home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Top Hat
-
-
- (September 9, 1935)
-
- In Top Hat, Dancer Fred Astaire obligingly continues to offer
- cinema-addicts an inventory of the proficiencies which made him
- a stage star for ten years before civilized dancing reached the
- cinema. The picture contains a dance on a sanded rug, designed
- as a lullaby for the lady (Ginger Rogers) who lives on the floor
- below and who has gone upstairs to complain about the tap-dance
- that preceded it; an elaborate routine with male chorus, copied
- from one Astaire did in Smiles in 1930; a pretentious
- "Picolino," which may or may not turn out to be the
- "Continental" of 1935-36. Possibly more ingratiating than any
- of these is an informal scene reminiscent of their best, in
- Roberta, showing Rogers & Astaire caught in a thunderstorm,
- arguing with each other by dancing.
-
- The music which accompanies these exercises, all by Irving
- Berlin, contain such likely hits as Top Hat, White Tie and
- Tails; Cheek to Cheek and Isn't This a Lovely Day. The story
- shows Astaire as the U.S.star of a London revue trying hard to
- further a romance which begins when he keeps Miss Rogers awake
- and which is impeded only by her stubborn and illogical belief
- that he is her best friend's husband. Otherwise pleasantly
- negligible, the narrative has at least the merit of giving a
- cast of skilled comedians (Edward Everett Horton, Helen
- Broderick, Erik Rhodes and Eric Blore) a chance to be amusing
- when Astaire & Rogers are out of breath.
-
-