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Shall We Dance (1937 film)

Shall We Dance is a 1937 American musical comedy film directed by Mark Sandrich. It is the seventh of the ten Fred Astaire-Ginger Rogers films. The story follows an American ballet dancer (Astaire) who falls in love with a tap dancer (Rogers); the tabloid press concocts a story of their marriage, after which life imitates art. George Gershwin wrote the symphonic underscore and Ira Gershwin the lyrics, for their second Hollywood musical.

Shall We Dance
theatrical release poster
Directed byMark Sandrich
Screenplay by
Story byLee Loeb
Harold Buchman[1]
Produced byPandro S. Berman
Starring
CinematographyDavid Abel
Joseph F. Biroc
Edited byWilliam Hamilton
Music by
Production
company
Distributed byRKO Radio Pictures
Release date
  • May 7, 1937 (1937-05-07) (U.S.)
Running time
109 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$991,000[2]
Box office$2,168,000[2]

Plot edit

Peter P. Peters (Fred Astaire) is an amiable American ballet dancer billed as "Petrov", who cultivates a public image of being a serious, demanding and temperamental Russian, though his employer knows the truth. Peters dances for a ballet company in Paris owned by the bumbling Jeffrey Baird (Edward Everett Horton), and secretly never wants to blend classical ballet with modern jazz dancing because they think it does not look very professional.

When Peters sees a photo of famous tap dancer Linda Keene (Ginger Rogers), he falls in love with her. He contrives to meet her (as "Petrov"), but she is less than impressed. They meet again on an ocean liner traveling back to New York, and Linda warms to Petrov. Their interactions spark a tabloid campaign that they are (or are perhaps not) married. Unknown to them, their associates create a publicity stunt "proving" their proper marriage. Outraged, Linda becomes engaged to the bumbling Jim Montgomery (William Brisbane), much to the chagrin of both Peters and Arthur Miller (Jerome Cowan), her manager, who secretly launches more fake publicity.

Peters (who by now has revealed his true identity) and Keene, unable to squelch the rumor, decide to actually marry and then immediately get divorced. Linda begins to fall in love with her husband, but then discovers him with another woman, Lady Denise Tarrington (Ketti Gallian), and leaves before he can explain. Later, when she comes to his new show to personally serve him divorce papers, she sees him dancing with dozens of women, all wearing masks with her face on them: Peters has decided that if he cannot dance with Linda, he will dance with images of Linda. Seeing that he truly loves her, she happily joins him onstage.

Cast edit

Music edit

George Gershwin – who had become famous for blending jazz with classical forms – wrote each scene in a different style of dance music, and he composed one scene specifically for the ballerina Harriet Hoctor. Ira Gershwin seemed decidedly less excited by the idea; none of his lyrics make reference to the notion of blending different styles of dance (such as ballet and jazz), and Astaire was also not enthusiastic about the concept.

The score of Shall We Dance is probably the largest source of Gershwin orchestral works unavailable to the general public, at least since the advent of modern stereo recording techniques in the 1950s. The movie contains the only recordings of some of the instrumental pieces currently available to Gershwin aficionados (although not all the incidental music composed for the movie was used in the final cut). Some of the cuts arranged and orchestrated by Gershwin include: "Dance of the Waves", "Waltz of the Red Balloons", "Graceful and Elegant", "Hoctor's Ballet" and "French Ballet Class". The instrumental track "Walking the Dog", however, has been frequently recorded and has been played from time to time on classical music radio stations.

Nathaniel Shilkret, musical director for the movie, hired Jimmy Dorsey and all or part of the Dorsey band as the nucleus of a fifty-piece studio orchestra including strings. Dorsey was in Hollywood at the time working the "Kraft Music Hall" radio show on NBC hosted by Bing Crosby. Dorsey is heard soloing on "Slap That Bass", "Walking the Dog" and "They All Laughed".

Gershwin was already suffering during the production of the motion picture from the brain tumor that was shortly to kill him, and Shilkret (as well as Robert Russell Bennett) contributed by assisting with orchestration on some of the numbers.

Musical numbers edit

Hermes Pan collaborated with Astaire on the choreography throughout and Harry Losee was brought in to help with the ballet finale. Gershwin modeled the score on the great ballets of the 19th century, but with obvious swing and jazz influences, as well as polytonalism. While Astaire made further attempts—notably in Ziegfeld Follies (1944/46), Yolanda and the Thief (1945) and Daddy Long Legs (1955)—it was his rival and friend Gene Kelly who would eventually succeed in creating a modern original dance style based on this concept. Some critics have attributed Astaire's discomfort with ballet (he briefly studied ballet in the 1920s) to his oft-expressed disdain for "inventing up to the arty".

  • "Overture to Shall We Dance":was written by George Gershwin in 1937 as the introduction to his score for Shall We Dance. Performance time runs about four minutes. "The opening [number] is in Gershwin's best big-city style; propulsive, nervous, bustling with modern harmonies; it might have easily been developed into a full-scale composition except that time was growing short."[3]
  • "French Ballet Class" written in the style of the galop.
  • "Rehearsal Fragments": In a brief segment which seeks to motivate the film's core dance concept, Astaire illustrates the idea of combining "the technique of ballet with the warmth and passion of this other mood" by performing two ballet leaps, the second of which is followed by a tap barrage.
  • "Rumba Sequence": Astaire watches a flip book showing a brief orchestral rumba danced by Ginger Rogers and Pete Theodore, choreographed by Hermes Pan; it is Rogers' only partnered dance without Astaire in the ten-film series of Astaire-Rogers musicals. The increasing complexity and chromaticism in Gershwin's music can be detected between music for this sequence and Gershwin's earlier effort at a rumba, the Cuban Overture, written five years earlier. Scored for chamber orchestra.
  • "(I've Got) Beginner's Luck": A brief comic tap solo with cane where Astaire's rehearsing to a record of the number is cut short when the record gets stuck.
  • "Waltz of the Red Balloons" written in the style of a valse joyeaux.
  • "Slap That Bass": In a mixed race number unusual for its time, Astaire encounters a group of African-American musicians holding a jam session in a spotless, Art Deco-inspired ship's engine room. Dudley Dickerson introduces the first verse of the song whose chorus is then taken up by Astaire. The virtuoso tap solo which follows is the first substantial musical number in the picture, and can be seen as a successor to the "I'd Rather Lead A Band" solo from Follow the Fleet (1936)—which also took place aboard ship—this time introducing a vertical element to the predominantly linear choreography, some pointedly dismissive references to ballet positions, and a middle section similarly without musical accompaniment but now imaginatively supported by rhythmic engine noises. George Gershwin's color home-movie footage of Astaire rehearsing this number was discovered only in the 1990s.[4]
  • "Dance of the Waves": written in the style of a barcarolle.
  • "Walking the Dog": This was only published in 1960 as "Promenade" to accompany two pantomimic routines for Astaire and Rogers. This is the only part of the score besides Hoctor's Ballet to be published for performance in the concert hall, thus far. Scored for chamber orchestra. (Not all of the Walking the Dog sequence heard in the movie is in the published score, the ending of the scene features the themes following each other in a round (music).)
  • "Beginner's Luck" (song): Astaire delivers this song to a non-committal Rogers, whose skepticism is echoed by a pack of howling dogs intervening at the close.
  • "Graceful and Elegant": another waltz written by Gershwin, this one written in the style of the pas de deux (the first of two pas de deux in the score)
  • "They All Laughed (at Christopher Columbus)": Ginger Rogers sings the introduction of Gershwin's now-classic song and is then joined by Astaire in a comic dance duet which begins with a ballet parody: Astaire in a mock-Russian accent invites Rogers to "tweeest" but after she pointedly fails to respond the pair revert to a tap routine which ends with Astaire lifting Rogers onto a piano.
  • "Let's Call the Whole Thing Off": The genesis of the joke in Ira Gershwin's famous lyrics is uncertain: Ira has claimed the idea occurred to him in 1926 and remained unused. Astaire and Rogers sing alternate verses of this quickstep before embarking on a partnered comic tap dance on roller skates in a Central Park skating rink. Astaire uses the circular form of the rink to introduce a variation of the "oompah-trot" he and his sister Adele had made famous in vaudeville. In a further dig at ballet, the pair strike an arabesque pose just prior to toppling onto the grass.
  • "They Can't Take That Away from Me": The Gershwins' famous foxtrot, a serene, nostalgic declaration of love;one of their most enduring creations and one of George's personal favorites—is introduced by Astaire. As with "The Way You Look Tonight" in Swing Time (1936), it was decided to reprise the melody as part of the film's dance finale. George Gershwin was unhappy about this, writing "They literally throw one or two songs away without any kind of plug". Astaire and Rogers said individually during their lives the song was one of their favourite personal songs, and they rescued it for The Barkleys of Broadway in (1949), his final reunion with Rogers, creating one of their most admired essays in romantic partnered dance, and it was the only occasion on film when Astaire permitted himself to repeat a song he had performed in a previous film. George Gershwin died two months after the film's release, and he was posthumously nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song for this song at the 1937 Academy Awards.
  • "Hoctor's Ballet": The film's big production number begins with a ballet featuring a female chorus and ballet soloist Harriet Hoctor whose specialty was performing an elliptical backbend en pointe, a routine she had perfected during her vaudeville days and as a headline act with the Ziegfeld Follies. Astaire approaches and the pair perform a duet to a reprise of the music to "They Can't Take That Away From Me". This number runs directly into:
  • "Shall We Dance/ Finale and Coda": After a brief routine for Astaire and a female chorus, each wearing Ginger masks, he departs and Hoctor returns to deliver two variations on her backbend routine. Astaire now returns in top hat, white tie and tails and delivers a rendition of the title song; urging his audience to "drop that long face/come on have your fling/why keep nursing the blues" and follows this with a zestful half-minute tap solo. Other musical nods are interwoven referencing the previous ballet sequences. Finally, Ginger arrives on stage, masked to blend in with the chorus whereupon Astaire unmasks her and they dance a brief final duet. This routine was referenced in the 1999 romantic comedy Simply Irresistible.

Production edit

The idea for the film originated in the studio's desire to exploit the successful formula created by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart with their 1936 Broadway hit On Your Toes.[5] In a major coup for RKO, Pandro Berman managed to attract the Gershwins – George Gershwin, who wrote the symphonic underscore, and Ira Gershwin, the lyrics – to score this, their second Hollywood musical after Delicious in 1931.

The film – Astaire and Rogers's most expensive to date – benefits from quality comedy specialists, opulent art direction by Carroll Clark under Van Nest Polglase's supervision, and a timeless score which introduces three classic Gershwin songs.[6]

Astaire was no stranger to the Gershwins, having headlined, with his sister Adele, two Gershwin Broadway shows: Lady Be Good! in 1924 and Funny Face in 1927. George Gershwin also accompanied the pair on piano in a set of recordings in 1926. Rogers first came to Hollywood's attention when she appeared in the Gershwins' 1930 stage musical Girl Crazy.[7]

Shall We Dance was named at the suggestion of Vincente Minnelli, who was a friend of the Gershwins. Minnelli originally suggested "Shall We Dance?" with a question mark, which disappeared at some point.[citation needed]

The car used on the ferry was 1936 Packard Twelve Coupe Roadster.[8]

Reception edit

Shall We Dance earned $1,275,000 in the US and Canada and $893,000 elsewhere, resulting in a profit of $413,000, less than half the previous Astaire-Rogers film.[2] It also was not a critical success and was taken as an indication that the Astaire-Rogers pairing was slipping in its audience appeal.[9]

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

Preservation status edit

On September 22, 2013 it was announced that a musicological critical edition of the full orchestral score of Shall We Dance will eventually be released. The Gershwin family, working in conjunction with the Library of Congress and the University of Michigan, are working to make scores available to the public that represent Gershwin's true intent.[11] The entire Gershwin project may take 30 to 40 years to complete, and it is unclear when Shall We Dance will be released.[12] Other than the sequences Hoctor's Ballet and Walking The Dog, it will be the first time the score has been published.[13]

In popular culture edit

  • In the 2019 psychological thriller Joker, Arthur Fleck dances to the "Slap That Bass" segment playing on his TV in one scene.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "AFI|Catalog".
  2. ^ a b c Jewel, Richard. "RKO Film Grosses: 1931-1951". Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, Vol 14 No 1, 1994, p. 56.
  3. ^ Jablonski 1998, p. 304.
  4. ^ "Gershwin films Astaire in Slap That Bass". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-19. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  5. ^ "AFI|Catalog".
  6. ^ "Axelrod Performing Arts Center Presents Let's Face the Music…The Timeless Songs of Fred Astaire".
  7. ^ "Girl Crazy" at the Internet Broadway Database
  8. ^ "Packard Twelve in "Shall We Dance"".
  9. ^ McGee, Scott. "Articles: 'Shall We Dance' (1937)." TCM.com. Retrieved: November 19, 2022.
  10. ^ "AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs" (PDF). American Film Institute. Retrieved 2016-08-13.
  11. ^ Green, Zachary. "New, critical edition of George and Ira Gershwin’s works to be compiled." PBS NewsHour website, September 14, 2013. Retrieved: March 31, 2016.
  12. ^ Clague, Mark. "George and Ira Gershwin Critical Edition" Musicology Now, September 21, 2013. Retrieved: November 19, 2022.
  13. ^ "The Gershwin Initiative: The Editions." University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance. Retrieved: March 31, 2016.

Bibliography edit

  • Astaire, Fred. Steps in Time: An Autobiography. New York: Dey Street Books, 2008, First edition 1959. ISBN 978-0-0615-6756-8.
  • Croce, Arlene (1974). The Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers Book. New York: Sunrise Books Publishers, 1972. ISBN 0-88365-099-1.
  • Green, Stanley (1999) Hollywood Musicals Year by Year (2nd ed.), pub. Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 0-634-00765-3 pages 68–69
  • Jablonski, Edward. Gershwin: A New Critical Biography. New York: Da Capo Press, 1998. ISBN 978-0-3068-0847-0.
  • Mueller, John E. (1985). Astaire Dancing: The Musical Films. New York: Alfred a Knopf Inc., 1985. ISBN 978-0-394-51654-7.
  • Stockdale, Robert Lee (1999). Jimmy Dorsey: A Study in Contrasts. Lanhalm, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1999. ISBN 0-8108-3536-3.

External links edit

shall, dance, 1937, film, other, artistic, works, with, this, title, shall, dance, disambiguation, shall, dance, 1937, american, musical, comedy, film, directed, mark, sandrich, seventh, fred, astaire, ginger, rogers, films, story, follows, american, ballet, d. For other artistic works with this title see Shall We Dance disambiguation Shall We Dance is a 1937 American musical comedy film directed by Mark Sandrich It is the seventh of the ten Fred Astaire Ginger Rogers films The story follows an American ballet dancer Astaire who falls in love with a tap dancer Rogers the tabloid press concocts a story of their marriage after which life imitates art George Gershwin wrote the symphonic underscore and Ira Gershwin the lyrics for their second Hollywood musical Shall We Dancetheatrical release posterDirected byMark SandrichScreenplay byAllan ScottErnest PaganoStory byLee LoebHarold Buchman 1 Produced byPandro S BermanStarringFred AstaireGinger RogersCinematographyDavid AbelJoseph F BirocEdited byWilliam HamiltonMusic byGeorge Gershwin music Ira Gershwin lyrics ProductioncompanyRKO Radio PicturesDistributed byRKO Radio PicturesRelease dateMay 7 1937 1937 05 07 U S Running time109 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 991 000 2 Box office 2 168 000 2 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Music 3 1 Musical numbers 4 Production 5 Reception 6 Preservation status 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksPlot editPeter P Peters Fred Astaire is an amiable American ballet dancer billed as Petrov who cultivates a public image of being a serious demanding and temperamental Russian though his employer knows the truth Peters dances for a ballet company in Paris owned by the bumbling Jeffrey Baird Edward Everett Horton and secretly never wants to blend classical ballet with modern jazz dancing because they think it does not look very professional When Peters sees a photo of famous tap dancer Linda Keene Ginger Rogers he falls in love with her He contrives to meet her as Petrov but she is less than impressed They meet again on an ocean liner traveling back to New York and Linda warms to Petrov Their interactions spark a tabloid campaign that they are or are perhaps not married Unknown to them their associates create a publicity stunt proving their proper marriage Outraged Linda becomes engaged to the bumbling Jim Montgomery William Brisbane much to the chagrin of both Peters and Arthur Miller Jerome Cowan her manager who secretly launches more fake publicity Peters who by now has revealed his true identity and Keene unable to squelch the rumor decide to actually marry and then immediately get divorced Linda begins to fall in love with her husband but then discovers him with another woman Lady Denise Tarrington Ketti Gallian and leaves before he can explain Later when she comes to his new show to personally serve him divorce papers she sees him dancing with dozens of women all wearing masks with her face on them Peters has decided that if he cannot dance with Linda he will dance with images of Linda Seeing that he truly loves her she happily joins him onstage Cast editFred Astaire as Peter P Petrov Peters Ginger Rogers as Linda Keene Edward Everett Horton as Jeffrey Baird Eric Blore as Cecil Flintridge Jerome Cowan as Arthur Miller Ketti Gallian as Lady Denise Tarrington William Brisbane as Jim Montgomery Harriet Hoctor as herself Dudley Dickerson as singing crew member in Slap That Bass Charles Coleman as policeman in Central Park uncredited Music editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message George Gershwin who had become famous for blending jazz with classical forms wrote each scene in a different style of dance music and he composed one scene specifically for the ballerina Harriet Hoctor Ira Gershwin seemed decidedly less excited by the idea none of his lyrics make reference to the notion of blending different styles of dance such as ballet and jazz and Astaire was also not enthusiastic about the concept The score of Shall We Dance is probably the largest source of Gershwin orchestral works unavailable to the general public at least since the advent of modern stereo recording techniques in the 1950s The movie contains the only recordings of some of the instrumental pieces currently available to Gershwin aficionados although not all the incidental music composed for the movie was used in the final cut Some of the cuts arranged and orchestrated by Gershwin include Dance of the Waves Waltz of the Red Balloons Graceful and Elegant Hoctor s Ballet and French Ballet Class The instrumental track Walking the Dog however has been frequently recorded and has been played from time to time on classical music radio stations Nathaniel Shilkret musical director for the movie hired Jimmy Dorsey and all or part of the Dorsey band as the nucleus of a fifty piece studio orchestra including strings Dorsey was in Hollywood at the time working the Kraft Music Hall radio show on NBC hosted by Bing Crosby Dorsey is heard soloing on Slap That Bass Walking the Dog and They All Laughed Gershwin was already suffering during the production of the motion picture from the brain tumor that was shortly to kill him and Shilkret as well as Robert Russell Bennett contributed by assisting with orchestration on some of the numbers Musical numbers edit Hermes Pan collaborated with Astaire on the choreography throughout and Harry Losee was brought in to help with the ballet finale Gershwin modeled the score on the great ballets of the 19th century but with obvious swing and jazz influences as well as polytonalism While Astaire made further attempts notably in Ziegfeld Follies 1944 46 Yolanda and the Thief 1945 and Daddy Long Legs 1955 it was his rival and friend Gene Kelly who would eventually succeed in creating a modern original dance style based on this concept Some critics have attributed Astaire s discomfort with ballet he briefly studied ballet in the 1920s to his oft expressed disdain for inventing up to the arty Overture to Shall We Dance was written by George Gershwin in 1937 as the introduction to his score for Shall We Dance Performance time runs about four minutes The opening number is in Gershwin s best big city style propulsive nervous bustling with modern harmonies it might have easily been developed into a full scale composition except that time was growing short 3 French Ballet Class written in the style of the galop Rehearsal Fragments In a brief segment which seeks to motivate the film s core dance concept Astaire illustrates the idea of combining the technique of ballet with the warmth and passion of this other mood by performing two ballet leaps the second of which is followed by a tap barrage Rumba Sequence Astaire watches a flip book showing a brief orchestral rumba danced by Ginger Rogers and Pete Theodore choreographed by Hermes Pan it is Rogers only partnered dance without Astaire in the ten film series of Astaire Rogers musicals The increasing complexity and chromaticism in Gershwin s music can be detected between music for this sequence and Gershwin s earlier effort at a rumba the Cuban Overture written five years earlier Scored for chamber orchestra I ve Got Beginner s Luck A brief comic tap solo with cane where Astaire s rehearsing to a record of the number is cut short when the record gets stuck Waltz of the Red Balloons written in the style of a valse joyeaux Slap That Bass In a mixed race number unusual for its time Astaire encounters a group of African American musicians holding a jam session in a spotless Art Deco inspired ship s engine room Dudley Dickerson introduces the first verse of the song whose chorus is then taken up by Astaire The virtuoso tap solo which follows is the first substantial musical number in the picture and can be seen as a successor to the I d Rather Lead A Band solo from Follow the Fleet 1936 which also took place aboard ship this time introducing a vertical element to the predominantly linear choreography some pointedly dismissive references to ballet positions and a middle section similarly without musical accompaniment but now imaginatively supported by rhythmic engine noises George Gershwin s color home movie footage of Astaire rehearsing this number was discovered only in the 1990s 4 Dance of the Waves written in the style of a barcarolle Walking the Dog This was only published in 1960 as Promenade to accompany two pantomimic routines for Astaire and Rogers This is the only part of the score besides Hoctor s Ballet to be published for performance in the concert hall thus far Scored for chamber orchestra Not all of the Walking the Dog sequence heard in the movie is in the published score the ending of the scene features the themes following each other in a round music Beginner s Luck song Astaire delivers this song to a non committal Rogers whose skepticism is echoed by a pack of howling dogs intervening at the close Graceful and Elegant another waltz written by Gershwin this one written in the style of the pas de deux the first of two pas de deux in the score They All Laughed at Christopher Columbus Ginger Rogers sings the introduction of Gershwin s now classic song and is then joined by Astaire in a comic dance duet which begins with a ballet parody Astaire in a mock Russian accent invites Rogers to tweeest but after she pointedly fails to respond the pair revert to a tap routine which ends with Astaire lifting Rogers onto a piano Let s Call the Whole Thing Off The genesis of the joke in Ira Gershwin s famous lyrics is uncertain Ira has claimed the idea occurred to him in 1926 and remained unused Astaire and Rogers sing alternate verses of this quickstep before embarking on a partnered comic tap dance on roller skates in a Central Park skating rink Astaire uses the circular form of the rink to introduce a variation of the oompah trot he and his sister Adele had made famous in vaudeville In a further dig at ballet the pair strike an arabesque pose just prior to toppling onto the grass They Can t Take That Away from Me The Gershwins famous foxtrot a serene nostalgic declaration of love one of their most enduring creations and one of George s personal favorites is introduced by Astaire As with The Way You Look Tonight in Swing Time 1936 it was decided to reprise the melody as part of the film s dance finale George Gershwin was unhappy about this writing They literally throw one or two songs away without any kind of plug Astaire and Rogers said individually during their lives the song was one of their favourite personal songs and they rescued it for The Barkleys of Broadway in 1949 his final reunion with Rogers creating one of their most admired essays in romantic partnered dance and it was the only occasion on film when Astaire permitted himself to repeat a song he had performed in a previous film George Gershwin died two months after the film s release and he was posthumously nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song for this song at the 1937 Academy Awards Hoctor s Ballet The film s big production number begins with a ballet featuring a female chorus and ballet soloist Harriet Hoctor whose specialty was performing an elliptical backbend en pointe a routine she had perfected during her vaudeville days and as a headline act with the Ziegfeld Follies Astaire approaches and the pair perform a duet to a reprise of the music to They Can t Take That Away From Me This number runs directly into Shall We Dance Finale and Coda After a brief routine for Astaire and a female chorus each wearing Ginger masks he departs and Hoctor returns to deliver two variations on her backbend routine Astaire now returns in top hat white tie and tails and delivers a rendition of the title song urging his audience to drop that long face come on have your fling why keep nursing the blues and follows this with a zestful half minute tap solo Other musical nods are interwoven referencing the previous ballet sequences Finally Ginger arrives on stage masked to blend in with the chorus whereupon Astaire unmasks her and they dance a brief final duet This routine was referenced in the 1999 romantic comedy Simply Irresistible Production editThe idea for the film originated in the studio s desire to exploit the successful formula created by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart with their 1936 Broadway hit On Your Toes 5 In a major coup for RKO Pandro Berman managed to attract the Gershwins George Gershwin who wrote the symphonic underscore and Ira Gershwin the lyrics to score this their second Hollywood musical after Delicious in 1931 The film Astaire and Rogers s most expensive to date benefits from quality comedy specialists opulent art direction by Carroll Clark under Van Nest Polglase s supervision and a timeless score which introduces three classic Gershwin songs 6 Astaire was no stranger to the Gershwins having headlined with his sister Adele two Gershwin Broadway shows Lady Be Good in 1924 and Funny Face in 1927 George Gershwin also accompanied the pair on piano in a set of recordings in 1926 Rogers first came to Hollywood s attention when she appeared in the Gershwins 1930 stage musical Girl Crazy 7 Shall We Dance was named at the suggestion of Vincente Minnelli who was a friend of the Gershwins Minnelli originally suggested Shall We Dance with a question mark which disappeared at some point citation needed The car used on the ferry was 1936 Packard Twelve Coupe Roadster 8 Reception editShall We Dance earned 1 275 000 in the US and Canada and 893 000 elsewhere resulting in a profit of 413 000 less than half the previous Astaire Rogers film 2 It also was not a critical success and was taken as an indication that the Astaire Rogers pairing was slipping in its audience appeal 9 The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists 2004 AFI s 100 Years 100 Songs Let s Call the Whole Thing Off 34 10 Preservation status editOn September 22 2013 it was announced that a musicological critical edition of the full orchestral score of Shall We Dance will eventually be released The Gershwin family working in conjunction with the Library of Congress and the University of Michigan are working to make scores available to the public that represent Gershwin s true intent 11 The entire Gershwin project may take 30 to 40 years to complete and it is unclear when Shall We Dance will be released 12 Other than the sequences Hoctor s Ballet and Walking The Dog it will be the first time the score has been published 13 In popular culture editIn the 2019 psychological thriller Joker Arthur Fleck dances to the Slap That Bass segment playing on his TV in one scene See also editFred Astaire s solo and partnered dancesReferences edit AFI Catalog a b c Jewel Richard RKO Film Grosses 1931 1951 Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television Vol 14 No 1 1994 p 56 Jablonski 1998 p 304 Gershwin films Astaire in Slap That Bass YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 19 Retrieved 17 May 2020 AFI Catalog Axelrod Performing Arts Center Presents Let s Face the Music The Timeless Songs of Fred Astaire Girl Crazy at the Internet Broadway Database Packard Twelve in Shall We Dance McGee Scott Articles Shall We Dance 1937 TCM com Retrieved November 19 2022 AFI s 100 Years 100 Songs PDF American Film Institute Retrieved 2016 08 13 Green Zachary New critical edition of George and Ira Gershwin s works to be compiled PBS NewsHour website September 14 2013 Retrieved March 31 2016 Clague Mark George and Ira Gershwin Critical Edition Musicology Now September 21 2013 Retrieved November 19 2022 The Gershwin Initiative The Editions University of Michigan School of Music Theatre amp Dance Retrieved March 31 2016 Bibliography edit Astaire Fred Steps in Time An Autobiography New York Dey Street Books 2008 First edition 1959 ISBN 978 0 0615 6756 8 Croce Arlene 1974 The Fred Astaire amp Ginger Rogers Book New York Sunrise Books Publishers 1972 ISBN 0 88365 099 1 Green Stanley 1999 Hollywood Musicals Year by Year 2nd ed pub Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 0 634 00765 3 pages 68 69 Jablonski Edward Gershwin A New Critical Biography New York Da Capo Press 1998 ISBN 978 0 3068 0847 0 Mueller John E 1985 Astaire Dancing The Musical Films New York Alfred a Knopf Inc 1985 ISBN 978 0 394 51654 7 Stockdale Robert Lee 1999 Jimmy Dorsey A Study in Contrasts Lanhalm Maryland Scarecrow Press 1999 ISBN 0 8108 3536 3 External links editShall We Dance at the American Film Institute Catalog Shall We Dance at IMDb Shall We Dance at the TCM Movie Database Shall We Dance at AllMovie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shall We Dance 1937 film amp oldid 1171135539, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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