When You Are Lost On The
Great White Way, Broadway … And Don’t Know What To Do-Dick Powell’s “Varsity Show”
(1937)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Sarah Lemoyne
Varsity Show, starring
Dick Powell and a bunch of Lane sisters, the inevitable last dance segment directed
by max daddy (Seth Garth’s expression) Bugby Berkeley, 1937
Sometimes you just can’t
win when you try to be nice, try to stop a growing dispute with fellow
colleagues in what everybody knows is a cutthroat go for the jugular “you are
only as good as your last piece” somebody is lurking to take your place profession
like film reviews in its tracks. Damn, can’t get any traction out of calling a
truce so that you do not have to start off every film review, maybe every piece
at this publication with what in normal times would be ho-hum stuff best
reserved for titter around the office water cooler. Maybe what the older
writers have told me, especially my mentor Seth Garth the film reviewing
business does not allow for anything but cutthroat dog eat dog animus. Although
that shouldn’t be so apparently to go up, and stay up, on the review food chain
you must at least mortally wound whoever your competitor of the day is. For now
this brewing confrontation must see the light of day if I am to protect my
growing reputation and if I am to keep my hard fought place in the food chain
since one Sam Lowell, whom I off-handedly characterized as wizened and in his
dotage in my last review of a Dick Powell film from the 1930s Hollywood Hotel had decided that I need “my comeuppance” over
those remarks and what followed.
Sam bogusly claims that
my review of the Powell vehicle was not written, could not be written by me
since my only source of information about the period of the 1930s and 1940s
musical was my grandmother who was a child held on her mother’s knee back then
watching these “feel good” films to get through some tough times. He has
suggested that the only way this review could have been does as well as it was
is if somebody more familiar with the times wrote the damn thing (his
expression). Sam insinuated that the only person he knew who could handle such
a review having done a series of Fred Astaire-Ginger Rogers films was his old
friend, still friend I assume, Seth Garth my kindly mentor had written the
piece and that I put my by-line name on the thing and sent it in to Greg Green
as my original work.
Of course Sam is looking
for tit for tat since he knows that almost everybody in the office over the age
of ten knows that he has a very large reputation going all the way back to the
1960s of having somebody write his reviews for him, usually stringers, usually
female stringers to boot or in desperation after some three day drunk or
cavorting just used the studio publicity department press releases and signed his
name to the document. I hear one time and if I am libeling him so be it he was
cavorting with some stringer on a three- day toot or something like that and
sent the press release in without clipping the studio name off the top. His old
buddy, another one of the half dozen or so guys from high school days who have written
for this publication over the years, editor Allan Jackson published it as is
Sam’s star was so high back then. Seth Garth
has been kindness itself in helping me up the ladder in the business and had
provided suggestions but that is it. I write my own material. Period.
More grating, more
insidious is that Sam has taken up the salacious office water cooler gossip
about some relationship beyond the mentoring one between Seth and myself implying
that I would get ahead on his coattails if I was nice to Seth. In that Hollywood Hotel review I made it quite
clear that Seth and I had merely a professional relationship and that it would
be absurd for me to have a personal relationship with a person old enough to be
my grandfather. I, moreover, mentioned that my companion has been having fits
over these rumors and we have had some shouting matches when she heard the last
product out of the rumor mill. Sam, the treacherous little wizened bastard,
that wizen thing always gets to him from what Seth has told me has been
spreading the word that something is up between us ever since he out of that
kindness I mentioned before took me to dinner one night.
Sam’s hook, Sam’s
fucking “hook” that is he is forever yakking about as necessary to draw a
reader in as if that wasn’t lesson one taught in journalism graduate school is
that Seth is just living out the life of Johnny Silver. Johnny, who I don’t
know from Adam, is one of their infamous and constantly talked about 1960s high
school corner boys who Seth wrote about in a long series of short pieces when
he got tangled up with a graduate student from Penn State after they had “met”
on Facebook a few years ago. That romance, that intergenerational sex, between
the pair who are still together is the hook Sam used to imply that his old
corner boy Seth was making the same kind of moves on me. Don’t these guys,
maybe gals too but I don’t know about that, ever think anything can be anything
other than some sex scheme when guys and gals are out together. Like I said my
companion went wild when she heard I had gone to dinner with Seth since he
received an e-mail about it from “anonymous.” I know there will be more in this
war of words but I will say Seth was right when he told me Sam was not above
anything and to be careful. He said he had known the wizened (a joke between
Seth and I now when we are referring to Sam in our mentoring sessions) Sam too
long to expect any quarter to be given. I have come a long way in a short time,
with Seth’s help, so I will not play the wilting violet. To the review.
Boy meets girl. Well if
you want my opinion that is essentially what this well-worn Hollywood trope is working
overtime on when you get to the close of Varsity
Club. This a college-based piece of fluff in the days when college entrance
was very circumscribed and mainly for the children of the elite, of those who
have already made it. Number one in making it was Chuck, Dick Powell’s role, an
alumnus of some private small maybe denomination Middle America school like
Kenyon or Oberlin Winfield College, who has made it big on Broadway although at
the start of the film he is on cheap street after producing a few flops, the kiss
of death to backers of such efforts. Meanwhile back at his old alma mater where
they are revolting, not revolting against the injustices and inequalities of
the Great Depression that my dear grandmother had to survive with lots of
trauma, but against an edict by the head of the music/drama department that the
annual varsity show should not disturb the dead. Not keep anybody awake. Be
pure vanilla meaning no cavorting (which would by reputations leave both withered Sam and
sweetie Seth out), no close boy-girl scenes and above all even in fully-clothed
post-Code days no references to sex, or maybe even biology.
The kids (although most
look much too old to have been in college then although today they would not
stand out with the demographic mix these days with people going to college for
lots of reasons, mostly serious, at older ages to get ahead in the world a bit)
don’t know what to do until some bravo latches onto the idea that they contact
good old Chuck to see if he can’t bring the thing into the 20th
century. After plenty of built-up, a few songs, a budding romance with a
sorority sister, one of the famous Lane sisters but I am not sure if it was the
one he snagged in Hollywood Hotel he
falls short, cannot move the production forward. Then led by Professor Fred
Waring (and his Pennsylvanians in tow) the whole cast winds up in New York
City, on the big white way where they will put on a bootleg production since the
staid college stage is out. Aside from the boy-girl thing between Powell and
Lane the virtue, the reason for existence of this mercifully short film is the
Bugby Berkeley show-stopper finale choregraphed to perfection in the way that he
and very few others could do. Finis. Well, no, anybody who was not old and
wizened maybe a shade bit senile in his dotage could tell in two seconds that
this review was written by me, by Sarah Lemoyne. Got it.
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