Lively, entertaining reviews of, and essays on, old and newer films and everything relating to them, written by professional author William Schoell.

Thursday, July 21, 2016

TILL THE CLOUDS ROLL BY

Ol' Blue-eyes sings "Ol' Man River" 
TILL THE CLOUDS ROLL BY (1946). Director: Richard Whorf.

Till the Clouds Roll By purports to be a biopic of composer Jerome Kern (Robert Walker). It opens with a twenty minute recreation of the opening night of Kern's masterpiece, Show Boat, and then goes downhill -- at least in the dramatic sense -- from there. It would have been better for all concerned to forget the fictionalized "plot" and simply present one number after another. Some of the basic facts of Kern's life are accurate: oversleeping kept him off of the ill-fated Lusitania upon which he was to sail with impresario Charles Frohman; and he did meet his wife, Eva (Dorothy Patrick of House by the River), in England, although under somewhat different circumstances. But the movie invents a completely fictional character, James Hessler (Van Heflin), a widower-arranger, who works with Kern and helps him to become a major success. Equally fictional is Hessler's daughter, Sally, who is played by Joan Wells as a child and Lucille Bremer as an adult (both are very good), and a lot of dumb drama is worked up over show biz aspirant Sally losing her big number to star Marilyn Miller (Judy Garland) and running off to unknown parts because of it. None of it has anything to do with Kern. But while this aspect of the film is dull, there are still some memorable moments in the movie, such as: Lena Horne singing "Can't Help Lovin' That Man" from Show Boat and "Why Was I Born?"; Angela Lansbury and chorus cuties on swings for "How'd You Like to Spoon with Me?"; the dancing for the title tune, which features June Allyson and Ray McDonald; Garland as Maxwell interpreting "Look for the Silver Lining;" "I Won't Dance" with Van Johnson and the aforementioned Bremer [Ruthless]; and Tony Martin doing "Make Believe" and "All the Things You Are." You wouldn't think that Frank Sinatra, however wonderful he was, could do much with "Ol' Man River" but he delivers in his own inimitable style. Other performers include Kathryn Grayson as Magnolia in Show Boat; Virginia O'Brien doing her frozen face shtick; and Dinah Shore doing a couple of numbers nicely without quite being on everyone else's level. The absolute low-light of the film is June Allyson croaking out a song about "Cleopatterer." Walker is okay as Kern, but looks nothing like him, while Heflin does more than his best with his character, and Paul Langton [Murder is My Beat] is fine as lyricist Oscar Hammerstein. Ironically, five years later the same studio, MGM, did a full-length version of Show Boat but instead of Lena Horne hired the completely Caucasian Ava Gardner to play the mulatto character of Julie; Kathryn Grayson, of course, remained as Magnolia. All of the musical numbers in this were expertly staged by Robert Alton except for Garland's numbers, which were handled for her by Vincente Minelli.

Verdict: There's still much to admire in this half-baked supposed biography. **1/2.

2 comments:

angelman66 said...

You are right on the money, Bill, the whole raison d'etre for this movie is in the wonderful musical numbers and guest stars. The supposed biography/plot is thin and generic, to say the least. Wow, what Lena Horne could have done with Show Boat if MGM had let her play the role of Julie!

For me, a most amusing moment comes during the sequence with Judy Garland dancing around in feathers, singing "Who stole my heart away?" I read in one of her bios that the whole Freed unit at MGM thought this was a wonderful joke, as Judy was 4 or 5 months pregnant with Liza, and they had to hide her baby bump, while she wandered from man to man in the sequence, inquiring "Who?" Who knocked up Judy? We do know that much, as Liza is the image of both her famous mother and father Vincente.

Need to see this one again, and fast-forward through June Allyson, of course!!
-Chris

William said...

Of course! Seriously, the story about Garland dancing around asking "who?" is hilarious! As for Lena Horne, it was criminal that they didn't have the courage to put her in the lead. (I suppose one could argue that she couldn't necessarily pass for white as the character could but it's also possible that many may not have even realized she was black. But let's face it -- she wasn't cast because she was black). A pity. No offensve to Ava, but Lena would have been great.