WORDS AND MUSIC: Blu-ray (MGM, 1948) Warner Archive
A bumper crop of
Rodgers and Hart’s hit tunes, and, virtually every major musical/comedy star
working at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer during its golden age then, are poured into
director, Norman Taurog’s Words and Music (1948) – a thin rekindling of
the magic in Richard Whorf’s fictionalized biopic of composer, Jerome Kern, Till
The Clouds Roll By (1946). The formula of taking a composer’s back catalog
and fitting bits of connective dialogue between the cavalcade of songs, while
far from original, is nonetheless enchanting, the sight of a thoroughly effervescent,
June Allyson, escorted by the Blackburn twins, warbling ‘Thou Swell’
from R&H’s A Connecticut Yankee, or Perry Como, effortlessly cooing,
‘Mountain Greenery’ from The Garrick Gaieties, just two of the plentifully
amusing 22 songs featured herein. Other memorable highlights go to Judy Garland
and Mickey Rooney, in the competition number, ‘I Wish I Were In Love Again’,
with Garland, thereafter given a breathtaking solo, ‘Johnny One-Note’. “Aaaahhhhhhhh!”
Although the Garland/Rooney
collab’ appears consecutively, the numbers were actually shot 4 months apart,
with Garland slightly plumper as she belts out with gusto. Words and Music
occupies a curious place in Garland’s MGM lore. On the one hand, it was both a
‘reunion’ and a swan song for Garland and Rooney, absent from the silver screen
together since the dissolution of their popular ‘barn yard’ musical cycle begun
with 1939’s Babes in Arms and reaching its summit with Girl Crazy,
just four years later. In the interim, Rooney had stepped out of his short
pants and away from the Andy Hardy franchise to do some incredible work.
Garland too had graduated to more adult fare, proving her teenage tenure at
Metro was just beginning. Ironically, Garland was hotter than ever at war’s
end, but Rooney’s box office had slipped…just a little, but enough, as it would
continue in steep decline throughout the 1950’s.
In retrospect,
the greater tragedy here, is Garland’s tenure at MGM had barely four more years
to go. Words And Music was thus, Judy’s last film for producer,
Arthur Freed, who had been the greatest proponent of her talent when first she
appeared on the scene. Freed adored Garland. Alas, Judy’s addiction to
studio-sanctioned pills was getting the better of her. Delay after delay
ensued. Garland barely had enough stamina to pre-record her pas deux with Rooney. Her on-set collapse necessitated a costly
postponement. At this juncture, Freed planned to star Garland opposite Fred
Astaire in the upcoming The Barkleys of Broadway (1949), those plans
kiboshed after Astaire refused to work with Garland again, citing the
complications endured on the set of Easter Parade (1948, and, their one
and only screen pairing). Nevertheless, Freed began preliminary work with
Garland in the saddle on ‘Barkleys’ only to realize after a sneak
prevue on Words and Music, audiences wanted one more number from
Garland. So, the set was rebuilt, the extras reassembled, and Judy came back to
record and film Johnny One-Note.
Words and Music sports some
stunning production design and is, of course, a superior way to experience
Rogers and Hart’s showbiz razzamatazz in one consolidated and legendary
celluloid regurgitation. Metro throws everything it has into this creative
blender, and, with very few exceptions, makes us forget the banality of its
fictional plot. For the record, Lorenz Hart was not the love-sick puppy,
mooning after a girl that got away, as reconstituted in Guy Bolton, Ben Feiner
Jr., Fred F. Finklehoffe and Jean Holloway’s corny yarn. Rather, he was a
closeted homosexual who, despite his incredible wit, enviable social
connections, and formidable family fortune, managed to squander everything on a
series of hedonistic, meaningless affairs, living publicly with his widowed
mother while drowning his sorrows in chronic alcoholism. To put it mildly, Hart
despised himself so completely he allowed his creative bent to be overrun by
his secretive bouts of depression and tormented erotic indulgences with younger
men, meant to assuage, or at least, dilute his guilt and self-loathing. Nothing really helped.
It is not
difficult to see why Richard Rodgers so disliked what Metro did with the story behind
Words and Music. Setting aside Rodgers himself, as depicted by all-American/fresh-faced
Tom ‘the boy next door’ Drake – a thoroughly colorless collaborator to
Lorenzo Hart’s strapping genius, the movie completely fakes the personal
history of Rogers’ professional alliance with Hart without even a whiff of the
tempestuousness that eventually caused their real-life split. Nor, in the
embodiment of Mickey Rooney, does Words and Music infer Hart was
anything but a manic quisling, impish in his outlook on life, but utterly
incapable to translate a flirtation with ‘love’ into anything ‘ever-lasting’
with the proverbial ‘good woman’ – herein, brought forth in the embodiment of
Peggy Lorgan McNeil (Betty Garrett).
For the real
Lorenz Hart, his teaming with Dick Rodgers ought to have been the real start of
a lengthy and vibrant career. But Rodgers was straight. So, there could be no
finely wrought and thoroughly trusting ‘after hours’ alliance a la Noel Coward
and Cole Porter. Instead, Hart plied his earthy urges on a throwaway succession
of chorus boys and male prostitutes. Naturally, none of this makes for
glamorous copy in an MGM musical – even if there had been no censorship at the
time. And so, none of it ultimately appears in the movie. We do, however, get a moment in which the
fictional Hart’s mother (played by a 37-yrs.-young Jeanette Nolan) quietly
observes from her bedroom window as her lonely and inebriated son is quietly
serenaded in the forecourt of their palatial home by Mel Torme’s velvety vocals
to ‘Blue Moon’ – ‘blue’ being the operative word as a subversive hint to
Hart’s illicit love denied. For L.B. Mayer, Words and Music likely
seemed fitting tribute. Hart had died in New York in 1943 and therefore was
quite unable to resist this bastardized of his life’s story, remade into a
gargantuan musical pastiche.
The only star,
other than Garland, afforded two numbers is Lena Horne, whose tenure at MGM, regrettably,
is marred by the studio’s shortsightedness to allow her to appear in anything
beyond a cameo. Horne coos the romantic ballad, ‘Where or When’ in a
posh nightclub before setting the place on fire with her flashy/sassy rendition
of ‘The Lady is a Tramp’ – neither number ever seen in theaters beyond
the Mason/Dixon line. Interviewed decades later, Horne harbored no ill will
against MGM for limiting her movie career to walk-ons, laughing off the
suggestion she should have felt ‘privileged’ because Mayer allowed her to eat
in the commissary with the other contract players. Indeed, there was such an
anti-black sentiment at the studio then, the hairstylists refused to do Horne’s
hair. Nobly, the head of the department, Sydney Guilleroff personally attended
to Horne’s needs for the duration of her career at the studio.
Today, one
quietly observes Horne’s Metro performances with a twinge of sadness. Apart
from her delicious vixen, Georgia Brown in Vincente Minnelli’s all-black
musical, Cabin in the Sky (1943), here was a woman, and, a talent,
repeatedly denied movie-land stardom as a bona fide actress. Horne’s second
marriage to one of Metro’s most brilliant musical conductors/arrangers, Lennie
Hayton in 1947 was a mercenary decision to advance her career. And although the
couple appeared happy at the time (separating in the early sixties, though
never to divorce), during their run as a couple, Horne indulged in various
affairs with the likes of Artie Shaw, Orson Welles, Vincente Minnelli, and boxer,
Joe Louis, procuring a lasting friendship with Billy Strayhorn, for whom she
later admitted she would have forsaken her staunch Catholicism and divorced
Hayton, had Strayhorn not been a homosexual.
Despite its
embarrassment of riches, Words and Music was foreshortened before its
premiere, losing some gorgeous ballads sung by Perry Como; “Lover” –
whose orchestral and choral arrangement are retained under the main titles,
and, “You’re Nearer” – a tender tome. Also cut, ‘My Funny Valentine’
and “It Never Entered My Mind” sung by Betty Garrett, “My Heart Stood
Still” from Como, “Falling in Love With Love” and “You Took
Advantage of Me” (both sung by Gene Kelly, who – now – would only appear in
the celebrated ‘Slaughter on Tenth Ave.’ ballet from R&H’s 1936
musical stunner, ‘On Your Toes’). Oddly, the movie’s Dorothy Rodgers,
played by Janet Leigh (the only casting choice the real Richard Rodgers
approved) informs Rooney’s Hart about the prospect of 'doing a play’ with
Kelly, implying he was an established stage star. But Kelly was a virtual
unknown before appearing in R&H’s Pal Joey, his only Broadway show
before becoming a movie star. The songs, “Manhattan”, “Way Out West”,
and the medley, featuring "On Your Toes/The Girl Friend/This Can't Be
Love," were all shortened for the final release, indiscriminately
dropping verses to keep the movie’s overall run time manageable. Interestingly, although MGM promoted Words
and Music with a soundtrack album (one of the first of its kind), none of
Perry Como’s songs, nor Mel TormĂ©’s silky smooth rendition of “Blue Moon”
were among the offerings, as each artist’s recording contracts belonged
exclusively elsewhere: Como’s to RCA Victor, and Torme, to Capitol Records.
Capitol at least allowed Torme to cut a studio version of ‘Blue Moon’
for their label.
With his eye
clearly on the box office garnered by Till The Clouds Roll By, director,
Norman Taurog immersed himself in the necessary evil of indulging a blissfully
obtuse (choke!) biography. As far as stage to screen yarns went, this one has
Rodgers and Hart miscast as a pair of financially struggling and forlorn
composers who eventually strike it big with the aid of mutual friends, Eddie
Lorison Anders (Perry Como), Peggy Lorgan McNeil and Margo Grant (Cyd
Charisse). While Rodgers meets, woos and marries Dorothy Feiner (Janet Leigh),
Hart suffers from a tragic one-sided love affair with Peggy; also, from ‘short
man syndrome’ – that much-recognized affliction for guys barely 5 ft. in
stature. This taints his romances. So, Hart compensates by immersing himself in
his work. Alas, this ultimately leads to overwork and his premature death…at
least, so the movie’s modus operandi would suggest. In between Hart’s search
for the great ‘heterosexual’ love of his life, he manages to bounce from one
hit Broadway show to the next, celebrated in a compendium of singable standards
that have forever since remained peerless examples in the song-writing milieu.
In the final moments of the picture, the Rodgers are seen on a recording sound
stage at MGM, observing through bittersweet tears as Eddie sings ‘With a
Song in My Heart’.
Words and Music remains an
enchanting musical for musicals’ sake. There is no attempt at integrating any
of these stage-bound songs and dances into the plot. They are strictly executed
to illustrate the ballast of Rodgers and Hart’s showmanship as well as the
stunning autonomy MGM once wielded as peerless purveyors of musical
extravaganzas like this one. Producer, Arthur Freed, having given Gene Kelly
the green light to stage ‘Slaughter on Tenth Avenue’ to his own likes
(the rest of the picture’s numbers were done by Robert Alton, whom Kelly
greatly admired, and who enthusiastically supported Kelly’s desire to work out
the kinks to this ballet on his own terms), reasoned the number was so good, it
deserved to be situated near the end of the movie, thereby dovetailing into its
dramatic climax - the collapse and death of Lorenz Hart. When the dust settled,
Freed had another colossus on his hands, praised for its big and flashy,
absolutely ravishing entertainment value. Produced on a budget of $2,799,970, Words
and Music easily earned back twice its cost, raking in, in excess of
$4,522,000.
Two years separate
Till the Clouds Rolls By from Words and Music. In that interim,
Mayer’s dream factory illustrated a well-oiled, though somewhat ‘assembly line’
approach to re-treading familiar territory. Comparatively, Words and Music
is a more homogenized and streamlined picture than ‘Clouds.’ But
does this make it, its’ lesser? Not necessarily. In absence of being able to
tell the tale as it actually occurred, the screenwriters have done an enviable
job of masking Hart’s homosexuality with alternate vices, eventually to prove
lethal…and not only to
Hart’s happiness. Though Mickey Rooney’s trademarked ‘Andy Hardy-esque
exuberance makes him an awkward fit for the real Hart’s opaque and mousy mien,
it is Rooney’s monumental talent and professionalism that really sell this
Hart as a tragic figure. No attempt has been made to present the musical
accomplishments of Rodgers and Hart as they actually occurred. ‘There’s a
Small Hotel’ is suggested as one of the boys’ first entrĂ©es when, in fact,
it hails from the middle act of their collaborative efforts. Hart’s duet with
Judy Garland – playing herself at a Hollywood party – would have been virtually
impossible, as Garland was barely 10-yrs.-old at the time this story is
supposedly taking place.
The pas deux
between Rooney and Garland offers audiences a reprieve for two songs shorn from
the stagecraft of Babes in Arms, ironically, another Garland/Rooney
musical, before it was translated to film in 1939. And while the real Richard Rodgers set Arthur
Freed a glowing letter, in part to thank him for the ‘exciting’ and
‘gratifying’ handling of the songs with ‘such an extraordinary cast of stars’ –
Rodgers was never entirely satisfied with the way his song-writing tenure with
Hart had been laid out. Words and Music is more 'a show' than ‘tell’ or
‘tell all’ for that matter. Yet, it works as a glossy star-spangled and
hit-filled cavalcade of R&H’s best work and, in the annals of movie
‘biopics’, proved both a template as well as a real tough act to follow. That
it also became one of MGM’s biggest and brightest money makers of the season
was, at the time, mere icing on the studio’s already well-frosted cake.
The forties, and
more directly, the war years, had seen MGM’s profits soar, in part, due to
Mayer’s streamlining of the ancient Thalberg motto, ‘do it right, do it big,
and give it class.’ Thalberg was passionate about conjuring to life the
finest escapisms ever put on celluloid. Mayer was more the mogul than the
magician. In an all-inclusive fiefdom like Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, such creative
control was not only possible, but preferable. Alas, at war’s end, the klieg
lights were dimming on Mayer’s magic kingdom. More than half a century later,
audiences are not left wanting by the sheer professionalism on tap in Words
and Music. While it could never be confused as being in the same artistic
league as Freed’s Easter Parade (also made and released in 1948) nor
even the ambitious, though somewhat fractured reimagining of On The Town
(1949), to immediately follow it, Words and Music sustains a joyful
vigor that every blue-chip movie musical ought to possess. Better still, its
tune-packed 2-hours create a colossus of song and dance with MGM’s glitterati assemblage
elevating the exercise to sheer perfection.
Decades ago,
MGM/UA Home Video released a LaserDisc of Words and Music that sported a
refurbished image, aligned from original Technicolor negatives. Unfortunately, when
Warner Home Video – the ‘then’ new custodians of Metro’s library, opted to
release a DVD version in 2002, the results abysmally failed to recapture this
former glory. Instead, we were given anemic colors and an overall soft-ish look
that belied the gorgeous, razor-sharp imagery captured by cinematographers, Charles
Rosher and Harry Stradling. Well,
prepare to make your old disc a Frisbee. Because the Warner Archive’s
new-to-Blu of Words and Music is a revelation. Colors pop, contrast is
uniformly excellent, and, image clarity and crispness could scarcely improve.
This is a magnificent presentation of a titanic musical. The 2.0 DTS mono
sounds wonderful too.
Ported over,
Richard Barrios’ sincere commentary. Also, the nearly 20-min. featurette,
hosted by Barrios, on the creation of the movie, with vintage and ‘then’ newly
recorded interviews with Dick Rodgers’ daughter, Mary, archivist, Ted Chapin,
author Noel Taylor, Mickey Rooney, and Gene Kelly’s widow, Patricia. We get
several deleted takes of Como’s ‘You’re Nearer’, and ‘Lover’,
plus outtakes of the Blackburn Twins singing, ‘I Feel at Home with You’,
Betty Garrett warbling ‘It Never Entered My Mind’ and, ‘My Funny
Valentine’, Como cooing, ‘My Heart Stood Still’, and complete
versions of ‘The Lady is a Tramp’, ‘Way Out West’ and ‘With A Song in
My Heart’. Two shorts – one animated, one live-action, and a theatrical
trailer round out the goodies. Bottom line: Words and Music is an
exceptionally well-tailored, if totally fictional musical bio. The joy of it
easily exceeds its narrative shortcomings. The Blu-ray is exceptional. Very
highly recommended!
FILM RATING (out
of 5 - 5 being the best)
4
VIDEO/AUDIO
5+
EXTRAS
5
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