Ginger Rogers - Tumblr Posts

1 year ago
Title Cards Drawn By Cartoonist Milt Gross For The 1942 Film Roxie Hart. Love These So Much They Have
Title Cards Drawn By Cartoonist Milt Gross For The 1942 Film Roxie Hart. Love These So Much They Have
Title Cards Drawn By Cartoonist Milt Gross For The 1942 Film Roxie Hart. Love These So Much They Have
Title Cards Drawn By Cartoonist Milt Gross For The 1942 Film Roxie Hart. Love These So Much They Have
Title Cards Drawn By Cartoonist Milt Gross For The 1942 Film Roxie Hart. Love These So Much They Have

Title Cards Drawn by Cartoonist Milt Gross for the 1942 Film Roxie Hart. Love these so much they have his natural trademark screwball energy.


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6 years ago

The dynamic duo in their first film together. I love the way the dance grows out of the dialog, which continues in dance form throughout the pas de deux. Ginger wasn’t as accomplished a dancer as she’d later become, but she’s still damn good.

Fred & Ginger: “Roberta” 1935


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1 year ago
FRED ASTAIRE And GINGER ROGERS In CAREFREE (1938) Dir. Mark Sandrich
FRED ASTAIRE And GINGER ROGERS In CAREFREE (1938) Dir. Mark Sandrich
FRED ASTAIRE And GINGER ROGERS In CAREFREE (1938) Dir. Mark Sandrich

FRED ASTAIRE and GINGER ROGERS in CAREFREE (1938) dir. Mark Sandrich


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5 years ago
CAREFREE (Dir: Mark Sandrich, 1938).

CAREFREE (Dir: Mark Sandrich, 1938).

A frothy RKO romance; the 8th pairing of the incomparable Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers.

This one has Fred as a psychiatrist and Ginger as his patient and fiancee of his best pal (Ralph Bellamy). Things get complicated when she falls for him and he hypnotizes her to remain faithful to the groom. The movie's outcome is clearly signposted from early on, but there is considerable fun to be had on the journey, nonetheless.

With only four full-blown song and dance numbers Carefree is less a musical than a screwball comedy with the occasional break for a song. The Irving Berlin score is pleasant enough, but by the composer’s own high standards is not especially memorable. 'Change Partners' and 'I Used to Be Color Blind' are the possible exceptions; both are considerably enhanced by Ginger and Fred's fabulous footwork. The highlight is undoubtedly Astaire's solo 'Since They Turned Loch Lomand into Swing' in which he ditches Rogers to partner a golf-club, proving as adept on the fairway as he is the dance-floor.

Allan Scott and Ernest Pagnos screenplay, while implausible, does include a fair amount of humorous moments. While director Mark Sandrich, by now a veteran of the Astaire-Rogers movies, handles the comedy and the dance numbers with equal aplomb. It is all a lot of nonsense, but all is forgiven when Fred and Ginger take the dance floor. There was never a classier screen couple than Mr Astaire and Ms Rogers and support is offered by a particularly distinguished cast, notably Ralph Bellamy and Jack Carson. Unbilled and underused in one of her many domestic help roles is the great Hattie McDaniel.

As its title suggests, Carefree is lighthearted, featherweight stuff. Often regarded as the weakest of the Astaire-Rogers partnership, it does pale in comparison to classics such as Top Hat (Mark Sandrich, 1935) and Shall We Dance (Mark Sandrich, 1937). Still, at a little over 80 minutes, it doesn't outstay its welcome. The old adage "they don't make 'em like that anymore" certainly applies here; fluff it may be, but it is consummately produced fluff, expertly performed by its legendary cast.

100+ movie reviews now available on my blog JINGLE BONES MOVIE TIME! Link below.

Carefree (1938)
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Carefree (Dir: Mark Sandrich, 1938). A frothy RKO romance; the 8 th pairing of the incomparable Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers.

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5 years ago
WERE NOT MARRIED (Dir: Edmund Goulding, 1952).

WE’RE NOT MARRIED (Dir: Edmund Goulding, 1952).

Covering similar ground to the earlier Mr and Mrs Smith (Alfred Hitchcock, 1941), We're Not Married is a portmanteau comedy in which, due to a jurisdictional error, five couples discover they are no longer married.

On Christmas Eve, a newly appointed justice of the peace (Victor Moore) marries the first of five couples, ignorant to the fact that his appointment does not take effect until January. This comes to light a few years later when each pair is informed of the mishap. The movie follows each couple as they respond to the news in different ways.

Although its strands are loosely connected, We're Not Married cannot overcome feeling like a series of sketches, some of which are, inevitably, better than others. For me the weakest of the bunch was the one which is granted the most screentime. Top billed Ginger Rogers and Fred Allen star as the Gladwyns, a pair of radio hosts whose contracts deem they are a married couple. I found the constant bickering between the two rather tiresome, although it does feature some neat satirical swipes at commercial radio.

Far more appealing is the sequence with Marilyn Monroe as a Mississippi beauty queen and her stay at home husband David Wayne. Monroe's appeal, in what was one of her first significant roles, in readily apparent; easily holding her own among a cast of much bigger names. The other highlight is the episode with soldier Eddie Bracken and his pregnant wife Mitzi Gaynor. With Bracken about to be shipped to Hawaii, the sequence is a sweetly old fashioned reminder of the mores of an earlier age.

Less successful are the remaining segments, with Eve Arden as the long suffering wife of philanderer Paul Douglas and, Louis Calhern and Zsa Zsa Gabor as a warring couple on the verge of divorce. Both have their amusing moments but suffer from dated, some would argue sexist, humour.

Not a perfect movie, and some ways off from being a classic, We’re Not Married is still worth a watch thanks to some genuine high spots and its roster of vintage Hollywood stars.

A longer review of WE’RE NOT MARRIED is available on my blog JINGLE BONES MOVIE TIME! Link below.

We’re Not Married (1952)
jinglebonesmovietime.blogspot.com
We’re Not Married (Dir: Edmund Goulding, 1952). Covering similar ground to the earlier  Mr and Mrs Smith (Alfred Hitchcock, 194

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5 years ago
jingle-bones - Jingle Bones Movie Time

TOP HAT (Dir: Mark Sandrich, 1935).

From RKO Radio Pictures, Top Hat was the 4th of 10 pairings of the inimitable Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers.

Where to begin? The screwball plot is some trifle about mistaken identity (isn’t it always?), as Ginger, believing Fred is the philandering husband of a friend, rebukes his advances and marries her dress designer instead (or does she?). Topnotch support comes from familiar faces Edward Everett Horton and Helen Broderick are the real husband and wife, Erik Rhodes the cuckolded couturier and Eric Blore as an asinine but resourceful manservant. As convoluted as it sounds the whole thing works beautifully. But who in the audience is really here for the plot? What we are here for is Astaire and Rogers at their artistic peak dancing up a storm to one of Irving Berlin's greatest musical scores and happily that is what we get.

Read the full review on my blog JINGLE BONES MOVIE TIME. Link below.

Top Hat (1935)
jinglebonesmovietime.blogspot.com
Top Hat (Dir: Mark Sandrich, 1935). From RKO Radio Pictures,  Top Hat was the 4th of 10 pairing of the inimitable Fred Astaire and Ginger

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10 months ago
Quick Sketch Of Fred + Ginger I Did On The Train Ride Home

Quick sketch of Fred + Ginger I did on the train ride home


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