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Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942)
Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) is one of Hollywood's greatest,
grandest and slickest musicals. The nostalgic,
shamelessly-patriotic, entertaining film also supported the war
effort as it paid tribute in its mostly fictional story to a
popular Irish/American entertainer and the grand American
gentleman of the theatre in the early 20th century.
The timeliness of its release, just after the attack on Pearl
Harbor in late 1941, helped the 'propaganda machine' of going to
European battlegrounds overseas with a song that was a rousing
theme song written years earlier for WW I - Over There. And a
second song, You're a Grand Old Flag, contributed to
morale-boosting, flag-waving patriotism and love of one's
country. And it was the first time that a living US President
(FDR in this case, played by Jack Young) was portrayed in a
motion picture.
Yankee Doodle Dandy is a lively, sensational and dynamic film
with exciting song and dance numbers and a tour de force
performance by the high-pitched and energized James Cagney. The
film tells the musical rags-to-riches life story and times of
early 20th century entertainment legend George M. Cohan,
following several generations of the Cohan family from the time
of young Cohan's vaudeville training on the road, through to his
later success on Broadway (with the production of 40 Broadway
shows and many hundreds of songs), and ending with his
retirement and a comeback in the theatre in I'd Rather Be Right.
The tough-guy Cagney persona, most remembered in earlier Warner
Bros. gangster films (such as in The Public Enemy (1931), G-Men
(1935), Angels With Dirty Faces (1938), and The Roaring Twenties
(1939)) was completely revolutionized with the charismatic actor
playing an ebullient, stiff-legged, egotistical hoofer speaking
from the side of his mouth and successfully grabbing for the
American dream, although he had been in an earlier Busby
Berkeley backstage musical titled Footlight Parade (1933). The
film was a major box-office success for Warner Bros.
Hungarian-born Michael Curtiz' direction (Curtiz was the famed
director of Casablanca (1942) - released in the same year), Ray
Heindorf's musical arrangements, photography by James Wong Howe,
and the screenplay by Robert Buckner and Edmund Joseph all
contributed to making this a top-notch piece of film-making.
[Although Curtiz was best known for directing other kinds of
film genres, he made a number of musicals and music bios during
his career, including: Mammy (1930) with Al Jolson, Romance on
the High Seas (1948) and the musical-comedy My Dream is Yours
(1949) and Young Man with a Horn (1950) - all with Doris Day,
I'll See You in My Dreams (1951) about lyricist Gus Kahn, White
Christmas (1954) with Bing Crosby, and King Creole (1958) with
Elvis Presley.]
The film received eight Academy Award nominations and was
awarded with three wins: Best Actor (James Cagney), Best Sound
Recording (Nathan Levinson), and Best Scoring of a Musical
Picture (Ray Heindorf and Heinz Roemheld). The other five
nominations included Best Picture, Best Supporting Actor (Walter
Huston), Best Director, Best Original Story (Robert Buckner),
and Best Film Editing (George Amy). For his own favorite
performance in a film, Cagney became the first actor to receive
an Academy Award for a musical performance. [Note: Luise Rainer,
Best Actress winner for The Great Ziegfeld (1936), and Alice
Brady, Best Supporting Actress winner for In Old Chicago (1937),
were in films with musical numbers, but their roles were
non-musical.] It was also Cagney's sole Oscar-winning
performance in his career. The film lost the Best Picture Oscar
to the similarly-patriotic (albeit British) Mrs. Miniver.
Similar to George M. Cohan's own family that acted together as
"The Four Cohans," Cagney's real-life sister Jeanne acted in the
film as his younger sister Josie Cohan and his brother William
was associate producer (in an independent company). The screen's
musical biography of Cohan followed a long cycle of biographies
(or 'biopics') that Warner Bros. had produced throughout the 30s
- many of which starred Paul Muni (Disraeli (1929), The Story of
Louis Pasteur (1935), The Life of Emile Zola (1937), Juarez
(1939), and Knute Rockne - All American (1940)), and was the
first in another series in the 40s of biographies of composers
(Rhapsody in Blue (1943) - George Gershwin, This is The Army
(1943) - Irving Berlin, and Night and Day (1946) - Cole Porter).
In the musical bio film The Seven Little Foys (1955) about famed
vaudeville star Eddie Foy (portrayed by Bob Hope), Cagney
reprised his role as George M. Cohan in a cameo appearance - in
a classic duet scene in which Hope tap-dances on a table-top to
the tune Yankee Doodle Dandy.
As a side piece of history, when Yankee Doodle Dandy was first
released for its world premiere on Memorial Day, 1942 on
Broadway, further special engagements were also scheduled around
Independence Day (Cohan's alleged birthdate). [Due to Cohan's
terminal illness with cancer, the original release date of July
4th was changed and moved earlier. As a sidenote, Cohan died in
November of 1942.] It became the top box-office hit of the year,
and Warners' most successful film to date. The black and white
film was the first computer-colorized film released by
entrepreneur Ted Turner in 1985 (again on Cohan's alleged
birthday July 4th - naturally!).
The black and white film opens with the credits - in red, white,
and blue flag-patterned text - displayed while an orchestrated
medley of the film's songs plays in the background. It also
states the film is "based on the story of George M. Cohan." A
fade-in presents a full shot of an electrical Broadway theatre
sign which proclaims:
SAM H. HARRIS
PRESENTS
GEORGE M. COHAN
in his triumphal return to the stage
in I'd Rather Be Right
The Greatest
Musical Comedy Hit in Years
The camera pans down into the lobby of the theatre where a
large, life-size cut-out picture of George M. Cohan (James
Cagney) stands on the floor. Cohan is playing the role of
third-term President Franklin Roosevelt in Kaufman and Hart's
I'd Rather Be Right. Two tuxedoed critics speak about the
opening night's performance as they emerge from the show:
First critic: I call it a hit. What'll your review say?
Second critic: I like it too. So, er, I guess I'll pan it.
First critic: Oh. (He laughs.) Well, that's logical.
Second critic: My publisher resents Cohan impersonating the
president of the United States. Says our young readers dream of
being president.
First critic: 'I'd rather be right than be president...' Cohan
may find out he isn't either one.
The camera moves through the outer door and into the dressing
room of George M. Cohan - he is being congratulated backstage by
well-wishers and his wife Mary (17 year old Joan Leslie) just
following his performance, but he is anxious about his
impersonation of the president:
Cohan: Well, that's all very well, but we're still treading on
dangerous ground. You know we're imitating the President of the
United States. A lot of people aren't gonna like it.
Well-wisher: It's all in good, clean fun. Didn't they enjoy the
try-out in Boston?
George: Never could do anything wrong in Boston.
Mary: The greatest man in the United States played by the
greatest actor. There's nothing wrong in that. Especially when
the greatest actor is my husband.
Cohan has received bundles of congratulatory Western Union
telegrams - one is "from the White House" and because it
"bothers" him, George asks his writer/producer Sam Harris
(Richard Whorf) to read it outloud:
George M. Cohan
The Alvin Theater, New York
The President of the United States requests that you call upon
him at your earliest convenience in regard to a personal matter.
Kindly reply for definite appointment at White House.
Stephen T. Early
Secretary to the President
Not knowing the purpose of the invitation and his summoning by
the President, George is a bit worried and anxious and thinks he
is going to be chastised: "What did I tell ya? Comin' at a time
like this with everything he has on his mind. This is not just a
casual invitation. This is important. I think we're in trouble."
Mary assures him that he doesn't have anything to fret over:
"Don't worry, dear. They don't telegraph you to come and be shot
at sunrise."
[Kaufman's and Hart's play I'd Rather Be Right, in which Cohan
appeared in the role of FDR, was produced in 1939. In the film,
Cohan is summoned from the playhouse to the White House to
receive the Congressional Medal of Honor. It continues to be a
matter of debate whether Cohan received an "official"
Congressional Medal of Honor or just special recognition. And
the reported year of his 'award' varies from 1936 to 1942.]
At night, George walks through the rain along Pennsylvania
Avenue in Washington, DC to the gates of the White House where
he is halted by armed soldier/guards. He introduces himself as
George M. Cohan (pronounced Co-en), and is soon cleared for
entry. He is greeted and escorted through the foyer of the White
House by an elderly black butler (Clinton Rosemond): "We've been
expecting you." George is led up a long straight staircase to
the second floor - along the stairway wall are framed portraits
of American heroes and statesmen. On the way, the butler
reflects about his memories of the famed entertainer:
Butler: Well, it musta been thirty-some years ago. I was valet
for Mr. 'Teddy' Roosevelt. He got me a seat up in the gallery.
The play was George Washington, Jr., and you was just singin'
and dancin' to all about the grand ole flag. Mr. Teddy used to
sing it in his bathtub.
George: That was a good old song in its day.
Butler: Yas, sir it was. And it's just as good today as it ever
was.
George is brought into the President's private study and
cordially met by the President (Captain Jack Young):
President: Well, hello there! How's my double?
George: Your double isn't any too sure. You gotta give me time
to work on that one.
President: Why, I was told that you knew all the answers.
George: There was a time when I thought so. Right now, I wish I
did.
President: Yes, so do I.
Cohan sits across the desk from the Democratic Party President -
the camera angle captures only a side/back view of the president
- with an over-the-shoulder shot of George. The actor's
apprehension about impersonating the President begins to
dissipate when the commander-in-chief, speaking in FDR's
characteristic accent, chuckles, kids with him, and then
reflects on aging George's membership in the celebrated
vaudeville family:
President: I'm sorry I missed the opening of your show.
George: Maybe it was just as well.
President: Don't worry about it. We understand each other
perfectly...The Herald Tribune says that you make a better
president in I'd Rather Be Right than I am.
George: Don't forget, that's a Republican newspaper.
President: I can remember you and your family very well - the
Four Cohans.
George: Do you really, Mr. President? That was a long time ago.
President: Yes, it was while I was attending school near Boston.
George: (smiling to himself) I was a pretty cocky kid in those
days - a pretty cocky kid. A regular Yankee Doodle Dandy, always
carrying a flag in a parade or following one.
President: I hope you haven't outgrown the habit.
George: Not a chance.
President: Well that's one thing I've always admired about you
Irish-Americans. You carry your love of country like a flag,
right out in the open. It's a great quality.
George: I inherited that - I got that from my father. He ran
away to the Civil War when he was thirteen - the proudest kid in
the whole state of Massachusetts.
President: So you've spent your life telling the other
forty-seven states what a great country it is.
George: Well, I never thought of it just that way before, but I
guess that's about the size of it. And I lost no time either. It
started with a very funny incident about sixty years ago...
Through Cohan himself, the film commences to tell the story, in
voice-over flashback (in a sequence of 'plays-within-a-play'),
of the life of the Cohan family. It spans George's whole career,
from the time of his July 4th birth - and youth - to the present
time. [Cohan's real birthday was July 3rd.]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Voice-Over)
It was in Providence, Rhode Island, on the Fourth of July. There
weren't so many stars then in the flag or on the stage. But
folks knew that more were coming. They were optimistic, happy,
and expectant. The beginning of the Horatio Alger Age...
The flashback slowly dissolves into the image of a billowing
American flag in the late 1870s, and then the camera pans down
to a Main Street in a typical American town where everyone is
celebrating the Fourth of July. Old fashioned-looking police,
horse-drawn wagons, uniformed bands and military figures march
in the day's parade. Cheering onlookers participate - each one
waving red, white, and blue flags. Storefronts are decorated
with even more flags and fabrics. The camera locates the front
of a theatre, the Colony Opera House, where a billboard is
printed with the names of the acts that are performed there:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Week of July 1, 1878
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mr. & Mrs.
JERRY COHAN
"The Irish Darlings"
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TREBOR
The Man of Mystic Changes
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capt. McCrosson's
ZOUAVES
"My father was playing in a variety theater, breaking in a
scene. No one was more expectant than he was - unless there was
my mother. She was busy right then in a smaller production." A
right-to-left dissolve on the billboard fades into the interior
of the small town's theatre, where George's Irish father Jerry
Cohan's (Walter Huston) name is placed on an easel card. He
performs on stage as an Irish trouper with a walking stick - he
is dressed in an Irish hat, buckled shoes, white stockings,
knee-length britches, and a dark coat with cape. He dances a
lively jig while singing the Irish tune:
Keep Your Eyes Upon Me (Dancing Master)
Larry O'Leary is me name.
By trade I am a dancing master.
And there's no one can teach the same
Nor teach it any faster.
It's easy, very easy,
If you watch ev'ry twist, ev'ry turn.
Keep your eyes upon me
And surprised you will be
At the dancing you have yet to learn.
After the song, he disappears into the wings and asks
expectantly: "Has any message come for me yet?...I gotta get out
of here. I gotta find out what's happening....My wife never held
up a show in her life." Backstage are other actors and
performers, the stage manager, and one actor in blackface.
Still amusingly-dressed in his costume, Jerry runs out the back
stage entrance into the alley, discovers his way across the
street is blocked by the crowd on the sidewalk and the parade,
and is labeled as Irish by one of the holiday marchers - a
blue-uniformed veteran of the Civil War: "The Irish are all at
the head of the parade as usual." Tense as he struggles to get
through, he hops on a caisson-drawn wagon, whispers something
into one of the veteran's ears, and is quickly dashed away.
He commandeers the cavalry caisson to a boarding house - a
make-shift hospital room on the second floor where his wife
Nellie (Rosemary DeCamp, who was 12 years younger than her
co-star 'son' Cagney) is attended to by an elderly doctor. Jerry
anxiously rushes in with a small flag in his hands and is told:
"Well, all signs point to its being a boy." With the birth of
his boy, Jerry asks the doctor for advice on a name:
Jerry: What do you say?
Doctor: Well, seeing that he arrived on the Fourth of July, what
about George Washington Cohan?
Jerry: Well, it has a nice patriotic ring to it, all right. (To
his wife) What do you think?
Nellie: Well - the George is fine - but the Washington - may be
too long for a billboard.
Jerry: How about a nice short Irish name - Dennis or Michael?
Nellie: (slowly) George - Michael - Cohan. Yes, I like that
name.
Jerry remembers to notify the veterans waiting below outdoors:
"Hey, it's a boy!" Following his signal, they fire a one-gun
salute. The boom awakens young George and he begins bawling -
Jerry is amused: "Heavenly day, Nellie, he's cryin' with a
brogue!" - he places the stick of the flag in his son's fist.
[Although reportedly born on the 4th of July, George was born on
July 3rd to an Irish family originally named Keohane.]
George's voice-over narration describes the addition of another
family member - Josie, the family's traveling road-show, and
their theatrical billing plastered on an outdoor fence in
Peoria, Illinois: 'The Four Cohans - America's Favorite Family
of Entertainers - The Celebrated Troupe of Singers, Dancers, and
Comedians with their Silver Plated Band':
I guess the first thing I ever had my fist on was the American
flag. I hitched my wagon to thirty-eight stars. And thirteen
stripes. You know, I was six or seven years old before I
realized they weren't celebrating my birthday on the Fourth of
July. Then my folks got a real break when my little sister,
Josie, made her entrance. She grew to love show business just as
she loved everybody and everything. We toured the kerosene
circuit in a tank show called 'Daniel Boone on the Trail.'
Everybody doubled in brass. Dad walloped the bass drum. For some
reason they teamed me with a donkey. I was a good Democrat, even
in those days. Mother and Josie threw out handbills. Their
smiles would have sold tickets to wooden Indians. They kept
putting new stars in the flag and the Cohans kept rushing out to
meet them. We had jokes to match every cornfield. We sang at
every milk station.
Young "MASTER GEORGIE" (Henry Blair at age 7) is a child
performer, doing "Violin Tricks and Tinkling Tunes" in his
family's vaudeville show, and singing the same number and
wearing the same outfit as his father did in the earlier number.
He plays his violin while it rests on the top of his head. His
cute younger sister's (Jo Ann Marlowe at age 6) solo performance
is prefaced with an easel card: "LITTLE JOSIE COHAN - America's
Youngest Skirt Dancer" - she sings part of "Strolling Through
the Park One Day."
We trouped through depression and inflation. Part of the
country's growing pains. We froze in winter and roasted in
summer. But it was a good life. It's a lucky family that dances
together every day. [The family dances in blackface together.]
Eighteen ninety-one found our fortunes flat as a pancake. Then
came a bolt from the blue. Jobs for the whole family in a play
called Peck's Bad Boy. We opened in Brooklyn. The town was noted
for its spirited audiences. Even before it had a ball team.
At the Brooklyn Theater, a huge billboard reads: "OPENING
TONIGHT - The Brooklyn Theatre presents THE COHANS in 'Peck's
Bad Boy' - A Rolicking Comedy." A five-pointed star is nailed to
a door - now the young boy George (Douglas Croft at age 13), who
is the one hammering the gilt star to his own dressing room
door, has become a cocky 'Peck's Bad Boy' - the precocious boy
has learned his part way too well.
An image of the audience reacting to the play appears over a
hand-held program of Peck's Bad Boy - a highlight bar progresses
through the acts in the play to denote the passage of time.
Henry (played by young George), 'Peck's Bad Boy,' pelts the
Schultz grocery store owner and an Irish cop with eggs in a
slapstick scene during the play. Adults in the orchestra seats
are amused but tough kids in the balcony scoff. The store owner
is paid off by Henry's wealthy father, and Henry is coerced to
promise that he'll be a good boy, yet he vows: "I can still lick
any kid in town." After the last curtain for the show, Georgie
is congratulated by backstage crew and other actors. The
egotistical, big-headed lad boasts about how he has upstaged his
father:
You could've told during rehearsals that I'd be a sensation in
this part. Listen, there's nothing to this acting business. I
wonder what took me so long to become a star.
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