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

Thursday, May 17, 2018

DANCING ON THE CEILING: STANLEY DONEN AND HIS MOVIES

DANCING ON THE CEILING: STANLEY DONEN AND HIS MOVIES. Stephen M. Silverman. Knopf; 1996.

From Broadway chorus boy to choreographer to director of several famous movies, Dancing on the Ceiling charts the course of Stanley Donen's Hollywood career with insight and admiration. Whether Silverman succeeds in making his case that Donen was one of the great directors, I'll leave to the individual viewer. Donen's romantic life follows an all-too-familiar course, with several failed marriages, including one to a woman nearly forty years his junior. Silverman briefly goes into these marriages but dispatches with them quickly, as he seems much more interested in Donen's career than his personal life, and as good as the book is, one might come away from the tome without ever really getting that much of a sense of Donen the person. However, the book certainly gives Donen his due as an important figure, detailing his triumphs and not skirting over his failures. Donen began co-directing with Gene Kelly on such films as On the Town, It's Always Fair Weather and Singin' in the Rainthen went strictly solo with such films as Royal Wedding, Funny Face and the excellent Damn Yankees. Later he became known as the "sophisticated" director of such films as Charade and Indiscreet. His misfires included the gay farce Staircase, Saturn 3, which he disavowed, and two movies with Yul Brynner, but he got some positive reaction to Two for the Road with Audrey Hepburn (with whom he worked several times) and Albert Finney. Written with Donen's cooperation, Dancing on the Ceiling is bolstered by many interviews with people who knew and worked with Donen, (although the device of quoting Betty Comden and Adolph Green as they affectionately discuss and disagree on several points eventually becomes tiresome).

Verdict: If this doesn't give you a new appreciation of Donen's work, nothing will. ***.

4 comments:

angelman66 said...

I am a fan of Donen, Bill, so I will check this book out. Charade and Singin in the Rain are among my top favorite films, and I enjoy Damn Yankees and Indiscreet as well!
- C

William said...

I'm going to look at Charade, which I haven't seen in many years, and other Donen flicks in the next couple of weeks. Damn Yankees is great!

Marta Dawes said...

This is a movie you probably needed to see when you were young, on its initial release. I saw it then at age 10 and adored it, and still do. It's super-silly, but that's not a bad thing because it's also a great amount of fun. Widescreen and in well-saturated color, it's a 60's dream movie. Revisiting the fashions of the 60's is a blast as well.

My single favorite moment is the bar scene, where Paul Lynde glances as Napoleon Solo, lounging by the bar, and does a double-take. My second is the referenced scene where Paul finds Dick Martin and Edward Andrews in bed together; Paul's expression has a wealth of meaning, and it's always funny. I'll still watch this film when I need a lift, just because it's so much fun.

William said...

Thank you very much for your interesting comments on "The Glass Bottom Boat," although they somehow wound up in the comment section of a post on a bio of Stanley Donen! I like the scenes with Paul Lynde that you mention as well. Those sixties movies with that decade's fashions and attitudes are indeed time capsules as are films of an earlier decade.