RIP: Stanley Donen (Signin' in the Rain, Charade, Damn Yankees)
Stanley Donen has passed. At age 94. That's a wonderful life.
Quite a career. Musicals. Thrillers(a couple.) Comedies. Dramas.
Reviewing his list, I was surprised at how many times he was a CO-director: Singin' in the Rain most famously. But also my favorite of 1958(Damn Yankees) and its companion piece Pajama Game(1957)...same team, same songwriters.
Singin' in the Rain, I suppose is the BIG one. But Donen rather has to share the glory on that with Gene Kelly.
Charade has been called "the best Hitchcock film Hitchcock didn't make," but its only kinda/sorta like Hitchcock. Its got a Henry Mancini score for one thing. Hitch fired Mancini off off Frenzy, but Donen used him for both "Charade" and the other (lesser) thriller "Arabesque" and ended up with two thrillers that sounded like Blake Edwards directed them(given that Mancini scored Edwards TV show Peter Gunn and every Edwards movie ever made from Breakfast at Tiffany's.)
Charade is my favorite movie of 1963(when Its a Mad Mad World isn't). We get Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn together, perfectly. Hitchcock always wanted to work with Audrey Hepburn and almost did on "No Bail for the Judge," and certainly never got Hepburn with Grant. We got Walter Matthau in his "pre-star top supporting guy phase"(and he's got the most interesting role in the movie.) We got pre-star James Coburn, he of the lanky walk and the stereophonic deep voice as "Tex" the subvillain. And we got a great romantic thriller.
Damn Yankees is my favorite movie of 1958. ("Verti-WHAT?") Fast on its feet, sexy and with the surefire centerpiece of "Mr. Applegate"(Ray Walston as the Devil, actually) to keep the proceedings macabre and mean. Its also got one of my favorite musical songs of all time: "Heart." As in "You Gotta Have Heart" -- uplift, comedy, barbershop quartet harmonies, the whole nine yards.
One sleeper gem: "The Little Prince" a 70's musical with a very abstract whimsical quality, and two nifty musical cameos -- Gene Wilder (as a fox), and Bob Fosse(as a snake). Each man projects his animal in costume and manner only. Its magical. And the song "The Little Prince" is heartbreaking.
One naughty guilty pleasure(Donen's final film): Blame it on Rio. Michael Caine in his usual British manner, and the underrated Joe Bologna(all macho New Yawk) are male buddies who take their two teenage daughters on vacation in Rio. Caine's daughter is a prim young Demi Moore. Bologna's daughter is va-va-voom, often seen topless and in total sexual pursuit of Caine. Which means if tough guy Bologna finds out -- trouble for Mr. Caine. The father figure sex stuff outraged some critics and the movie isn't very good but -- its on-the-edge sexual and very funny: Caine is perfect as the man who strays and goes nuts trying to cover it up.
One big bomb: Lucky Lady. Top seventies stars Burt Reynolds and Gene Hackman buddy it up, with Liza Minnelli as the woman in between. It was meant to be a "Sting"-like period action comedy about rumrunning; it just played horribly, start to finish. (I blame the husband-and-wife screenwriters, who also wrote bad movies like Howard the Duck and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.)
To linger on the little-known Donens is probably wrong, but The Little Prince and Blame it on Rio were memorable to me(for different reasons) and Lucky Lady saddened me -- and in all three cases, I KNEW Donen was their maker. And I was rooting for the man who made Charade and Damn Yankees.
And that Rain movie.
But this one, too: "Two for the Road" -- Audrey Hepburn and Albert Finney in a very adult tale of marriage and all it entails, with a Mancini score and not a scare in sight in the year Hepburn also made Wait Until Dark.
And this one: Funny Face. I've spoken ill of it, but I don't know why. Only saw it once. I know its pretty major. I know its highly ranked. I know its very sophisticated. Maybe its because Fred Astaire doesn't much send me. Likely its simple: versus the peppy, sexy Damn Yankees, its just TOO sophisticated.
And wait, THIS one: Seven Brides for Seven Brothers. That was on the CBS Friday Night Movie, it seemed, in constant rotation. I remember the big barnstorming dance number in the middle, and how each brother wore a different bright colored outfit. Liked it, didn't love it.
No, its Charade and Damn Yankees for me, personally. And Singin' in the Rain as the Psycho-level acknowledged classic(I love the title number -- its like the crop duster scene of dance.)
And I like that for a year or two as an "old man," Stanley Donen was married to the hot Yvette Mimieux. Good for you, Stanley!
A great career. An interesting man. RIP, Stanley Donen.