I love this song from White Christmas with Rosemary Clooney (George Clooney’s aunt), Bing Crosby, and Danny Kaye. Vera-Ellen was dubbed by Trudy Stevens.
“My Week With Marilyn” is a new film based on the memoirs by Colin Clark about his time as a third assistant director (basically a gofer) on the set of a movie she made in England with Sir Laurence Olivier. You can have your own week with Marilyn Monroe, the most popular sex symbol in movie history, by watching some of her films. I recommend:
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes Monroe plays a gold-digging showgirl in this colorful and energetic musical. Her signature song “Diamonds are a Girl’s Best Friend” inspired Madonna’s “Material Girl” video.
Some Like It Hot The American Film Institute’s pick for the funniest American movie of all time is Billy Wilder’s gender-bending masterpiece about two male musicians (Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon) who disguise themselves as women and join an all-female band so they can hide from mobsters. Monroe plays the band’s lead singer who has a weakness for saxophone players. It gets better and funnier every time you see it.
Let’s Make Love Yves Montand plays one of the wealthiest and most successful men in the world. When he hears that a small off-Broadway musical satiric revue makes fun of him, he goes to the theater to complain. But the director thinks he has shown up to audition and when he sees Monroe (in sheer practice tights and leotard) is in the cast, he pretends to be an actor. She sings a sizzling version of “My Heart Belongs to Daddy.”
Bus Stop Many people think Monroe’s best performance as an actress is in this poignant story of a cowboy in love with a bar girl. She sings a heartbreakingly (intentionally) trashy “That Old Black Magic.”
The Seven Year Itch Monroe’s most iconic pose comes from this film about an innocent flirtation between a man who stays in New York while his family is on vacation and his free-spirited upstairs neighbor.
The Prince and the Showgirl When Monroe wanted to be taken more seriously as an actress she formed a production company to finance this film, co-starring and directed by Sir Laurence Olivier. It is more interesting to watch to compare their incompatible acting styles than it is to try to care about the slight story, but definitely worth seeing if you plan to watch “My Week With Marilyn.”
How to Marry a Millionaire Monroe co-stars with Lauren Bacall and Betty Grable in this romantic comedy about three blonde models with a plan to find wealthy husbands.
I hope that Michelle Williams’ exquisite performance in the new film, “My Week With Marilyn” inspires its viewers to go back and watch the inimitable original: Marilyn Monroe. Williams does a snippet of this song in the film though does not try to replicate the staging of the original. It’s one of my favorite of Monroe’s musical numbers, steamy but witty and shows what a gifted dancer and singer she was. One amusing note: in the original film, There’s No Business Like Show Business, one of Irving Berlin’s lyrics was censored for being too racy. Instead of saying, “She started a heat wave by letting her seat wave,” they changed it to “letting her feet wave”(!). In the Michelle Williams version, the original lyric is used. In both, her seat waves.
That’s Donald O’Connor, Ethel Merman, Mitzi Gaynor, and Dan Dailey watching from the wings. The movie is just an excuse for a lot of Irving Berlin songs, but that’s enough to make it worth watching.
Must-See Movie Moment: Stella Stevens Plays the Drums
Posted on November 12, 2011 at 8:00 am
Another of the moments in my book, 101 Must-See Movie Moments, is this performance by Stella Stevens from “The Courtship of Eddie’s Father.” She’s shy girl who was too nervous to perform in her beauty queen competition. When her date, played by Jerry Van Dyke, persuades a jazz group to let her sit in, everyone is surprised.
And similarly, Kay Kendall in the delightful “Genevieve.” (That’s Kenny Baker’s trumpeting, by the way.)
Happy birthday today to my wonderful mother, who taught me about so many of the essentials of life, including thank you notes, how to tell a joke, and why you should respond to bad behavior by taking the high road (it’s the right thing to do and it will drive bad guys crazy) and for helping to inspire my love of movies. She even appeared in a movie — she was Henry Fonda’s secretary in Advise and Consent. It’s a little blurry, but you can see her here, sitting behind his left shoulder.
In honor of Mom’s birthday, here’s one of her very favorite movie moments, with Ava Gardner (singing by Annette Warren) in “Show Boat.”