Thursday, October 11, 2018

Quote of the Day (Rita Moreno, on Jerome Robbins, ‘Tough and Demanding Daddy’ of ‘West Side Story’)


“A lot of the dancers hated him [director-choreographer Jerome Robbins]— but loved him. He would think nothing of making us do one step over and over until we broke down in tears or pulled something. Shin splints for days. He was a tough and demanding daddy, but if you got a smile out of him, you floated on air for days.”—Oscar-winning actress Rita Moreno quoted in Joe McGovern, “Making West Side Story’s ‘America,” Entertainment Weekly, July 7, 2017

Jerome Robbins was born 100 years ago today in Manhattan. I had written a blog post several months ago about his agonized decision to inform on friends during the McCarthy Era, but that was hardly enough to sum up the career of this extraordinary if imperfect artist.

Inevitably, I turn back to West Side Story, even though Robbins’ many accomplishments predated and followed that landmark 1957 musical. It would have been enough that he brought it to fruition on Broadway, but he also was instrumental in its translation to film in 1961, and he was a co-winner for Best Director for his efforts. (Altogether, with 10 Academy Awards, the film would be one of the most honored in Hollywood history.) In a sense, the opportunity to work in Hollywood—and on such a prestigious project—helped motivate his controversial 1953 testimony as a friendly witness before the House Un-American Activities Committee.

Yet the uncompromising nature that enabled him to make West Side Story such a stunning Broadway success also ensured that he would not complete production of the movie. Moreno’s remarks above only hint at what a taskmaster he could be. The location shooting in what would become, in a few years, Lincoln Center took place over a grueling summer. 

“In New York it was, like, 110 degrees,” Russ Tamblyn—who played "Jets" gang leader Riff—recalled in this YouTube clip of his appearance at the 55th anniversary of the movie. “And we had to do this long dance down the street where we were walking and dancing and we had to do it over and over and over, and they had to keep shooting,,,And finally, [co-director] Robert Wise would say, ‘Well, that’s fine for me….How ‘bout you, Jerry?’ And Jerry would say, ‘Well, I’d just like to do one more, but I’d like all of you dancers to do it on the other foot.’ I don’t know if you know what that means, but instead of stepping out to the left, you step out to the right. You had all of these dancers trying to figure out what to do. So it took a long of time.”

But what short-circuited Robbins' involvement with the project was how he treated his collaborators and studio executives: with dismissive contempt. He rebuffed multiple suggestions from Wise (tasked to direct non-musical sequences) and screenwriter Ernest Lehman on how to translate scenes from the stage to the screen. 

At last, when the film was $300,000 over budget and only one-third of the expected footage was in the can, United Artists decided to fire Robbins--a decision made easier by a clause in his contract that few thought would ever be invoked, that allowed for his termination if the movie wasn't working out. With rumors flying that the film would shut down completely, that was the opening that United Artists needed. 

It says something for Wise’s forbearance that, even when it came to this pass, he still went to bat for his troublesome collaborator.To be fair, though, it also says something for Robbins’ brilliance. In his autobiography, composer, arranger, and musical director Saul Chaplin, for all his criticism of Robbins' cruelty and sadism, still had to acknowledge him as "by far the most exciting choreographer I had ever watched. He seemed to have an endless stream of exciting ideas.”  

Remember that the next time as you watch the movie’s choreography, all of which Robbins managed to complete before his ouster. And the musical numbers he finished—"Prologue," "America," "Cool," and "Something’s Coming"—still bristle with energy and fire, giving viewers a visceral sense of the violent youthful passions that end on New York’s mean streets.




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