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An American in Paris (1951)
An American in Paris (1951) is one
of the greatest, most elegant, and most celebrated of MGM's 50's
musicals, with Gershwin lyrics and musical score (lyrics by Ira
and music by composer George from some of their compositions of
the 20s and 30s), lavish sets and costumes, tremendous
Technicolor cinematography, and a romantic love story set to
music and dance. Gene Kelly served as the film's principal star,
singer, athletically-exuberant dancer and energetic
choreographer - he even directed the sequence surrounding
"Embraceable You." The entire film glorifies the joie de vivre
of Paris, but it was shot on MGM's sound stages in California,
except for a few opening, establishing shots of the scenic city.
Nonetheless, it remains one of the most optimistic American
films of the post-war period - with Paris at its center.
The film brought eight Academy Award nominations and won six of
them - none of which were for acting: Best Picture (Arthur
Freed, producer), Best Story and Screenplay (Alan Jay Lerner),
Best Color Cinematography, Best Color Art Direction/Set
Decoration, Best Musical Score, and Best Color Costume Design.
Its nominations for director (Vincente Minnelli) and Film
Editing were unrewarded. Gene Kelly received an Honorary Award
from the Academy the same year, presumably for his contributions
to this film - it was presented "in appreciation of his
versatility as an actor, singer, director and dancer, and
specifically for his brilliant achievements in the art of
choreography on film." Nineteen year-old Leslie Caron made her
film debut as the young Parisian mademoiselle.
An American in Paris - and Gigi (1958), were among Minnelli's
most successful films, and two rare nuggets of gold among MGM's
Golden Age of Musicals. [The Arthur Freed unit at MGM Studios
was well known for its production of other wonderful films:
Singin' in the Rain (1952) that re-invented the musical in the
1950s, and Minnelli's own Meet Me in St. Louis (1944), The
Pirate (1948) and The Bandwagon (1953), among others.] It was
one of the few musicals ever voted Best Picture in Oscar
history, and one of only a few Best Picture winners with no
acting nominations.
It is an integrated musical, meaning that the songs and dances
blend perfectly with the story. As in many musicals, the plot of
this film is not its most important element. One of the film's
highlights is its impressive finale - an ambitious, colorful,
imaginative, 13 minute avante-garde "dream ballet" costing a
half million dollars to produce. The pretentious sequence,
featuring an Impressionistic period daydream in the style of
various painters, is one of the longest uninterrupted dance
sequences of any Hollywood film, and features the music of
George Gershwin. [The success of the balletic themes in Michael
Powell and Emeric Pressburger's British film The Red Shoes
(1948) inspired Minnelli to follow suit - he had experimented
with shorter ballet sequences in his earlier films Yolanda and
the Thief (1945) and Ziegfeld Follies (1946).]
After the credits and a brief travelogue of Paris, a voice
describes the setting:
This is Paris. And I'm an American who lives here. My name Jerry
Mulligan. And I'm an ex-GI. In 1945, when the Army told me to
find my own job, I stayed on and I'll tell you why. I'm a
painter. All my life, that's all I've ever wanted to do.
Carefree, but struggling and penniless young artist, ex-GI Jerry
Mulligan (Gene Kelly) has remained in Paris following World War
II to paint and study art. He explains the lure of Paris:
And for a painter, the Mecca of the world for study, for
inspiration, and for living is here on this star called Paris.
Just look at it. No wonder so many artists have come here and
called it home. Brother, if you can't paint in Paris, you'd
better give up and marry the boss's daughter.
He provides another view of why he came to Paris to study
painting:
Back home everyone said I didn't have any talent. They might be
saying the same thing over here, but it sounds better in French.
Jerry who lives on the West Bank, appears lighthearted and
optimistic. He is happy to be living and working in an
efficiently-organized but cramped apartment two flights above a
cafe in a Montmartre garret. He is first seen through the window
of his cramped and confining space. He uses many "Rube
Goldberg"-like mechanical contrivances in a choreographed set of
actions to save space - a rope tugs his bed up out of the way,
and a shelf folds up to make a table. He is popular with the
neighbor kids because he gives them American bubble-gum.
One of his "very good friends in Paris" introduces himself in
voice over:
Adam Cook is my name. I'm a concert pianist. That's a
pretentious way of saying I'm unemployed at the moment.
With sardonic wit and a droll, morose sense of humor, aspiring
American concert pianist Adam Cook (Oscar Levant) explains that
he has won his eighth scholarship/fellowship to study abroad, is
homesick and feels like "the world's oldest child prodigy."
Jerry's Montmartre friend describes his mordant character:
It's not a pretty face, I grant you, but underneath its flabby
exterior is an enormous lack of character. I like Paris. It's a
place where you don't run into old friends, although that's
never been one of my problems.
Adam used to work as an accompanist fifteen years earlier for
successful music-hall star entertainer Henri Baurel (Georges
Guetary in his only American film appearance). Henri pauses
before a mirror to assure himself that he is still the
dapper-looking music hall idol of years earlier, even though he
is aging. Henri excuses his graying hair and older age:
Let's just say I'm old enough to know what to do with my young
feelings.
Adam plays piano in the nearby downstairs bistro. There, Henri
shows Adam a picture of his 19 year old girlfriend/fiancee Lise
Bouvier (young teen Leslie Caron in her screen debut), a
beautiful dancer who works in a French perfume shop. He had
rescued her from the Nazis years earlier when her father was a
Resistance leader and she was orphaned. Henri raised her in his
own home. Adam makes the obvious point: "Shocking degenerate."
Henri explains how he grew to love her after she blossomed into
womanhood: "She was a little girl then. We only became in love
after she left." Adam is skeptical of the age discrepancy:
"She's a little young for you, isn't she kid?" Lise is described
as a fun loving dancer, with great vitality and enchanting
beauty: "She has great vitality, joi de vivre, she loves to go
out and have fun and dance. She would dance all night...She's an
enchanting girl, Adam. Not really beautiful. And yet, she has
great beauty."
As Henri tries to explain to Adam what Lise is really like, we
see five different aspects of her personality, conveyed in a
montage of dance styles, costumes and color schemes or settings
projected on a cafe mirror. Each balletic vignette is danced and
scored to "Embraceable You," each with a different Gershwin
tune. Lise conveys five guises, moods, styles, or aspects of her
character: exciting or sexy, sweet and shy, vivacious and
modern, studious while reading, and gay or athletic. At the end
of the descriptions, the screen splits into five diamond-shaped
parts to show images of all five vignettes, all from Henri's
subconscious imagination.
In the cafe, Jerry is introduced to Henri, Adam's friend. Jerry
struggles to sell his paintings in Montmartre. His first
potential customer is appalled by the lack of perspective in his
paintings, and he tells her to move on. She is labeled as "one
of those third year girls who gripe my liver...You know,
American college kids. They come over here to take their third
year and lap up a little culture...They're officious and dull.
They're always making profound observations they've overheard."
Jerry's fortunes appear bright when he is discovered by Milo
Roberts (Nina Foch), a wealthy, attractive American patroness
who purchases two of his paintings - to his complete surprise.
When he questions her name, she breezily explains it to him: "As
in Venus de." Jerry is driven in her chauffeured green car to
her hotel to be paid. He accepts a drink of sherry, and learns
she acquired her wealth as an heiress to a sun-tan oil empire,
clarifying: "There's a lot of red skin in America." She smoothly
invites him to a small party in her hotel room later that
evening. She hopes to win Jerry's heart by buying his paintings,
promoting his career, and helping to sponsor him in the Paris
art world.
After teaching a streetful of adorable Parisian children some
American words, Jerry exuberantly tap dances and teaches them to
sing an American song, "I Got Rhythm," partly in French and
partly in English, while he dances and leaps down the block.
At Milo's party, Jerry appears to be the only guest. He admires
the would-be patron's one-shouldered white gown in one of the
film's most famous lines:
That's, uh, quite a dress you almost have on. What holds it up?
She cleverly replies "modesty," and they share a drink.
Jerry: I see it's a formal brawl after all.
Milo: What makes you think that?
Jerry: Well, the more formal the party is, the less you have to
wear.
Milo: Oh, no. You're quite wrong. It's most informal.
Jerry: Where is everybody?
Milo: Here.
Jerry: Downstairs?
Milo: No. Here in this room.
Jerry: What about that extra girl?
Milo: Ha, ha. That's me.
Jerry: Ohhh! You mean the party's just you and me.
Milo: That's right.
Jerry: Oh I see. Why that's kind of a little joke, isn't it?
Milo: In a way.
Jerry refuses to be bought and made a kept man, returns her
"dough" for the paintings, and decides to "run along." Milo asks
him to stay, but Jerry declines. He self-righteously rejects
Milo's patronistic support - she fails to ignite any amorous
spark in his heart: "You must be out of your mink-lined head. I
know I need dough but I don't need it this badly. If you're hard
up for companionship, there are guys in town that do this kind
of thing for a living. Call one of them." Following his
"righteous" display of his honor and "male initiative," Milo
explains why she invited him. She attempts to explain she is
more interested in his painting talent than in him personally or
romantically: "I'm simply interested in your work and I want to
get to know you better. Now is that such a crime?...I want to
help you. I think you have a great deal of talent. Now it
doesn't hurt to have somebody rooting for you, does it?" Jerry
is persuaded to remain in her company, but at a place he can
afford for dinner. They go to the Cafe Flaubert on Montparnasse.
In the Montmartre nightclub, Milo explains her access to
important art world connections: "I want to bring you to the
attention of the important dealers," she tells him. She offers
to be his sponsor: "They know me. I'm a big customer. We have a
large collection at home. I could sponsor you, talk about you,
encourage you, and then when you've done enough canvasses, I
could arrange for your first show. That is, if you'll let me."
Jerry wants clarity on her motivations: "Sounds great, but, uh,
what's in it for you?" he asks. "Well, just the excitement of
helping somebody I believe in and finding out if I'm right." She
also introduces him to Tommy Baldwin (Hayden Rorke), one of her
art acquaintances, and she encourages Baldwin to support Jerry
on the art pages of the Paris Telegram.
In a chance encounter in the club - as in most musical comedies
- he spots the beautiful, young but elusive Lise Bouvier and is
immediately captivated and attracted to her. So completely taken
by her, he rudely asks Tommy if he knows the "very special doll"
sitting at the other table. Leaning back in his chair to hear
the conversation at Lise's table, he learns her name. Outright
callous to Milo, he flirts with Lise on his first night out with
his patroness. Jerry pulls Lise onto the dance floor, pretending
to know her - she rebuffs him. "Well, you're certainly not
without your nerve, Monsieur," she first tells him. To calm her,
he briefly sings "Our Love is Here to Stay" to her as they dance
pas de deux: "It's very clear. Our love is here to stay." The
frame is tightly held around them as the camera follows their
movements. Soon the music stops, and she insists on returning to
her own table, but not before he persists and learns her work
phone number. In the meantime, he has shown no regard for Milo,
his date of the evening.
Returning home in her limo from the club, Milo decides she has
had enough of him but she also feels wounded pride. She
reprimands his behavior in an angry torrent of words: "I can
tell you, I didn't like your exhibition tonight. I thought you
were very rude...If you insist on picking up stray women, that's
your own affair but from now on, don't do it when you're with
me. Is that clear?"
The next morning, there are alternating scenes of persistent
pursuit - of Jerry for Lise, and Milo for Jerry. He is
undeterred in getting a date with Lise. He calls her at the
perfume shop but is again rebuffed: "Last night you were a small
annoyance but today you are growing into a large nuisance. Now
leave me alone and don't call me again ever." Dejected, Jerry is
joined at his cafe table by Milo, who explains she has already
been hard at work early that morning to support his art work
with dealers and galleries. She apologizes for the previous
night's tiff, and he agrees to meet her for lunch to discuss his
sponsorship.
Jerry visits the perfume shop and asks Lise to go out with him.
Lise observes his obnoxious persistence and fends him off: "It's
a pity you don't have as much charm as you have persistence."
Breaking down her defenses, she finally agrees to keep a date
with him at 9 pm at the Cafe Belle Ami by the bridge next to the
Seine. "Mademoiselle, there is no happier man in Paris than
Monsieur Mulligan at this moment," he beams.
A romantic Jerry is so exuberant and happy over his newfound
love for Lise that he bounds up to Adam's garret, where he finds
his friend playing on the piano. Jerry joyfully sings and dances
to "Tra-La-La-La": "This time it's really love, tra-la-la-la,
I'm in that blue above, tra-la-la-la." A dour cynic, Adam plays
the piano to accompany him and later joins him in the singing.
Jerry ends up tap-dancing all over his friend's place, even on
top of the piano.
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