“I didn’t want to move or act like a rich man. I
wanted to dance in a pair of jeans. I wanted to dance like the man in the
streets.”—Actor-director Gene Kelly, quoted in the PBS “American Masters”
documentary, Gene Kelly: Anatomy of a Dancer (2002)
The star of Singin’
in the Rain and other MGM films, who was born 100 years ago today, brought the
musical to its peak in the 1950s, both through his own incomparable dancing and
through the innovative movies he directed with collaborator Stanley Donen.
Some bits of trivia about Gene Kelly:
*Before heading to Hollywood, he originated the
title role in the landmark Rodgers and Hart musical Pal Joey on Broadway;
*With his career as a leading man on the big screen
more or less over by the early Sixties, he assumed the most famous role of another
iconic Irish-American entertainer, Bing Crosby’s Fr. Chuck O’Malley, in a
one-season TV series adaptation of Going
My Way.
*The
man with the smile that wouldn’t fade in the famous title scene from Singin’ in the Rain had a real struggle
to put on a happy face, as he battled a 103-degree fever at the behest of a
notorious taskmaster: himself, in his role as director.
*My favorite scene in the 1980s comedy Legal Eagles shows an insomniac Robert
Redford tap dancing in the bathroom, batting a paddle ball while eating ice
cream and singing along with Kelly in “Singin' in the Rain."
*According to his widow, one of his favorite
pastimes offscreen was completing crossword puzzles—in ink.
Fulfilling his ambition magnificently, Kelly showed
that you didn’t need to be a top-hat society swell to dance, just a fellow with
enough heart to soar as he turned lampposts and umbrellas into improbable dance
partners.
You forgot to mention his almost making Xanadu worth watching.
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