The Mayfair Swells Kick Up The Jams-Grace Kelly, Bing Crosby And Frank Sinatra’s “High Society” (1956)-A Film
Review
DVD Review
By Associate Film Critic
Alden Riley
[Since the formal
retirement of Sam Lowell as the long time film critic in this space (and of
other publications going back to long defunct The Eye out in the Bay Area where he started out back in the 1970s)
Sandy Salmon has stepped in to do the main chores. However Sandy, a longtime
colleague of Sam’s, is also heading toward his own eventual retirement from the
day to day film review grind and he has asked his associate Alden Riley to
“pinch hit” on occasion. This is the first occasion for Mister Riley.]
High Society, starring
Grace Kelly, Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra and Louis Armstrong, based on the play The Philadelphia Story which in turn was
adapted for the screen starring Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant and Jimmy Stewart,
music and lyrics by Cole Porter, by 1956
The Mayfair swells have
their problems too as the film under review tries to give us plebeians a
glimpse at in this 1956 cinematic musical version of the play The Philadelphia Story, High Society. No, we are not going to be feted to their
struggles to keep a roof over their heads (although the then high tax rate was
alluded to), provide food for the table or figure a way to dress their kids. No
need for that but to show us that they too, at least 1950s too, have as many
problems with affairs of the heart as ordinary folks. The Mayfair swells have
many private and exclusive watering holes. This one takes place in old money
Newport down off the ocean in Rhode Island against a backdrop of the Newport
Jazz Festival which George Weir had put together a few years before (and would
when the folk minute hit high speed a few years later produce the Newport Folk
Festivals).
Although in the 1950s
divorce wasn’t a national epidemic especially among the staid old money rich who
deathly feared the breakup of their generational trust funds that is the
central problem behind what is agitating the swells. Or rather one swell, Tracy
played by fetching Grace Kelly who would move on to real royalty over in fairyland
Monaco after this film. Tracy had dumped one man and was as the film opens
getting ready to wed another. That dumped guy, Dexter, a successful jazz
composer which in high society was just too plebeian a professional (and black
an unstated premise), played by Bing Crosby was still holding the torch for his
ex. Adding to the complexity of this whole show is the fact that a scandal
sheet which has the goods on Tracy’s father’s philandering had been given
permission to get the inside scope on what the Mayfair swells are up to when
wedding bells are ringing. That rag sent a team of two, a from hunger reporter
Mike, played by Frank Sinatra and a photographer, Liz who is carrying her own
torch for Mike, played by Celeste Holms. They are supposed to get the inside
dirt. (By the way with the starring billing of Crosby and Sinatra backed up by
jazzman Louis Armstrong and his boys this one had no right to exist except as a
musical.)
Back to the fetching
Tracy though who leads not only her intended staid uptight businessman bridegroom
a merry chase but hard guy Mike as well. Of course we already know what she
thinks of Dexter. Last year’s news. So between songs we get the drama of Tracy
trying to discover who she really is, what her place in the sun is. Well you
know the minute Bing and Frank showed up that the bridegroom was out. After a
fling (a chaste fling remember this is the 1950s when sex wasn’t invented yet
or something like that) with Mike (to Liz’s chagrin) she decided that Dexter was
the one for her after all. Frankly this choice made more sense in the film
adaptation of The Philadelphia Story
where Katharine Hepburn decided on Cary Grant. Bing might have been a good
singer but for fetching woman like Tracy Mike should have won the brass
ring.
[A note on Louis
Armstrong and his role in the story. The famous jazz man was included as part of
the play for the Newport Folk Festival and that part made sense. But his role,
according to some sources, as an “Uncle Tom” type playing “ah, shucks” up to
the swells was subject to some controversy among blacks and their white
supporters. Remember this was 1956 and the start of the militant “New Negro”
black civil rights movement which rocked this country.]
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