Dancing Cheek To Cheek-
Again-Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire’s “Top Hat” (1935)- A Film Review
DVD Review
By Senior Film Critic
Sandy Salmon
Top Hat, starring Fred
Astaire, Ginger Rogers, music by Irving Berlin, 1935
No, I will not start
this review of what even to me seems like a never-ending series of dance films
by Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire reminding me of the never-ending Bob Dylan
concert tours (and bootleg CD volumes) or the William Powell and Myrna Loy Nick
and Nora Charles The Thin Man series going
on and on about the superiority of Mr. Astaire’s dancing and grace compared to
Mr. Gene Kelly based on the latter’s performance in the Gershwin-etched An American In Paris. Doing so would be
merely overkill since once again in this film Mr. Astaire shows what grace,
style and athleticism (the one attribute in which Mr. Kelly has an edge over
Mr. Astaire) combined looks like when the hammer goes down. My understanding is
the film under review Top Hat was one
of the ten that this well-known dance pair did together although it seems like
I did many more reviews than that already rather large number.
Since the real deal in
these Astaire-Rogers pairings is the dancing this review can be mercifully
short and sweet. After all nobody has ever accused the screenwriters of these
frilly things of writing Oscar-worthy material to back up the dancing and the
music by the likes of Jerome Kern, the Gershwins, Cole Porter or as here Irving
Berlin. Here is the “skinny,” very skinny as my old friend and colleague Sam
Lowell is fond of saying. Top Broadway musical showman Jerry, Fred Astaire’s
role, is in London to bail out some producer’s musical when along the way he
meets, well who else, Dale, played by Ginger Rogers, who seems to be some kind
of model for an upscale high society Italian fashion designer. Naturally Jerry
goes bug-eyed when he spies Dale and makes his big play. She somewhat guardedly
is intrigued by him (after out of nowhere doing a serious pair dance with him
out in the park which either meant something was in the water or that the dance
indicated in an unspoken way that they were kindred spirits-you figure it out).
All well and good
although this would be an extremely short film with basically nothing else but
dancing and singing if it was left to that. What keeps the thing moving along a
bit is a case of mistaken identity. Dale is led to believe that Jerry is the
producer who just so happens to be married and therefore nothing but a cad and
ne’er-do-well even if he can dance up a storm. Moreover, supposedly married to
a good friend of hers. This miscue business takes them eventually to Italy where
the thing gets played out and resolved in Jerry’s favor after a few more songs
and a few more dances. The dancing by Astaire making obvious that he was the
one you could not keep your eyes off of with his moves and not Ms. Rogers. End
of story as they go dancing into that good night. See this one mainly for the
great dance scene when they go Dancing
Cheek to Cheek.
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