Top Hat

Top Hat

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Mark Sandrich
Produced by Pandro S. Berman
Written by Allan Scott
Dwight Taylor
Starring Fred Astaire
Ginger Rogers
Edward Everett Horton
Erik Rhodes
Eric Blore
Helen Broderick
Music by Irving Berlin
Max Steiner
Cinematography David Abel
Editing by William Hamilton
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures
Release date(s)

August 29, 1935 (NY)[1]

September 30, 1935 (1935-09-30) (LA)
Running time 101 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $609,000

Top Hat is a 1935 screwball comedy musical film in which Fred Astaire plays an American dancer named Jerry Travers, who comes to London to star in a show produced by Horace Hardwick (Edward Everett Horton). He meets and attempts to impress Dale Tremont (Ginger Rogers) to win her affection. The film also features Eric Blore as Hardwick's valet Bates, Erik Rhodes as Alberto Beddini, a fashion designer and rival for Dale's affections, and Helen Broderick as Hardwick's long-suffering wife Madge.

The film was written by Allan Scott and Dwight Taylor. It was directed by Mark Sandrich. The songs were written by Irving Berlin. "Top Hat, White Tie and Tails" and "Cheek to Cheek" have become American song classics.

It has been nostalgically referenced — particularly its "Cheek to Cheek" segment — in many films, including The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985) and The Green Mile (1999).

Top Hat was the most successful picture of Astaire and Rogers' partnership (and Astaire's second most successful picture after Easter Parade), achieving second place in worldwide box-office receipts for 1935.[2] While some dance critics maintain that Swing Time contained a finer set of dances,[2][3] Top Hat remains, to this day, the partnership's best-known work.[4]

Contents

Synopsis

An American dancer, Jerry Travers comes to London to star in a show produced by the bumbling Horace Hardwick. While practising a tap dance routine in his hotel bedroom, he awakens Dale Tremont on the floor below. She storms upstairs to complain, whereupon Jerry falls hopelessly in love with her and proceeds to pursue her all over London.

Dale mistakes Jerry for Horace, who is married to her friend Madge. Following the success of Jerry's opening night in London, Jerry follows Dale to Venice, where she is visiting Madge and modelling/promoting the gowns created by Alberto Beddini, a dandified Italian fashion designer with a penchant for malapropisms.

Jerry proposes to Dale, who is disgusted that her friend's husband could behave in such a manner and agrees instead to marry Alberto. Fortunately, Bates, Horace's meddling English valet, disguises himself as a priest and conducts the ceremony; apparently, Horace had sent Bates to keep tabs on Dale.

On a trip in a gondola, Jerry manages to convince Dale and they return to the hotel where the previous confusion is rapidly cleared up. The reconciled couple dance off into the Venetian sunset, to the tune of "The Piccolino".[5]

Cast

Notable bit parts:

Production

Top Hat began filming on April 1, 1935 and cost $620,000 to make. Shooting ended in June and the first public previews were held in July. These led to cuts of approximately ten minutes, mainly in the last portion of the film: the carnival sequence and the gondola parade which had been filmed to show off the huge set were heavily cut. A further four minutes were cut[6] before its premiere at the Radio City Music Hall, where it broke all records, went on to gross $3 million on its initial release, and became RKO's most profitable film of the 1930s.[7] After Mutiny on the Bounty, it made more money than any film released in 1935.[3]

Script development

Dwight Taylor was the principal screenwriter in this, the first screenplay written specially for Astaire and Rogers. Astaire reacted negatively to the first drafts, complaining that "it is patterned too closely after The Gay Divorcee", and "I am cast as ... a sort of objectionable young man without charm or sympathy or humour".[2] Allan Scott, whose first major project this was, and who would go on to serve on six of the Astaire-Rogers pictures, was hired by Sandrich to do the rewrites and never actually worked with Taylor, Sandrich acting as script editor and advisor throughout.[3] The Hays Office insisted on only minor changes, including probably the most quoted line of dialogue from the film: Beddini's motto: "For the women the kiss, for the men the sword" which originally ran: "For the men the sword, for the women the whip."[3][8] Of his role in the creation of Top Hat, Taylor recalled that with Sandrich and Berlin he shared "a kind of childlike excitement. The whole style of the picture can be summed up in the word inconsequentiality. When I left RKO a year later, Mark said to me, 'You will never again see so much of yourself on the screen.'"[3][9] On the film's release, the script was panned by many critics, who alleged it was merely a rewrite of The Gay Divorcee.[7]

Musical score and orchestration

This was composer Irving Berlin's first complete film score since 1930 and he negotiated a unique contract, retaining the copyrights to the score with a guarantee of ten per-cent of the profits if the film earned in excess of $1,250,000.[7] Eight songs from the original score were discarded as they were not considered to advance the film's plot.[7] One of these: "Get Thee Behind Me, Satan" was recycled into Follow the Fleet (1936). All five songs eventually selected became major hits and, in the September 28, 1935 broadcast of Your Hit Parade, all five featured in the top fifteen songs selected for that week.[7]

Astaire recalled how this success helped restore Berlin's flagging self-confidence. Astaire had never met Berlin before this film, although he had danced on stage to some of his tunes as early as 1915. There ensued a lifelong friendship with Berlin contributing to more Astaire films (six in total) than any other composer. Of his experience with Astaire in Top Hat Berlin wrote: "He's a real inspiration for a writer. I'd never have written Top Hat without him. He makes you feel so secure."[2]

As Berlin couldn't read or write music, and could only pick out tunes on a specially designed piano which transposed keys automatically, he required an assistant to make up his piano parts. Hal Borne – Astaire's rehearsal pianist – performed this role in Top Hat and recalled working nights with him in the Beverly Wilshire Hotel: "Berlin went 'Heaven...' and I went dah dah dee 'I'm in Heaven' (dah-dah-dee). He said, 'I love it, put it down.'"[3] These parts were subsequently orchestrated by a team comprising Edward Powell, Maurice de Packh, Gene Rose, Eddie Sharp, and Arthur Knowlton who worked under the overall supervision of Max Steiner.[2]

Berlin broke a number of the conventions of American songwriting in this film, especially in the songs "Top Hat, White Tie and Tails" and "Cheek to Cheek",[10] and, according to Rogers, the film became the talk of Hollywood as a result of its score.[10]

Set design

In an Astaire-Rogers picture, the Big White Set — as these Art Deco-inspired creations were known — took up the largest share of the film's production costs, and Top Hat was no exception. A winding canal — spanned by two staircase bridges at one end and a flat bridge on the other — was built across two adjoining sound stages. Astaire and Rogers dance across this flat bridge in "Cheek to Cheek". Around the bend from this bridge was located the main piazza, a giant stage coated in red bakelite and this was the location for "The Piccolino". This fantasy representation[11] of the Lido of Venice was on three levels comprising dance floors, restaurants and terraces, all decorated in candy-cane colours, with the canal waters dyed black. The vast Venetian interiors were similarly inauthentic, reflecting instead the latest Hollywood tastes.[12]

Carroll Clark, who worked under the general supervision of Van Nest Polglase, was the unit art director on all but one of the Astaire-Rogers films and he managed the team of designers responsible for the scenery and furnishings of Top Hat.

Wardrobe: The "feathers" incident

Although Bernard Newman was nominally in charge of dressing the stars, Rogers was keenly interested in dress design and make-up.[13] For the "Cheek to Cheek" routine, she was determined to use her own creation: "I was determined to wear this dress, come hell or high water. And why not? It moved beautifully. Obviously, no one in the cast or crew was willing to take sides, particularly not my side. This was all right with me. I'd had to stand alone before. At least my mother was there to support me in the confrontation with the entire front office, plus Fred Astaire and Mark Sandrich."[14]

Due to the enormous labour involved in sewing each ostrich feather to the dress, Astaire — who normally approved his partner's gowns and suggested modifications if necessary during rehearsals — saw the dress for the first time on the day of the shoot,[15] and was horrified at the way it shed clouds of feathers at every twist and turn, recalling later: "It was like a chicken attacked by a coyote, I never saw so many feathers in my life."[16][17] According to choreographer Hermes Pan, Astaire lost his temper and yelled at Rogers, who promptly burst into tears, whereupon her mother, Lela, "came charging at him like a mother rhinoceros protecting her young."[18] An additional night's work by seamstresses resolved much of the problem, however, careful examination of the dance on film reveals feathers floating around Astaire and Rogers and lying on the dance floor.[2] Later, Astaire and Pan presented Rogers with a gold feather for her charm bracelet, and serenaded her with a ditty parodying Berlin's tune:

Feathers — I hate feathers

And I hate them so that I can hardly speak

And I never find the happiness I seek

With those chicken feathers dancing

Cheek to Cheek[7][19]

Thereafter, Astaire nicknamed Rogers "Feathers" — also a title of one of the chapters in his autobiography — and parodied his experience in a song and dance routine with Judy Garland in Easter Parade (1948).[2]

Astaire also chose and provided his own clothes. He is widely credited with influencing 20th Century male fashion and, according to Forbes male fashion editor, G. Bruce Boyer, the "Isn't It a Lovely Day?" routine: "shows Astaire dressed in the style he would make famous: soft-shouldered tweed sports jacket, button-down shirt, bold striped tie, easy-cut gray flannels, silk paisley pocket square, and suede shoes. It's an extraordinarily contemporary approach to nonchalant elegance, a look Ralph Lauren and a dozen other designers still rely on more than six decades later. Astaire introduced a new style of dress that broke step with the spats, celluloid collars, and homburgs worn by aristocratic European-molded father-figure heroes."[20]

Musical numbers and choreography

The choreography, in which Astaire was assisted by Hermes Pan, is principally concerned throughout with the possibilities of using taps to make as much noise as possible.[2] In the film, Astaire suffers from what Rogers terms an "affliction": "Every once in a while I suddenly find myself dancing." Astaire introduces the film's tap motif when he blasts a tap barrage at the somnolent members of a London Club.[2][21]

The final supported backbend – Astaire and Rogers in the climax to "Cheek to Cheek"

Awards

The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture, as well as Art Direction (Carroll Clark and Van Nest Polglase), Original Song (Irving Berlin for "Cheek to Cheek"), and Dance Direction (Hermes Pan for "Piccolino" and "Top Hat").[41]

In 1990, Top Hat was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[42]

In 2006 this film ranked #15 on the American Film Institute's list of best musicals.[43]

Reviews and legacy

Reviews for Top Hat were mainly positive. The Los Angeles Evening Herald Express praised the film, exclaiming "Top Hat is the tops! With Fred Astaire dancing and singing Irving Berlin tunes! Well, one (in his right mind) couldn't ask for much more — unless, of course, it could be a couple of encores." The New York Times praised the film's musical numbers, but criticized the story line, describing it as "a little on the thin side," but also stating that "it is sprightly enough to plug those inevitable gaps between the shimmeringly gay dances."Top Hat" is worth standing in line for. From the appearance of the lobby yesterday afternoon, you probably will have to."[44] Variety also singled out the story line as well as the cast, stating "the danger sign is in the story and cast. Substitute Alice Brady for Helen Broderick and it's the same lineup of players as was in The Gay Divorcée. Besides which the situations in the two scripts parallel each other closely". Nevertheless, it concluded that Top Hat was a film "one can't miss".[45]

Top Hat has been nostalgically referenced — particularly its "Cheek to Cheek" segment — in many films, including The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985)[46] and The Green Mile (1999).[47]

DVD releases

Region 1

Since 2005, a digitally restored version of Top Hat is available separately and as part of The Astaire & Rogers Collection, Vol.1 from Warner Home Video. In both cases, the film features a commentary by Astaire's daughter, Ava Astaire McKenzie, and Larry Billman, author of Fred Astaire, a Bio-bibliography.

Region 2

Since 2003, a digitally restored version of Top Hat (not the same as the US restoration) is available separately, and as part of The Fred and Ginger Collection, Vol. 1 from Universal Studios, which controls the rights to the RKO Astaire-Rogers pictures in Europe. In both releases, the film features an introduction by Ava Astaire McKenzie.

Notes and references

  1. Brown, Gene (1995). Movie Time: A Chronology of Hollywood and the Movie Industry from its Beginnings to the Present. New York: MacMillan. p. 124. ISBN 0-02-86042906.  In New York, the film premiered at Radio City Music Hall.
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 Mueller, John (1986). Astaire Dancing – The Musical Films. London: Hamish Hamilton. pp. 76–87. ISBN 0-241-11749-6. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Croce, Arlene (1972). The Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers Book. London: W.H. Allen. pp. 54–79. ISBN 0-491-00159-2. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Hyam, Hannah (2007). Fred and Ginger – The Astaire-Rogers Partnership 1934–1938. Brighton: Pen Press Publications. ISBN 978-1-905621-96-5. 
  5. Adapted from Billman
  6. including the scene where Blore poses as a gondolier and insults an Italian policeman – this scene is restored in some prints. cf. Croce p.78
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 Billman, Larry (1997). Fred Astaire – A Bio-bibliography. Connecticut: Greenwood Press. pp. 88–90. ISBN 0-313-29010-5. 
  8. reviewing the film in England, author Graham Greene was pleased to find the film "quite earnestly bawdy" and took satisfaction in how this had escaped the British censor. cf Mueller, p.80.
  9. The claims that Top Hat was adapted by Karl Noti from A Scandal in Budapest by Aladar Laszlo and Alexander Farago have been examined and dismissed by Arlene Croce, cf. Croce p.70
  10. 10.0 10.1 Green, Benny (1989). Let's Face the Music: The Golden Age of Popular Song. London: Pavilion-Michael Joseph. pp. 171. ISBN 1-85145-4896. 
  11. Croce, p.56: "Venice as a celestial powder room"
  12. Descriptions adapted from Croce, p.76
  13. Rogers' preoccupation lost on the Variety critic who wrote: "she is again badly dressed, while her facial make-up and various coiffeurs give her a hard appearance", cf. Billman, p.90. Croce, p.66, disagrees.
  14. Rogers, Ginger (1991). Ginger, My Story. New York: Harper Collins. pp. 143. ISBN 0-060-18308-X. 
  15. Astaire had approved the costume sketch. cf. Billman p.89.
  16. Astaire, Fred (1959). Steps in Time. London: Heinemann. pp. 205–211. ISBN 0-241-11749-6. 
  17. David Niven attended the shoot in the company of Astaire's wife, Phyllis, who suffered from a speech impediment. He recalled her verdict: "she looks like a wooster", cf. Billman p.89
  18. Thomas, Bob (1985). Astaire, the Man, the Dancer. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 112. ISBN 0-297-78402-1. 
  19. Since Astaire and Pan had to create a tap track to accompany the routine, they also created a joke version, replete with melodramatic female sighs and creaking sounds to accompany backbends for Rogers' amusement. cf. Mueller p.86
  20. Bruce Boyer, G. (2005). Fred Astaire Style. Assouline. pp. 10–11. ISBN 2-84323-677-0. 
  21. Croce, p.57: "the dance technique is an element in the characterization. Jerry Travers is literally footloose, he's bumptious, he's a disturber of the peace." Also Mueller, p.78: "this urge becomes a motif in the film as Astaire's dancing feet, usually irritating somebody or other, send the plot skittering along."
  22. As Mueller notes, repeating a song was extremely unusual for Astaire, who by way of variation, mixes two drinks during the repetition
  23. described by Croce (p.59) as "rising from her satin pillows, like an angry naiad from the foam.". This scene is also referenced in Bernardo Bertolucci's 2003 film The Dreamers.
  24. Mueller, p.80: "at once tender and erotic...This scene is one of the most memorable in Astaire's career," and Croce, p.59: "in the movie's sexiest scene, dances...with caressive little strokes."
  25. In his 1936 comedy short Grand Slam Opera Buster Keaton parodies the entire "No Strings" number
  26. The script originally called for a scene in a zoo, but as Berlin provided this song, the script was adapted accordingly. cf. Mueller, p.80.
  27. Croce, p.62: "that ecstatic embrace when they pivot together in a wide circle all around the stage...a shining moment in the history of the musical film."
  28. Hyam, p.104: "It epitomises the elegance and sophistication that are synonymous with his name."
  29. Astaire recounts how he got the idea at 4.00 a.m. and woke his sister Adele as he cavorted around his bedroom with an umbrella. After explaining to his awakened sister that he had just had an idea for the Manhattan number, she replied: "Well, hang on to it, baby — you're going to need it in this turkey." cf. Astaire, p.184
  30. Satchell, Tim (1987). Astaire – The biography. London: Hutchinson. pp. 128. ISBN 0-09-173736-2. 
  31. Mueller, p.16: "Trudy Wellman, a secretary who worked on Top Hat recalls: 'He gets very annoyed with himself, just himself....He would take that cane and he would break it across his knee, just like that, and, of course, we were all shocked because we knew we only had 13 canes....It was a good thing we had that 13th cane because that was the take we printed.'"
  32. Astaire, p.210: "Jimmy watched and whispered to me after about the third take, 'Don't shoot it again, kid — you got it on the second take. You'll never top that one.' I insisted on one more, but Jimmy was right. Next morning when I saw the rushes, that second take was the one."
  33. This sequence was parodied in a scene in Mel Brooks' Young Frankenstein.
  34. which did not dissuade Croce from describing it as "a bit too ritzy, a bit too consciously "poised"." For a comparison of critical opinions see Hyam, pp.205,207
  35. Hyam, p.205: "Rogers' feathered dress creates dazzling spirals of white."
  36. Dance description principally condensed and adapted from Mueller, pp.83–86
  37. Mueller, p.87: "I love it, the way you love a child that you've had trouble with. I worked harder on 'Piccolino' than I did on the whole Top Hat score."
  38. Unlike its predecessors, "The Piccolino" never became a national craze. cf. Mueller, p.86
  39. Croce, p.75: "When Pan objected that Berlin's lyric was about a song rather than a dance ('Come to the Casino/ And hear them play the Piccolino'), Berlin suggested that the dance could be called 'The Lido,' and then the lyric could run 'Come and do the Lido / It's very good for your libido.'"
  40. Hyam, p.121: "a thoroughly appealing performance, lively and expressive without any suspicion of exaggeration." Also Mueller, p.86: "a lively rendition"
  41. http://awardsdatabase.oscars.org/ampas_awards/DisplayMain.jsp;jsessionid=8D72BA1F329543E77915074F371A9B60?curTime=1271846228624
  42. http://www.loc.gov/film/titles.html
  43. http://connect.afi.com/site/DocServer/musicals25.pdf?docID=204
  44. Andre Sennwald (August 30, 1935). "Top Hat (1935) NYT Critics' Pick THE SCREEN; Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in Their New Song and Dance Show, 'Top Hat,' at the Music Hall.". The New York Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9800EFD91E39E33ABC4850DFBE66838E629EDE. Retrieved 21 April 2010. 
  45. VARIETY STAFF (January 1st, 1935). "Top Hat". Variety Magazine.. http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117795802.html?categoryid=31&cs=1&p=0. Retrieved 21 April 2010. 
  46. Deacy, Christopher (2005). Faith in film: religious themes in contemporary cinema. Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate. p. 53. ISBN 0754651584. 
  47. Magistrale, Tony (2993). Hollywood's Stephen King. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 144. ISBN 0312293208. 

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