Can-Can | |
Director: | Walter Lang |
Producer: | Jack Cummings Saul Chaplin |
Based On: | Abe Burrows (stage musical) |
Starring: | Frank Sinatra Shirley MacLaine Maurice Chevalier Louis Jourdan |
Music: | Cole Porter |
Cinematography: | William H. Daniels |
Editing: | Robert L. Simpson |
Distributor: | Twentieth Century-Fox |
Runtime: | 131 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Budget: | $4,995,000[1] |
Gross: | $4.2 million (US/ Canada rentals)[2] |
Can-Can is a 1960 American musical film made by Suffolk-Cummings productions and distributed by 20th Century Fox. It was directed by Walter Lang, produced by Jack Cummings and Saul Chaplin. The screenplay was written by Dorothy Kingsley and Charles Lederer, loosely based on the musical play by Abe Burrows. The music and lyrics were written by Cole Porter for the play, but for the film, some songs were replaced by those from earlier Porter musicals. Art direction was handled by Jack Martin Smith and Lyle R. Wheeler, costume design by Irene Sharaff and dance staging by Hermes Pan. The film was photographed in Todd-AO. Although performing well on initial release, it failed to recoup its production costs from its domestic receipts.
The film stars Frank Sinatra, Shirley MacLaine, Maurice Chevalier and Louis Jourdan, and gave Juliet Prowse her first speaking role in a feature. Sinatra, who was paid $200,000 along with a percentage of the film's profits, acted in the film under a contractual obligation required by 20th Century Fox after he had walked off the set of Carousel in 1955.
In the Montmartre district of Paris, a dance known as the can-can, considered lewd, is performed nightly at the Bal du Paradis, a cabaret where Simone Pistache is both a dancer and the proprietor. On a night when her lawyer and lover François Durnais brings his good friend chief magistrate Paul Barrière to the café, a raid is staged by police and Claudine and the other dancers are placed under arrest and brought before the court.
Paul wishes the charges to be dismissed, but his younger colleague Philippe Forrestier believes that the laws against public indecency should be enforced. Visiting the café and pretending to be someone else in order to gain evidence, Philippe becomes acquainted with Simone and develops a romantic interest in her, but she is warned by Claudine that he is actually a judge.
Despite his attraction to her, Philippe proceeds with again raiding the café, and Simone is arrested. François attempts to blackmail Philippe with a compromising photograph in an effort to force him to drop the charges. However, Philippe had already decided to stop the case. He then shocks Simone by proposing marriage to her. When François comes to visit her, she warns him that she will accept the proposal if he does not marry her himself, but he refuses the notion of ever marrying. Meanwhile, Paul tries dissuade Philippe from the marriage, believing such an arrangement would end his career, but Philippe ignores his advice. Conspiring to sabotage the engagement, Paul arranges a party for the couple aboard a riverboat, during which François gets Simone drunk and encourages her to perform a bawdy routine in front of the upper-class guests. Humiliated, Simone jumps off the boat and refuses to see Philippe again, writing to him that she cannot in good conscience become his bride.
Simone obtains a loan from François to stage a ball, insisting he accept the deed to the café as collateral. On the night of the ball, Simone gets her revenge by arranging for the police to raid the café and arrest François, now the legal proprietor. At the ensuing trial, Simone is called to testify but does not have the heart to give evidence against François. As the case is to be dismissed for lack of evidence, the president of a local moral league demands that action must be taken against the lewd performance. Paul suggests that the court view the dance firsthand to determine that it is indeed indecent. A can-can is performed to the approval of all, who agree that it is not obscene. When the police nonetheless escort Simone to a jail wagon, she is startled to find François inside, and even more surprised when he finally proposes.
The film contains what critics now consider some of Cole Porter's most enduring songs, including "I Love Paris," "It's All Right With Me" and "C'est Magnifique." However, when the musical play premiered in 1953, many critics complained that Porter was producing material far below his usual standard. Some of the songs from the original Broadway musical were replaced by other more famous Porter songs for the film, including "Let's Do It," "Just One of Those Things" and "You Do Something to Me." "I Love Paris" is sung by the chorus over the opening credits rather than in the actual story by MacLaine. A version of "I Love Paris" by Sinatra and Chevalier was featured on the film's soundtrack album, but it was cut in previews when the studio realized that it slowed the film down. A photo of the sequence can be found in a New York Times Magazine article from February 21, 1960. The song takes place shortly after Act Two opens, in the scene in which Chevalier visits Sinatra in a nightclub.
• "I Love Paris" – Sung by chorus over the beginning credits and end screen
• "Montmart'" – Sung by Frank Sinatra, Maurice Chevalier and chorus
• "Maidens Typical of France" – Performed by Juliet Prowse and can-can girls
• "Can-Can" – Danced by Juliet Prowse and can-can girls; Reprised in the finale by Shirley MacLaine, Prowse, can-can girls and male dancers
• "C'est Magnifique" – Performed by Frank Sinatra; Reprised by Shirley MacLaine
• "Apache Dance" – Danced by Shirley MacLaine and male dancers
• "Live and Let Live" – Sung by Maurice Chevalier and Louis Jourdan
• "You Do Something to Me" – Sung by Louis Jourdan
• "Let's Do It, Let's Fall in Love" – Performed by Frank Sinatra and Shirley MacLaine
• "It's All Right with Me" – Sung by Frank Sinatra; Reprised by Louis Jourdan
• "Come Along with Me" – Performed by Shirley MacLaine
• "Just One of Those Things" – Sung by Maurice Chevalier
• "Garden of Eden Ballet" (interpolating portions of "I Love Paris") – Danced by Shirley MacLaine, Juliet Prowse, Marc Wilder and dancers
The plot of the musical was revised for the film adaptation. In the stage version, the judge is the leading character, but in the film, it is the lover of the nightclub owner who is the lead, and the judge forms the other half of a love triangle not found in the play. The character of Paul Barriere, a non-singing supporting part on stage, was enhanced and given two songs for Maurice Chevalier .
During the filming, Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev famously visited the 20th Century Fox studios[3] and was allegedly shocked by what he saw. He took the opportunity to make propagandistic use of his visit and described the dance, and by extension American culture, as "depraved" and "pornographic."[4]
In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic Bosley Crowther lamented the film's deviations from the musical play: "The music has been reduced to snatches, the book has been weirdly changed and the dances–well, they have been abandoned for some tired jigs ..." Crowther also panned the script and performances: "The story is also a downright foolish pastiche, cut to Frank Sinatra and Miss MacLaine, who look about as logical in Paris of the Eighteen Nineties as they would look on the Russian hockey team. He, as a nonchalant young lawyer, and she, as the owner of a cabaret that is frequently being raided because they do the can-can there, behave, under Walter Lang's direction, as if they were companions in a Hoboken bar, slightly intoxicated and garrulous with gags. The experience of watching and listening to two such people would probably be about as amusing as watching and listening to Mr. Sinatra and Miss MacLaine."[5] Kate Cameron, however, gave the film a full four-star rating in the New York Daily News, calling it "a rough-and-tumble, rowdy but entertaining film. The exhibition of the dance that has made Paris night clubs the mecca of world tourists since it was first introduced there in the early part of the 19th Century, is a rude, noisy, fast dance number, expertly performed by the chorus." She added: Dick Williams of the Los Angeles Mirror called it "a racy, raucous show with its ups and downs, emerging as a mixture of TV spec, Broadway revue and movie musical. It often seems more Beverly Hills Rat Pack Clan, thanks to members Frank Sinatra and Shirley MacLaine who are starred, than Paris, Montmartre, circa 1896."[6] A user of the Mae Tinee pseudonym in the Chicago Daily Tribune opened her remark by saying that "Shirley MacLaine is a girl who can light up a screen, even a giant size one, and when she's in action, this musical is a lively affair. Frank Sinatra, as a glib and wary bachelor, is an excellent foil for her and also provides some good moments. But there are some dull stretches in the film when the thinness of the script shows thru, in spite of lavish sets and colorful costumes."[7] Herb Lyon, in the same newspaper's Tower Ticker column, reacted differently to the film: Mike Connolly, a syndicated columnist, wrote: Hortense Morton, in the San Francisco Examiner, "found the film real enjoyment despite the fact, it runs very long and one begins to wonder if one should have told the milkman to hold up morning delivery of the naif and half; left word with the gardener to water the lawn and told the neighbors to keep a lookout for prowlers."[8] Myles Standish of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch wrote: Richard L. Coe observed in The Washington Post that "KHRUSHCHEV was quite right. Though the dance he found so vulgar does not strike me so, 'Can-Can,' in full dosage at the Uptown, is just that. Consider: Metro having scored with turn-of-the-century Paris in “Gigi,” Twentieth Century-Fox takes two of its stars, Maurice Chevalier and Louis Jourdan, the same period and Cole Porter’s stage musical. It then gives those stars little to do, adds Frank Sinatra and Shirley MacLaine, who are amusing but nonetheless pure Hoboken. Next it bolsters three of the master’s irrelevant favorites, “Let’s Do It,” “You Do Something to Me” and “Just One of Those Things.” All this is then presented in Todd-AO, vast screen, stereophonic sound, all worthy of the Creation. At upped, reserved-seat prices. Heaven knows, Abe Burrows' stage book was fairly dim but what Dorothy Kingsley and Charles Lederer have been paid to add is even less inspired. Its most conspicuous quality is that inverse snobbism our West Coast gold-miners seem to find profitable with the masses: that judges and society folk are just snobs and that night club entertainers, crooked lawyers and others with no manners and bad speech are The Salt of the Earth." He added: W. Ward Marsh of the Cleveland Plain Dealer wrote that the film was "a combination of France and Hollywood, and this is good since there is an exacting balance between Frank Sinatra and Shirley MacLaine, who can do no wrong on the screen, and Maurice Chevalier and Louis Jourdan, who bring the necessary touch of Paris to a picture which sets out to entertain and winds up to pretty pure entertainment."[9] Helen Bower wrote in the Detroit Free Press that "the madcap romance of Shirley MacLaine as the cafe proprietor with Frank Sinatra as her non-marrying lawyer gives these two stars great romp room for performances best suited to them."[10]
Francis Melrose of the Rocky Mountain News commented:
Harold Whitehead of the Montreal Gazette said that the "producer and director have taken what we have always felt was second rate Cole Porter and turned it into a first-rate motion picture production."[11] Jacob Siskind of the Montreal Star called it "one of the more enjoyable musicals to have come out of Hollywood in some time. It’s partly the music and partly the cast that make it so."[12] Clyde Gilmour of Maclean's magazine wrote: Dick Richards of London's Daily Mirror called it "a feckless frolic version of a film. It is too long and leisurely but—thanks mainly to Shirley—it's as bubbly as a glass of champagne."[13] Campbell Dixon of The Daily Telegraph of London wrote that "The production has faults. We could do with more Chevalier Mr Sinatra’s Americanism is so evident that the director gives Mr Jourdan a chance to mock it pleasantly. A running time of 141 minutes could have been cut with advantage. But there can be nothing but praise for the acting and direction. Shirley MacLaine's Simone is lush and sexy but not gross; Mr Sinatra manages to make the tricky lawyer llkeable; M Chevalier walks through his part with consummate ease; and Mr Jourdan with a combination of charm, distinction, and gentle courtesy that must be unique on the screen, gives a basically commonplace little fable a kind of grace."[14]
The film was listed by Variety as the highest-grossing film of 1960 (behind 1959's Ben-Hur) with estimated rentals of $10 million,[15] based on an estimated $3 million from 70-mm showings to December 1960 and $7 million estimated from future 35-mm showings.[16] The expected future rentals were not achieved, and the rental was revised down to $4.2 million the following year.[2]
Academy Awards, 1961:
Golden Globe Awards, 1961:'
Grammy Awards, 1961: