The Gay Divorcee
RKO Radio (1934) Dir. Mark Sandrich
105 min. / B&W / 1.37:1 / DTS Master Audio 2.0 Mono / SDH
Warner Archive Blu-ray $24.98
Available from Movie Zyng
After a chance encounter with her in Paris, hoofer Fred Astaire falls desperately in love with radiant Ginger Rogers. Ginger is trying to get away from her husband, a geology professor who only loves her for her money, and she has no use for Fred, either. However, back home in London, the barrister she hires to help her finagle a divorce is none other than Edward Everett Horton, Astaire's best friend, and if you think that’s a ridiculous coincidence, well, you haven’t watched very many 1930s romantic comedies, where this kind of thing happens as often as morning paper gets published. Eventually, Fred sings Night and Day to her and she's his, but she's still got to dump that pesky husband. Barrister Horton has brought in a crazy Italian gigolo who specializes in being the “other man” in divorce cases, and there’s also a silly aunt (Alice Brady), a buttinsky waiter (Eric Blore) and in case you’re wondering, I’m only mentioning all this because it occurred to me midway through the 17 min. The Continental song and dance climax of the picture that I didn’t recall the plot at all, which as usual doesn’t really matter in a Fred & Ginger film in any case.
That said: Wow! I loved this movie; it was the legendary dance team’s second film, following their star-making supporting role in Flying Down to Rio; I rank this behind only the later Swing Time in the Fred & Ginger canon. RKO even give Horton (with teenage Betty Grable!) a novelty number called Let's K-nock K-nees, and it’s hilarious. As mentioned, The Continental is the highlight and swerves back and forth between ensemble dancing, our stars on the dance floor, the crazy Italian guy singing, and so on.
The Gay Divorcee was nominated for several Oscars, including Best Picture, winning the first Academy Award for Best Song for The Continental (beating out Carioca from the previous Astaire & Rogers film) and it's absolutely wonderful.
The Fred-Ginger romantic plots would grow old (after all, they made nine films for RKO, and a later MGM reunion 10th film), but here it shines.
Also on the Program
A fine and funny two-reeler that was new to us called Art Trouble (1934), probably the one and only film (we’re guessing) in which Shemp Howard slaps Jimmy Stewart. Mr. Stewart was making his film debut, and doesn’t look too happy about the palm of Shemp’s hand, incidentally.
Two beautiful early 1930s Warners cartoons are included, the classic I Like Mountain Music (with magazine characters coming to life) and Shake Your Powder Puff (a dog tries to crash a barnyard nightclub), there’s a trailer and two audio-only radio broadcasts, a half-hour adaptation with Frank Sinatra and a 13 min. radio trailer with excerpts of the musical numbers, plus the original theatrical trailer. There’s also a 3-reel short called Masks and Memories that appears to be ported over from a video master; it was unwatchable.
Verdict from the Balcony
Warner Archive should not be taken for granted; their quality standards are among the highest in the industry, and it’s been years since we’ve been disappointed with a purchase: sound and picture are all we could hope for. When a company loves the vintage films they’re releasing, it shows, and here's to further RKO musicals on Blu-ray that look and sound as good as this one.