Bolero | |
---|---|
Directed by | Wesley Ruggles |
Written by | Horace Jackson |
Based on | story by Carey Wilson & Kubec Glasmon |
Starring | George Raft Carole Lombard Sally Rand Ray Milland William Frawley |
Cinematography | Leo Tover |
Edited by | Hugh Bennett |
Music by | Ralph Rainger Maurice Ravel |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Bolero is a 1934 American pre-Code musical drama film directed by Wesley Ruggles and starring George Raft and Carole Lombard. The Paramount production was a rare chance for Raft to play a dancer, which had been his profession in New York City, rather than portraying a gangster. The film takes its title from the Maurice Ravel composition Boléro (1928). The supporting cast includes William Frawley, Ray Milland and Sally Rand.
In 1910 New York, Raoul De Baere is a coal miner who wants to be a dancer and tries to persuade his brother Mike to manage him. He dreams of moving to Europe and opening a nightclub in Paris. He does not fare well until he teams with a female partner, Lucy, and they make a success dancing at a beer garden in New Jersey. Lucy is attracted to Raoul but he does not want to mix business with pleasure.
Raoul travels to Paris, where he makes a living dancing with elderly women in nightclubs. He finds a dance partner, Leona, and they dance as a team in nightclubs. Leona wants to start a romance with Raoul, but he refuses. When Leona threatens to quit, Mike begins a romantic relationship with her, although he dislikes her jealousy and wage demands.
Former Ziegfeld chorus girl Helen Hathaway convinces Raoul to team with her. He quits his Paris job to go to England with Helen, dumping Leona. Raoul is attracted to Helen but makes her promise that she will always reject his advances. She agrees and they make a successful dance team. They appear on the bill with fan dancer Annette, who wants to team with Raoul and tells him that Lord Coray is romantically interested in Helen. While holidaying in Belgium, Raoul and Helen start an affair.
Raoul opens a nightclub in Paris and he devises a very athletic routine with Helen to be accompanied by Ravel's Boléro . However, news of the outbreak of World War I distracts the audience during the debut. Raoul stops the performance and delivers a patriotic speech, promising to not dance until the war ends. When Helen learns that Raoul's speech was merely for publicity, she leaves him to work as a nurse and marry Coray.
Raoul and Mike serve in the army during the war and Raoul is wounded. On Armistice Day, a doctor warns him that if he ever exerts himself again, he may die. After the war, Raoul tries to find Helen and restart his dancing career. He cannot find her, but he reconnects with Annette and they again form a team.
Raoul reopens his Paris nightclub featuring the famous Boléro dance performance. On opening night, as he is about to start the show, he finds Annette drunk and unable to perform. However, Helen is in the audience and agrees to take Annette's place, and Raoul hopes that she will rejoin him. They dance to thunderous applause, although the routine causes Raoul serious physical stress. Before they can return to the stage for an encore performance, Raoul collapses and dies.
The film was based on the life of the American dancer Maurice Mouvet, known professionally as Maurice (1889–1927). [1] Maurice was born in New York and moved to Europe at a young age, where he became famous for his dancing. He was romantically involved with several of his dancing partners; other partners left him to get married. Maurice died relatively young of tuberculosis. [2] [3]
George Raft, whose character was based on Maurice, said he knew Maurice and taught him some dance steps. He refused to appear in the film until some changes to the script were made, but Paramount suspended him, only to later relent and implement the changes. [4] Before filming, Raft said: "If they [the public] don't go for me in this one, I might as well quit." [5] Raft reportedly punched the film's producer Benjamin Glazer during filming, although Glazer later claimed that it was just a push. [6] [7] Raft later classified the incident as the most regrettable of his fights as a dancer. [8]
Miriam Hopkins was intended to play the female lead but fell ill while making Design for Living . She was replaced by Carole Lombard, although Lombard had never danced professionally. [9] Paramount was impressed with the performance of Ray Milland, who had been away from Hollywood for a while, and later offered him a long-term contract. [10]
The film's title and music are based on Maurice Ravel's Boléro , but the composition was not written until 1928 and the scenes take place in 1914.
The Hays Office disapproved of real-life burlesque dancer Sally Rand appearing in films, [11] but Paramount paid her $1,200 per week for four weeks. [12] The film was released before rigorous enforcement of the Hollywood Production Code came into effect on July 1, 1934. Several scenes would likely have been banned by the code, such as those in which Helen auditions in her underwear and Sally Rand performs her famous fan dance. A double was used for Lombard in many of the shots in the dance scenes.
LeRoy Prinz was the choreographer and devised a new tango for the film called "Raftero." [13] Ballroom dancers Veloz and Yolanda were hired as uncredited dance doubles and choreographers.
Filming started in December 1933 and finished by January 1934.
In 1959, Raft announced that he wanted to remake the film, but no project materialized. [14]
In a contemporary review for The New York Times , critic Andre Sennwald wrote: "Mr. Raft is a vivid and pictorially interesting type, rather than an actor in the technical sense, and consequently he proves unequal to the full implications of the fame-hungry dancer. The exterior attractiveness which Mr. Raft brings to the role gives "Bolero" considerable color, nevertheless, and the film, without coming close to realizing the real possibilities of the story as an overpowering study of megalomania, does manage to be moderately entertaining." [15]
The Los Angeles Times critic Philip K. Scheuer wrote: "[T]he waits between dances are so interminable, the characters so obtuse and self-centered, that the film emerges largely as a series of anticlimaxes. ... [A]s drama, the piece remains essentially makeshift and sporadic." [16]
The film was a box-office hit, [17] and its success led to another pairing of Raft and Lombard in a film with a fairly similar plot and title, Rumba (1935). However, the second film was much less successful.
The dance routine was copied by Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean for their famous ice-dance routine to the same music.[ citation needed ]
Sally Rand's bubble dance was spoofed in Tex Avery's cartoon Hollywood Steps Out (1941).
Ray Milland was a Welsh-American actor and film director. He is often remembered for his portrayal of an alcoholic writer in Billy Wilder's The Lost Weekend (1945), which won him Best Actor at Cannes, a Golden Globe Award, and ultimately an Academy Award—the first such accolades for any Welsh actor.
Sally Rand was an American burlesque dancer, vedette, and actress, famous for her ostrich-feather fan dance and balloon bubble dance. She also performed under the name Billie Beck. Rand got her start as a chorus girl before working as an acrobat and traveling theater performer. Her career spanned more than forty years and she appeared on stage, screen and in television. Through her career she worked alongside Humphrey Bogart, Karl Malden, and Cecil B. De Mille. She was a trained pilot and briefly dated Charles Lindbergh.
George Raft was an American film actor and dancer identified with portrayals of gangsters in crime melodramas of the 1930s and 1940s. A stylish leading man in dozens of movies, Raft is remembered for his gangster roles in Quick Millions (1931) with Spencer Tracy, Scarface (1932) with Paul Muni, Each Dawn I Die (1939) with James Cagney, Invisible Stripes (1939) with Humphrey Bogart, and Billy Wilder's comedy Some Like It Hot (1959) with Marilyn Monroe and Jack Lemmon; and as a dancer in Bolero (1934) with Carole Lombard and a truck driver in They Drive by Night (1940) with Ann Sheridan, Ida Lupino and Bogart.
John Villiers Farrow, KGCHS was an Australian film director, producer, and screenwriter. Spending a considerable amount of his career in the United States, in 1942 he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Director for Wake Island, and in 1957 he won the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for Around the World in Eighty Days. He had seven children by his wife, actress Maureen O'Sullivan, including actress Mia Farrow.
The Bowery is a 1933 American pre-Code historical comedy-drama film set in the Lower East Side of Manhattan around the start of the 20th century directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Wallace Beery and George Raft. The supporting cast features Jackie Cooper, Fay Wray, and Pert Kelton.
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Quick Millions is a 1931 pre-Code crime film directed by Rowland Brown and starring Spencer Tracy, Marguerite Churchill, Sally Eilers, and featuring George Raft as the sidekick with a solo eccentric dance performance.
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All of Me is a 1934 American pre-Code drama film directed by James Flood and starring Fredric March, Miriam Hopkins, and George Raft. The film was written by actor Thomas Mitchell and Sidney Buchman from Rose Porter's play Chrysalis.
Rumba is a 1935 American musical drama film starring George Raft as a Cuban dancer and Carole Lombard as a Manhattan socialite. The movie was directed by Marion Gering and is considered an unsuccessful follow-up to Raft and Lombard's smash hit Bolero the previous year.
Nob Hill is a 1945 Technicolor film about a Barbary Coast, San Francisco, United States saloon keeper, starring George Raft and Joan Bennett. Part musical and part drama, the movie was directed by Henry Hathaway. It remains one of Raft's lesser known movies even though it was a big success, in part because it was a musical.
Seton Ingersoll Miller was an American screenwriter and producer. During his career, he worked with film directors such as Howard Hawks and Michael Curtiz. Miller received two Oscar nominations and won once for Best Screenplay for the 1941 fantasy romantic comedy film, Here Comes Mr. Jordan, along with Sidney Buchman.
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