Inside Hollywood but Happily

Singin’ In The Rain (1952)

The plot of the film is an autobiography of Hollywood itself at the dawn of the talkies. The story is about a dashing, smug but romantic silent film star and swashbuckling matinee idol (Don Lockwood) and his glamorous blonde screen partner/diva (Lina Lamont) who are expected, by studio heads, to pretend to be romantically involved with each other. They are also pressured by the studio boss R.F. Simpson (Millard Mitchell) to change their silent romantic drama (The Duelling Cavalier) and make their first sound picture, renamed as the musical The Dancing Cavalier. There’s one serious problem, however – the temperamental, narcissistic star has a shrill, screechy New York accent. The star’s ex-song-and-dance partner (Cosmo) proposes to turn the doomed film into a musical, and suggests that Don’s aspiring actress and ingenue dancer-girlfriend (Kathy Selden) dub in her singing voice behind the scenes for lip-synching Lina. The results of their scheming to expose the jealous Lina and put Kathy in revealing limelight provide the film’s expected happy resolution.

Surprisingly, this great film that was shot for a cost of $2.5 million (about $.5 million over-budget), was ignored by film critics when released and treated with indifference (with box-office of $7.7 worldwide). It received only two Academy Award nominations – Best Supporting Actress (Jean Hagen), and Best Musical Score (Lennie Hayton) and didn’t win any awards. The film’s musical score Oscar nomination lost to Alfred Newman’s score for With a Song in My Heart.

Now, after many accolades, television screenings, and its resurgence after the release of That are Entertainment (1974), it is often chosen as one of the all-time top ten American films and generally considered Hollywood’s greatest and finest screen musical. Great care was made to authenticate the costumes, the sound studio set, and other historical details in the film. The film’s title song was paid twisted homage (of sorts) in Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange (1971) during the brutal rape scene. At the same time that Singin’ in the Rain was being filmed, another MGM film exposing and satirizing Hollywood’s foibles was also in production – director Vincente Minnelli’s melodramatic The Bad and the Beautiful (1952), starring Kirk Douglas and Lana Turner, and Oscar-stealing Gloria Grahame who defeated this film’s Jean Hagen for the Best Supporting Actress honor.

 

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