Worth 1,000 Words: CAGNEY & CO. salute ‘YOU’RE A GRAND OLD FLAG’


Filled with GEORGE M. COHAN’S patriotic songs, 1942’s YANKEE DOODLE DANDY includes a particularly rousing, stand-up-proudly-and-salute production number featuring a song Cohan wrote in 1906, YOU’RE A GRAND OLD FLAG. Contrary to what the movie says, Cohan was born the day before Independence Day, July 3 (1878). No matter. His unabashed Americanism and flag waving spirit is forever symbolic of the Fourth of July.


Cohan’s inspiration for writing the famous song is explained in the following Library of Congress statement: The original lyric for this perennial George M. Cohan favorite came, as Cohan later explained, from an encounter he had with a Civil War veteran who fought at Gettysburg. The two men found themselves next to each other and Cohan noticed the vet held a carefully folded but ragged old flag. The man reportedly then turned to Cohan and said, “She’s a grand old rag.” Cohan thought it was a great line and originally named his tune “You’re a Grand Old Rag.” So many groups and individuals objected to calling the flag a “rag,” however, that he “gave ’em what they wanted” and switched words, renaming the song “You’re a Grand Old Flag.”

Incidentally, You’re a Grand Old Flag was the first song from a musical to sell one million sheet music copies.
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You’re a grand old flag,
You’re a high flying flag
And forever in peace may you wave.
You’re the emblem of
The land I love.
The home of the free and the brave.
Ev’ry heart beats true
‘neath the Red, White and Blue,
Where there’s never a boast or brag.
But should auld acquaintance be forgot,
Keep your eye on the grand old flag.
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This movie still depicts James Cagney as George M., stage front, backed by dozens of flag wavers and his Yankee Doodle Dandy family, portrayed by (from left) real life sister Jeanne Cagney, Joan Leslie, Walter Huston, and Rosemary DeCamp. Released at the beginning of WWII, the film won three Oscars, including Best Actor for James Cagney. [from Steve Crum’s showbiz memorabilia collection]
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Celebrate the Fourth of July by viewing the (colorized) most patriotic sequence ever filmed, YOU’RE A GRAND OLD FLAG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rxZvDTnlvKM
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Worth 1,000 Words: JOLSON sings ‘SWANEE’ in ‘RHAPSODY IN BLUE’


Perhaps THE iconic moment from Warner Brothers 1945 musical biography of George Gershwin, Rhapsody in Blue, is Al Jolson singing Swanee. Written by Gershwin and Irving Caesar in 1919, the song was on the road to failure until Jolson stepped up, singing it in his Broadway hit, Sinbad. It was then associated with Jolie for the rest of his life.

 
Rhapsody in Blue stars Robert Alda (yes, Alan’s dad) as George, and features many Gershwin contemporaries playing themselves, including Paul Whiteman, whose orchestra premiered the symphonic Rhapsody in Blue; Oscar Levant, Gershwin’s friend who also did the piano solos for the film; George White, the producer of Broadway’s Scandals; Anne Brown, the original Bess of Gershwin’s folk opera, Porgy and Bess; and, of course, Jolson.
 
This is posted in honor of The International Al Jolson Society’s salute this week to Jolson’s memorable singing of Swanee in Rhapsody in Blue. That entire clip can be viewed now by visiting the Society’s impressive site at http://www.jolson.org/.
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The 11 x 14 lobby card shown is pretty rare, and unfortunately has its share of imperfections. (No Photoshop has been applied.) Still, it is a treasured part of my collection. Note that that the piece is colorized, that is, hand tinted. Jolie’s blackface and hands remain, per se, black and white–as is the movie. [from Steve Crum’s showbiz memorabilia collection]
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Douglas is terrific as self destructive ‘SOLITARY MAN’

By Steve Crum
It is so easy, so right in fact, to be repelled by Michael Douglas’ central character, Ben Kalmen, in Solitary Man. Here is a guy who treats people, including his own daughter, like the most sleazy, stereotypical used car salesman imaginable (and lo, he is a car salesman). Thanks particularly to smart dialogue and an Oscar worthy performance by Douglas, Solitary Man is a charismatic 90 minutes of drama as we observe a man determined to self destruct.

Co-directors Brian Koppelman and David Levien, along with Koppelman’s screenplay, effectively tell the rather uncomfortable tale beginning with a flashback to over six years back, when Kalmen receives a diagnosis of a possibly serious heart problem. At that time, he is a highly successful car dealer with several mid-town locations. Long married to soulmate Nancy (Susan Sarandon), he has a loving married daughter, Susan (Jenna Fischer of TV’s The Office), son-in-law, and grandchild. Kalmen is also a local media personality, having appeared on TV ads (“New York’s Honest Car Dealer”) for his upscale car dealerships, and he is a philanthropist of sorts. The library at his alma mater university is named after him due to his generous donations. That was then.

Since his medical scare, which he never follows up with treatment, Kalmen is hell bent on living, really re-living, his life. He pursues and beds virtually every young lady he sees, prompts his wife to divorce him, and gets involved in illegalities leading to the destruction of his auto dealerships. He serves jail time. He is a man figuratively off center, reeling and spiraling. Call it classic mid-life crisis or just trying to race death. Either way, 60 year-old Ben Kalmen’s life style has segued into smooth talking his way into board rooms and bedrooms. He is constantly broke, yet still appears to be on top of his game. He exudes confidence via a winning smile and sharp clothes, yet his demeanor is more plastic than ever. Michael Douglas played a similar, but more controlling weasel Gordon Gekko in Wall Street (1986).

Just when we are seduced into thinking Kalmen is back on track, he dupes us again. A telling sequence involves Kalmen going out of his way to escort his girlfriend Jordan’s daughter to interview with the dean of his old university and tour the campus. Jordan is played by Mary-Louise Parker, while Imogen Poots plays her daughter Allyson. Always looking for an angle, Kalmen befriends a sophomore, Daniel Cheston (Jesse Eisenberg), giving him tips on how to please women. Without divulging any more, just realize one thing leads to a more outrageous event, all triggered by Kalmen, which affect the remainder of the plot.

Look for Danny DeVito as an old college buddy Jimmy, now running his late dad’s off-campus malt shop, who factors into Kalmen’s return to his old campus life. No, Kalmen has not re-enrolled, he just partakes in every bar and frat party he can find. The non-partying, non-boozing Jimmy lends stability to Ben’s life, even letting him stay with him. Like Kalmen’s wife and daughter, Jimmy still cares enough to offer help.

Speaking of Ben’s daughter, there are a couple of dynamite scenes featuring Fischer’s Susan, whose love for him bottoms out as he repeatedly forsakes her and her son. There are terrific performances throughout Solitary Man, but Fischer and Douglas are particularly Oscar illuminated.

It is ironic that Grown Ups is also opening today. Whereas Grown Ups humorously explores a group of adult men pursuing their shared pasts in raucous, slapstick ways, Solitary Man travels the dark side. Ben Kalmen’s pursuit is self destructive, yet with a grim, pitiful humor that makes for one compelling movie.
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GRADE on an A to F Scale: B+
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Please watch the trailer to Solitary Man: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lm95_LnjUJQ

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Worth 1,000 Words: AL JOLSON, fishing for love in AVALON


By Steve Crum

While he may not have been the world’s greatest angler, AL JOLSON was always The World’s Greatest Entertainer. Here he mugs it, as usual, oddly hatted as a sailor while fishing in Avalon Bay at Catalina Island. The photo was probably taken during the mid-1930’s. Jolie frequented Catalina often, and (the story goes) discovered future songwriter and friend BUDDY DeSYLVA there as DeSylva dived for coins tourists would throw from visiting ships. Fact or fiction, the legend persists. But it is true that Buddy DeSylva eventually became a successful composer of popular songs, a movie producer, and co-founder of Capitol Records. [from Steve Crum’s showbiz memorabilia collection]
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AVALON, written by DeSylva, Vincent Rose and Al Jolson, was published in 1920, and became a huge hit for Jolson. (Jolson’s actual input into the song’s composition is questionable. His name was often added–on dozens of songs–in exchange for his plugging the tune in one of his shows.) Jolson sang it in two of his Broadway extravaganzas, Sinbad and Bombo, as well as in The Jolson Story (1946). Avalon became a popular standard for many, particularly Benny Goodman. Interestingly, the publishers of Avalon were successfully sued in 1921 for plagiarism, charged that the melody was lifted from Puccini’s aria E lucevan le stelle from the opera Tosca. The Puccini folks were awarded $25,000 along with all subsequent royalties. This did not deter Jolson, Goodman, and many others from continuing to perform the memorable song.
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The lyrics to AVALON:
EV’RY MORNING MEM’RIES STRAY
ACROSS THE SEA WHERE FLYING FISHES PLAY
AND AS THE NIGHT IS FALLING
I FIND THAT I’M RECALLING
THAT BLISSFUL ALL ENTHRALLING DAY

JUST BE-FORE I SAILED AWAY
SHE SAID THE WORD I LONGED TO HEAR HER SAY,
I TENDERLY CARESSED HER
CLOSE TO MY HEART I PRESSED HER
UPON THAT GOLDEN YESTERDAY

I FOUND MY LOVE IN AVALON
BESIDE THE BAY
I LEFT MY LOVE IN AVALON AND SAILED AWAY
I DREAM OF HER AND AVALON
FROM DUSK ‘TIL DAWN
AND SO I THINK I’LL TRAVEL ON
TO AVALON

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Listen to Jolson singing the melodic AVALON: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k8mhhTH1pHc

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Worth 1,000 Words: NATALIE WOOD & JAMES DEAN, rebellious youth


By Steve Crum

Hiding in the bushes, NATALIE WOOD and JAMES DEAN wait until it is safe during an intense scene in this still from 1955’s REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE, directed by Nicholas Ray. Both Wood and Dean symbolize teenage angst throughout the film, yet it is James Dean who became THE teen icon of that era. Undoubtedly, Dean’s tragic 1955 death in a car accident established his legend forever. Both Dean and Wood died far too early in their lives. [from Steve Crum’s showbiz memorabilia collection]

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NATALIE WOOD (July 20, 1938-Nov. 29, 1981), born Natasha Zacherenko of Russian immigrant parents, acted in many films throughout her relatively brief career. From Miracle on 34th Street (1947) to Rebel Without a Cause to Gypsy (1962), Natalie Wood’s charisma and talent made her a star. She was Oscar nominated for her work in Rebel Without a Cause, Splendor in the Grass (1961), and Love With the Proper Stranger (1963). One of my favorite Wood films is Inside Daisy Clover (1965). Natalie Wood drowned before her last film, Brainstorm, was completed. However, a stand-in was used for her, and the movie was eventually released. Natalie Wood was 43 years-old at her death.
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JAMES DEAN (Feb. 8, 1931-Sept. 30, 1955) made only three feature films during his short life, but he is idolized by many to this day. In the course of two years, he starred in East of Eden (garnering a Best Actor Oscar nomination), Rebel Without a Cause, and Giant (released posthumously in 1956). Dean was 24 when he was killed.
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REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE features James Dean as Jim Stark, a new high school boy in town who has to prove himself against switchblade slashing, hotrod driving bullies. Supporting him in the cast are Sal Mineo, Nick Adams, Dennis Hopper, Jim Backus, Ann Doran, William Hopper and Ed Platt.
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Here is the trailer to Rebel Without a Cause: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cAlzg0S51GY
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