Zum Hauptinhalt springen
Nicht aus der Schweiz? Besuchen Sie lehmanns.de

Free and Easy? (eBook)

A Defining History of the American Film Musical Genre

(Autor)

eBook Download: EPUB
2017
John Wiley & Sons (Verlag)
9781118322901 (ISBN)

Lese- und Medienproben

Free and Easy? - Sean Griffin
Systemvoraussetzungen
24,99 inkl. MwSt
(CHF 24,40)
Der eBook-Verkauf erfolgt durch die Lehmanns Media GmbH (Berlin) zum Preis in Euro inkl. MwSt.
  • Download sofort lieferbar
  • Zahlungsarten anzeigen

A History of the American Musical narrates the evolution of the film musical genre, discussing its influences and how it has come to be defined; the first text on this subject for over two decades, it employs the very latest concepts and research.

  • The most up-to-date text on the subject, with uniquely comprehensive coverage and employing the very latest concepts and research
  • Surveys centuries of music history from the music and dance of Native Americans to contemporary music performance in streaming media
  • Examines the different ways the film musical genre has been defined, what gets counted as a musical, why, and who gets to make that decision
  • The text is written in an accessible manner for general cinema and musical theatre buffs, whilst retaining theoretical rigour in research
  • Describes the contributions made to the genre by marginalized or subordinated identity groups who have helped invent and shape the musical

 



Sean Griffin is a Professor of Film and Media Arts at Southern Methodist University. He is the author of Tinker Belles and Evil Queens: The Walt Disney Company from the Inside Out (1999). He is the editor of Hetero: Queering Representations of Straightness (2009) and What Dreams Were Made of: Movie Stars of the 1940s (2011). He co-edited Queer Cinema, The Film Reader (with Harry M. Benshoff, 2005), and co-authored America on Film: Representing Race, Class, Gender and Sexuality at the Movies (Wiley Blackwell , 2009) and Queer Images: A History of Gay and Lesbian Film in America (2006).

Sean Griffin is a Professor of Film and Media Arts at Southern Methodist University. He is the author of Tinker Belles and Evil Queens: The Walt Disney Company from the Inside Out (1999). He is the editor of Hetero: Queering Representations of Straightness (2009) and What Dreams Were Made of: Movie Stars of the 1940s (2011). He co-edited Queer Cinema, The Film Reader (with Harry M. Benshoff, 2005), and co-authored America on Film: Representing Race, Class, Gender and Sexuality at the Movies (Wiley Blackwell , 2009) and Queer Images: A History of Gay and Lesbian Film in America (2006).

Acknowledgments vii

Introduction 1

1 Overture: Musical Traditions before Cinema 11

2 You Ain't Heard Nothin' Yet: The Sound Revolution 35

3 Face the Music and Dance: The Depression 67

4 Singing a Song of Freedom: World War II 97

5 There's Beauty Everywhere: MGM and the Freed Unit 125

6 Something's Gotta Give: The Postwar Musical 147

7 Bustin' Out All Over: The Rise of the Musical Blockbuster 175

8 In a Minor Key: The B Musical and Beyond 197

9 The Sound of Money: Musicals in the 1960s 225

10 Whistling in the Dark: A Genre in Crisis 251

11 Can't Stop the Music: Musicals and the New Hollywood 279

12 Just Like Scheherezade: Reviving the Musical Film Genre 307

Index 335

Introduction


“Today, there is no single definition even of what constitutes a musical, period.”

—Ethan Mordden1

What is a musical? When I teach a course on the musical film genre, the first thing I do the first day is ask students this question. I do not bring lecture notes to this first class session, because the entire class time is spent trying to agree on a definition—and the question is left open and looms over the rest of the semester. Over the course of writing this book, I have often asked friends and acquaintances over cocktails or dinner what they think a film musical is. Although there are common concepts that carry across people’s reactions, I am constantly intrigued by the range of opinions. I do not judge who is right and who is wrong, but I often like to play devil’s advocate—either coming up with an example of a movie that I know they will not think fits the definition they just voiced but that they will agree is a musical; or, conversely, coming up with an example of a film that does fit their parameters, but I am pretty certain they will not think is a musical. The conversations often get pretty heated, but in a fun and friendly way, leaving people mulling over the boundaries of the category “musical” more than they thought was possible.

Such a question has nipped at the heels of those writing about the musical film for ages, leading to the quote by musical theatre historian Ethan Mordden that opens this introduction. Barry Keith Grant, in The Hollywood Film Musical, admits in his Introduction that “the definition of the film musical is a matter of some debate.”2 Clive Hirschorn’s The Hollywood Musical attempts to be encyclopedic in its overview, aiming “to be as complete a record of the genre as possible, but it clearly was essential, very early on, to establish workable guidelines as to what constitutes a ‘musical’ … I remain painfully aware that there will always be room for disagreement.”3 Ethan Mordden’s own history of The Hollywood Musical includes an entire chapter called “What’s a Musical?,” and Richard Barrios’s A Song in the Dark: The Birth of the Musical Film also contains a chapter entitled “Is It a Musical?”4 A number of articles foreground this conundrum, such as Richard Dyer’s “Is Car Wash a Musical?,” Andrew Caine’s “Can Rock Movies Be Musicals? The Case of This Is Spinal Tap,” and Jane Feuer eventually asking “Is Dirty Dancing a Musical, and Why Should It Matter?”5 The title of this volume is taken from a 1930 MGM movie that also begs this question (Figure 1). The film contains three songs and one reprise—and the first song is not introduced until a half hour into the picture. Many would consider the picture to be a comedy, particularly due to its star, Buster Keaton.

Figure 1 Is this a musical? Trixie Friganza looks on as Buster Keaton gets crowned in the comic operetta being filmed by the characters in Free and Easy (1930).

Snapshot taken from: Free and Easy (1930).

A central tenet of this book is to explore those limits, and I am purposefully, almost tauntingly, inclusive. It is quite possible that some readers will start to get downright argumentative at certain points, such as one student who said, “If you are going to try to tell me that 8 Mile (2002) is a musical, we are going to have to take this out into the hall.” If the following chapters elicit that reaction, then I have accomplished my mission. Why? I feel that the musical genre has been hampered for generations with a limited and limiting definition, one that has led to what I feel is an erroneous conclusion: that the film musical genre is dying or dead already. Jane Feuer recognizes the prevalence of “speaking of ‘the musical’ as if it were a static structure, a hygienically sealed system free from the lint of changing audience tastes and of those historical transformations other forms seem to endure.”6

On an elemental level, musical films center around and focus predominantly on the performance of music and/or dance.7 To leave it at this seems far too broad to many, and my expansive list of possible candidates for the genre emerges from the reliance on this clear‐cut condition. Rick Altman, in his landmark work The American Film Musical, certainly felt so, writing that “critical work on the film musical continues to depend on a definition provided largely by the film industry itself … a film with music, that is, with music that emanates from what I will call the diegesis, the fictional world created by the film.”8 He then argues that this is an unwieldy definition, “that every conceivable film with diegetic music [must then be] accepted and treated as a musical, from Gilda to Singin’ in the Rain, from Hallelujah to The Lady and the Tramp [sic], from Paramount on Parade to Woodstock, from the films of Shirley Temple to those of Elvis Presley.”9 The seeming intention of this list is to incite incredulity in the reader that all of these movies could be considered musicals, and Altman moves on to establish criteria to limit the corpus of films. Yet, if Altman rejects the self‐proclaimed authority of the film industry over matters of genre, then the self‐proclaimed authority of the critic must come under scrutiny as well. If someone regards any or all of the above movies as musicals, who is Altman (or myself) to tell that person she or he is wrong?

I do agree that it is possible to parse this basic statement a bit further. In centering or focusing on the performance of music, there is the expectation that the viewer will be entertained or take pleasure from that performance. Many have suggested that such pleasure comes from the sense of music and dance as a form of heightened expression—that song lifts beyond ordinary speech, that dance expands movement of the body past the everyday motions. A common canard in discussing musical theatre is that “when the emotion becomes too strong for speech, you sing; when it becomes too strong for song, you dance.”10 In a certain way, song and dance present a sense of liberation from the normal constraints of existence. We enjoy watching performers accomplish those feats of liberation (remarkable singers, gifted dancers), vicariously experiencing that liberation ourselves.

Yet, while song and dance entice as moments of emotional and/or physical release, music and choreography are highly structured art forms. Music is written to a certain rhythm and organized according to a set of particular patterns. For example, the common rhythm of an American popular song in the first half of the twentieth century was a cycle of four beats, or four beats per measure, and songs were typically set at thirty‐two measures: eight measures for the first verse, eight measures for the second verse (which was very like but just slightly different than the first verse in melody), eight measures for the bridge (a new melody), and eight measures for the concluding verse (a return to original melody, but often with a unique flourish to indicate the end of the tune). Similarly, lyrics had to match the structure of the melody, usually setting up a pattern of rhyming in the first eight bars that would carry through the rest of the piece (abab followed by cdcd, for example, or aaab followed by cccb). Dancers also needed to learn how to perform certain steps, to put them into particular combinations—and to have the dance match the music being played. Such established formats give artists a foundation to build upon, and give audiences a sense of comfort in recognizing (however unconsciously) how the structure works rather than feeling confused and alienated by something strange and unknown.

Thus, the entertainment or pleasure of experiencing music and dance performance is a delicate, ongoing balance between the comfort of structure and the joy of liberation. A number of songs, dance routines, and plotlines of musical theatre and cinema hew so closely to the established patterns that they become tedious. On occasion, some do the polar opposite, trying so hard to do something new and different that it creates a sense of bewilderment in audiences. (At times, audiences find what was new and strange has become less threatening because time has helped them grow accustomed to these new structural ideas.) The largest percentage of songs, dance routines, musical theatre productions, and musical films work within the accepted parameters, but with specific planned moments that push or go beyond the usual boundaries: a singer hits an unexpected high note, a lyric piles on multiple internal rhymes at a key point in the song, the dancer accomplishes a breathtakingly new move. They bend and expand the possibilities of the format, but without breaking it—or, to put it another way, using music terminology: theme and variations. Amy Herzog, in Dreams of Difference, Songs of the Same: The Musical Moment in Film, focuses on “this contradiction, between the sameness of the identical repetition and a movement toward transformation, difference, and excess.”11 Intriguingly (for my purposes), she asserts at the outset that she is “not interested in establishing film distinctions between musical and nonmusical films” and that “the majority of the films [she]...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 25.5.2017
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Film / TV
Kunst / Musik / Theater Musik Klassik / Oper / Musical
Sozialwissenschaften Kommunikation / Medien Medienwissenschaft
Schlagworte Alice Faye • American film • American musical traditions • Amerikanische Filmkunst • beach party musicals • Betty Gable • Betty Hutton • Bing Crosby • Carmen Miranda • Chicago • Cultural Studies • deanna durbin • Eleanor Powell • Filmmusical • Frankie Avalon • Frank Sinatra</p> • Fred Astaire • Gene Kelly • Ginger Rogers • Grace Moore • hairspray • Hollywood • Jeanette MacDonald • Judy Garland • Kulturwissenschaften • <p>American musicals • Mama Mia! • MGM • Moulin Rouge! • Musical • musical productions • musical publishing • Musicals • musical traditions • My Fair Lady • Nelson Eddy • Oklahoma! • Rita Hayworth • Shirley Temple • Sonia Henie • The LIttle Mermaid • the musical blockbuster • the Postwar Musical
ISBN-13 9781118322901 / 9781118322901
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt?
EPUBEPUB (Adobe DRM)

Kopierschutz: Adobe-DRM
Adobe-DRM ist ein Kopierschutz, der das eBook vor Mißbrauch schützen soll. Dabei wird das eBook bereits beim Download auf Ihre persönliche Adobe-ID autorisiert. Lesen können Sie das eBook dann nur auf den Geräten, welche ebenfalls auf Ihre Adobe-ID registriert sind.
Details zum Adobe-DRM

Dateiformat: EPUB (Electronic Publication)
EPUB ist ein offener Standard für eBooks und eignet sich besonders zur Darstellung von Belle­tristik und Sach­büchern. Der Fließ­text wird dynamisch an die Display- und Schrift­größe ange­passt. Auch für mobile Lese­geräte ist EPUB daher gut geeignet.

Systemvoraussetzungen:
PC/Mac: Mit einem PC oder Mac können Sie dieses eBook lesen. Sie benötigen eine Adobe-ID und die Software Adobe Digital Editions (kostenlos). Von der Benutzung der OverDrive Media Console raten wir Ihnen ab. Erfahrungsgemäß treten hier gehäuft Probleme mit dem Adobe DRM auf.
eReader: Dieses eBook kann mit (fast) allen eBook-Readern gelesen werden. Mit dem amazon-Kindle ist es aber nicht kompatibel.
Smartphone/Tablet: Egal ob Apple oder Android, dieses eBook können Sie lesen. Sie benötigen eine Adobe-ID sowie eine kostenlose App.
Geräteliste und zusätzliche Hinweise

Buying eBooks from abroad
For tax law reasons we can sell eBooks just within Germany and Switzerland. Regrettably we cannot fulfill eBook-orders from other countries.

Mehr entdecken
aus dem Bereich
Klassische Musik für jeden Tag

von Clemency Burton-Hill

eBook Download (2019)
Diogenes Verlag AG
CHF 12,65
Eine etwas andere Opernverführerin

von Barbara Vinken

eBook Download (2023)
Klett-Cotta (Verlag)
CHF 23,40