg
Austria, intent on capturing Rodgers and Hammerstein’s final stage work on
celluloid for posterity. By then, the socio-political and artistic landscape of
Hollywood had been so dramatically altered from the Consent Decrees and by the
advent of television, many in the industry were pondering the future
feasibility of making movies. Indeed, nowhere more than at 20th Century-Fox was
this crunch and conflict felt more dramatically, compounded by the studio
hemorrhaging funds on the Elizabeth Taylor/Richard Burton epic, Cleopatra (1963). Ever-conscious Fox
was expecting a mega-hit, on time and under budget, director Robert Wise worked
as diligently as he could on location; hampered by Austria’s temperamental climate.
Today, The Sound of Music needs no
introduction. But in 1964 it was a gamble. Times had changed. The Hollywood
musical was no longer popular with audiences. The story of the Von Trapps is
best recalled in a few brief sentences: a novice from the abbey, Maria (Julie
Andrews) – who regrettably will never make ‘a
fine nun’ is instead sent to the wealthy estate of retired sea captain,
Georg Von Trapp (Christopher Plummer) to act as a governess for his seven
precocious children; Liesl (Charmian Carr), Louisa (Heather Menzies), Friedrich
(Nicholas Hammond), Kurt (Duane Chase), Brigitta (Angela Cartwright) and Gretyl
(Kym Karath). Unaccustomed to the Captain’s military training, Maria brings
sweetness and light to the household, inspiring the children, only to realize
her place of importance must end once the captain marries the wealthy, Baroness
Elsa (Eleanor Parker). However, despite the Baroness’ best attempts at
sabotage, the captain falls madly in love with Maria instead. The two are
married, the war breaks out and the Von Trapp’s are forced to flee Austria to
escape the Nazis.
The Sound of Music is an inspired and inspirational
movie musical – astutely publicized by Fox as “the happiest sound in all the world.” Nightly, cast and crew
indulged in Austria’s cozy pubs and beer gardens, soaking up lush centuries-old
atmosphere of Vienna. At one point, actor Christopher Plummer had to have
several of his costumes let out to accommodate the extra girth he had acquired
from all the pastries and wine. Despite daily telegrams from California,
pressing Wise to speed up his shoot, the director quickly realized he could not
wrap up the film on time and under budget. Still, what he had captured around
town – the Mirabell Gardens, the exterior of Nonnberg Abbey, Winkler’s Terrace,
the lush greenery and mountain exteriors of Saltzkammergut and the Mozart
footbridge - proved an intoxicating blend of almost surreal locations. These
were later cobbled together, seamlessly for once, with sets built at 20th
Century Fox.
When The Sound of Music had its world
premiere on March 2, 1965, few could have predicted its success. Despite an
only slightly above average opening weekend, word of mouth and renewed ticket
sales caused the film’s weekly intake to steadily rise during the Spring and
Summer months – a virtually unheard of phenomenon. When the final tallies were
counted, The Sound of Music had become
Fox’s most popular film of the decade. It would eventually go on to become one
of the highest grossing motion pictures of all time. In response to the film’s
few detractors, who found the action cloying and saccharinely, Richard Rodgers
replied, “So what’s wrong with sweetness
and light? They’ve been around for a long time?”
In retrospect,
The Sound of Music proved to be the
last hurrah for Richard Rodgers. In 1962, Fox had dusted off State Fair for yet another remake.
Rodgers was invited to write six new songs to embellish the contributions he
and Hammerstein had shared on the 1945 film. A shift in locale from Iowa to
Texas necessitated dropping ‘All I Owe I
Owe Ioway’ – one of the earlier film’s best offerings; replacing it with
the largely forgettable ‘It’s The Little
Things in Texas.’ Unfortunately, the revamped State Fair failed to catch on; foreshadowing the fact that Rodgers
best efforts were, arguably, already behind him. The Sound of Music’s movie debut delayed Rodgers retirement by
another eight years. But that movie put a definite period to Rodgers own
aspirations to continue composing for musical shows.
Shortly before
his death, Oscar Hammerstein and Richard Rodgers appeared together on
television to field questions about their long-time collaboration. It was
poignant farewell for Hammerstein, who had already been diagnosed with terminal
cancer. “I believe that not all of life
is good,” Hammerstein whimsically relayed, “but so much of it is. My inclination is to emphasize that side of
life…and it’s natural. It’s not something I’ve developed.”
Today, the
Rodgers and Hammerstein catalogue remains a unique legacy steeped in this
philosophy of goodness and light. It continues to radiate appeal well beyond
its own time and resonates with the highest ideals humankind is capable of
achieving. That Richard Rodgers subsequent musical collaborations, following
Hammerstein’s death, failed to reach such meteoric heights is perhaps
forgivable – for he and Oscar did give themselves an impossibly tough act to
follow. But in the final analysis, theirs’ was a legacy in song immeasurably
blessed by a willingness to believe art and life should – and might – run
high-minded parallel courses. Perhaps, it is this expectation for idealism in
all things that we today continue to find so alluring; arguably more
desperately needed now than ever before.
When Richard
Rodgers died on Dec. 30th, 1979, a period was put to what brilliant ideas and
melodies might have lay within that highly developed sense of personal style.
But he did not leave us barren of the moments, memories or a lifetime of
exemplary masterworks. These will continue to captivate and encourage the
creative fertility of young minds for as long as musicals endure. Oh what a
perennially beautiful morning, indeed.
I wish I could
say the same for Fox’s Amazon exclusive of The
Rodgers and Hammerstein Collection on Blu-ray. While I cannot be certain of
the mentality behind this release, I can unequivocally state that what’s here
has decidedly left me wanting. Back in 2003, Fox Home Video released a similar
collection on DVD. Regrettably, this hi-def offering is hardly an improvement.
Where to begin? Well, for starters, in their infinite and thoroughly perplexing
wisdom, Fox has excluded the 1962 remake of State Fair from this collection. They’ve also jettisoned a series
of interviews featuring R&H, and the extensive ‘making of’ that was included for The King and I (actually, an ‘interactive’
supplement culled from the old CBS/Fox Laserdisc, that nevertheless featured
some fascinating interviews and behind the scenes footage). All this is missing
from this thin box set.
I could have
forgiven even these oversights had there been more to crow about over these
1080p transfers. But no. I have to say, both State Fair and Oklahoma!
still have issues; their viewing experience remains a grand disappointment.
Let’s begin. Its’ original camera negative long ago destroyed in Fox’s
ridiculous mid-1970’s purge of archival elements, State Fair has been remastered in hi-def from a second generation
print master that hasn’t held up particularly well over the decades. I’ve seen
Fox work miracles in hi-def with similar offerings like The Black Swan and Niagara.
But State Fair seems to have flown
under this radar, transferred from old digital files. Apart from the obvious
loss of clarity and absence of its once robust Technicolor imagery, the overall
characteristic of State Fair’s
visuals is dull and drab; also dark and softly focused. What a shock and a
disappointment, factoring in some digital anomalies that render film grain
digitally harsh in spots.
Moving on, I
was more hopeful about Oklahoma!
Alas, such aspirations were immediately dashed when accessing the ‘restoration’ extra. The two line
footnote that immediately pops up on the screen explains the Todd A-O version
included herein has been remastered in 1080i – not 1080p; presumably because
Todd A-O’s 30 frames per second conversion could not be accommodated in 1080p. What?!?
Fox has given us 1080p remasters of South
Pacific, The Agony and The Ecstasy, and the Burton/Taylor Cleopatra – all of them shot in Todd
A-O!!! Clearly, there were no conversion issues on these discs!
The elements
used on the Todd A-O incarnation of Oklahoma!
are admittedly sharper than they appeared when Fox released Oklahoma! to DVD back in 2003. But the
improvement is marginal at best. We still have an image that is relatively dull
by comparison to the other aforementioned features shot in Todd A-O, with some
weird light bleeding around the edges, and a residual softness that belies the
format’s claim of motion picture high fidelity. Alas, colors still appear
washed out. There’s modeling and streaking throughout this transfer,
intermittently drawing undue attention. Flesh tones look pasty, occasionally
with a bizarre jaundice yellow tint.
The news was
even more abysmal when I popped in the Cinemascope version of Oklahoma!; excessively marred by
age-related dirt and scratches, built-in flicker and marginal color fading.
Honestly, doing a side by side comparison with Fox’s old DVD from 2003, I
detected similar anomalies on both discs and in the very same spots, leading me
to deduce they are using the same extremely flawed digital files to create this
hi-def master. Bottom line: Oklahoma!
on Blu-ray in either format looks careworn and unimpressive. If a restoration
has been done on the Cinemascope version, it’s among the poorest I’ve seen. What a shock and a sham!
Better news
was forthcoming on The King and I
and Carousel – each receiving a new
hi-def scan from original elements. Of all the early R&H movies, these two
look the most impressive; partly owed to Cinemascope 55’s superior photographic
method. On both titles, we get a relatively smooth visual presentation,
unencumbered by age-related artifacts, with richer than expected color
fidelity, very solid contrast, and, a light smattering of accurately reproduced
film grain. The image on both movies is also very sharp without suggesting any untoward
digital tinkering. There’s no edge enhancement.
Next up, is South Pacific. I am assuming this
incarnation is exactly the same as the previously issued Blu-ray. Doing side by
side comparisons with the previously issued Blu-ray of South Pacific, I detected virtually no differences in quality; the
visual presentation looking identical. Like Oklahoma!, South Pacific
gets two discs; one showcasing the movie’s theatrical presentation, the other
offering us the extended road show cut - but without any of the reinstated
footage receiving the necessary restoration and color correction to properly reintegrate
it back into the main feature. Last, but certainly not least, is The Sound of Music. Again, this appears
to be the exact same hi-def transfer Fox made available in their lavish box set
almost three years ago. It’s picture perfect and will surely NOT disappoint.
The audio on
all these discs – with the exception of State
Fair – has been given a meticulous 5.1 DTS upgrade. State Fair is in DTS mono. The best sounding of the lot are The King and I, South Pacific and The Sound
of Music. Carousel remains,
marginally compromised. Carousel’s
soundtrack has always incorporated a modicum of built-in distortion. It tends
to sound scratchy, the higher frequencies frequently grating on the ear. As for
extras: Fox has given short shrift to the collector; purging the second disc of
goodies that accompanied The Sound of
Music. So we also lose ‘Rodgers and Hammerstein: The Sound of
Movies’ – a fantastic 2-hour tribute to the composing team and their
illustrious history. I have to say, Fox’s willy-nilly inclusion of superficial
extras ‘music machine’ and ‘sing-a-long’ features, while ditching the more
comprehensive interview pieces and other extras (we get Liliom, which is not an R&H title, as example, but neither the 1933 nor 1962 versions of State Fair) like vintage advertising and
stills – to mis-quote Yul Brynner’s King, is more than a bit of a puzzlement.
My biggest
grievance is over the image quality on State
Fair and both Cinemascope and Todd A-O versions of Oklahoma! These movies are not represented in a way that will
likely endear them for posterity and this is a shame. Frankly, I consider it an
insult, as well. I was all set to praise Fox for finally getting around to releasing
these movies in hi def. But what’s here is hardly stellar. Just Fox’s
repackaging two already pristine transfers (South Pacific and The Sound
of Music) with competent 1080p transfers on The King and I and Carousel.
Why Oklahoma! – either in Todd A-O
or Cinemascope - did not rate such consideration is a question I cannot answer.
I wish I had better news – but this is the best I can offer. A pity Fox Home
Video felt about the same.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
State Fair 4
Oklahoma! 4.5
Carousel 3.5
The King and I
5+
South Pacific
3.5
The Sound of
Music 5+
VIDEO/AUDIO
State Fair 2
Oklahoma!
(Cinemascope) 2
Oklahoma!
(Todd A-O) 3
Carousel 3.5
The King and I
4
South Pacific
5+
South Pacific
(roadshow) 3.5
The Sound of
Music 5+
EXTRAS
3
Comments
Regarding OKLAHOMA! in Todd-AO ; Todd-AO was, for a short periode, shot at 30 fps thus a 24p HD master cannot be created (since 30p is not available on blu-ray platforms). However by using 60i one is able to recreate the 30 fps original experience. On the R&H collection only OKLAHOMA! was made with the original Todd-AO.
Sincerely,
Patrick
from France
Yes, I've received several emails explaining as much. Regardless, the flesh tones in the Todd A-O version have adopted a rather jaundice look, particularly during the title number, and color in general just seems less than punchy as it undoubtedly ought to be.
Appreciate the comment, though.