Jump to content

Let's Dance (1950 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Let's Dance
theatrical release poster
Directed byNorman Z. McLeod
Screenplay byAllan Scott
Dane Lussier (additional dialogue)
Based onLittle Boy Blue (story, 1948) by
Maurice Zolotow
Produced byRobert Fellows
StarringBetty Hutton
Fred Astaire
Roland Young
Ruth Warwick
CinematographyGeorge Barnes
Edited byEllsworth Hoagland
Music byRobert Emmett Dolan
Production
company
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • November 29, 1950 (1950-11-29)
Running time
111-112 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$2.4 million (US rentals)[1]

Let's Dance is a 1950 American Technicolor musical romantic comedy-drama film directed by Norman Z. McLeod starring Betty Hutton, Fred Astaire and Roland Young. It was produced and released by Paramount Pictures.

Plot

[edit]

During World War II, Kitty McNeil and her dance partner Donald Elwood are performing for troops in London. Don announces his engagement to Kitty on stage, but Kitty later tells him she's recently married pilot Richard Everett, a member of a wealthy Boston family. Everett is killed soon after the marriage after being shot down.

Five years later, Kitty is locked in a struggle with her late husband's grandmother Serena for the custody of Kitty and Richard's son, Richard "Richie" Everett VII. Serena dislikes Kitty, and thinks she knows best about Richie's education. Kitty decides to flee to New York City with Richie.

Desperate for money, Don has taken a job at Larry Channock's nightclub. Don runs into an out-of-work Kitty at a café, and manages to get her a job as a cigarette girl. However, Serena has sent her two lawyers Pohlwhistle and Wagstaffe to the club, where they subpoena Kitty in an attempt for Serena to gain custody of Richie. Don persuades Larry to give Kitty a steady job as his dance partner at the club, but various potentially embarrassing details about Richie not going to school and spending most of his time at the club emerge at court. However, all are easily answered by the kind nightclub staff. The judge gives Kitty sixty days to give Richie a stable home life, to which end Don agrees to marry Kitty. However, Don and Kitty get into an argument at the marriage license bureau, thus ending their short-lived engagement.

Kitty becomes engaged to the rich Timothy Bryant, a friend of Don's. A jealous Don manages to end the engagement, and all looks well until Serena wins back custody of Richie. Kitty kidnaps Richie and hides him at the club. However, Don, who has made a substantial amount of money from selling a racehorse, manages to smooth things out between Kitty and Serena. A delighted Kitty agrees to marry Don.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

Buoyed by the great success of MGM teaming Astaire with their biggest female musical star Judy Garland in the 1948 musical blockbuster Easter Parade, Paramount decided to team Astaire with their biggest female musical star (Hutton) hoping that the same box-office magic would happen. Astaire's character, perhaps coincidentally, even possessed the same first name (Don) as in the 1948 film. Unfortunately, the film did not repeat the earlier film's success.

While the film did reasonably well financially, overall it proved to be a disappointment. Let's Dance was completely overshadowed by Hutton's other musical film of 1950, Annie Get Your Gun, which became one of the highest-grossing films of the year.

Hutton was loaned to MGM to replace Garland (because of illness) as Annie Oakley in Annie Get Your Gun.

Frank Loesser wrote the music.

Comic book adaptation

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ 'The Top Box Office Hits of 1950', Variety, January 3, 1951
  2. ^ "Movie Love #7". Grand Comics Database.
[edit]