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Applause (1929)
In this early landmark musical drama with innovative
sound techniques and a constantly-moving camera, from director Rouben
Mamoulian (his first sound film):
- the realistic and cynical look at seamy backstage
life - the chorus line of burlesque dancers in the Zenith Opera
House composed of unattractive, pudgy and washed-up chorines rather
than conventional cute blondes
- the character of fading, "washed-up" burlesque
star Kitty Darling (real-life torch singer Helen Morgan) - the ailing,
self-sacrificing mother of convent-bred 17 year-old daughter April
Darling (Joan Peers)
- Kitty's singing of the plaintive What Wouldn't
I Do For That Man to a photograph of her unscrupulous, predatory,
unfaithful and brutish "Bad Boy" lover and burlesque
comic Hitch Nelson (Fuller Mellish, Jr.) - as he kissed another
chorine down the hall - in a triangulated split-screen view
- the scene of an embarrassed April's sight of her mother
onstage during the burlesque show and hearing leering male audience
spectators calling her 'washed-up' and April pleading: "Let's
go away from here"
- the scene of April's all-night date with sailor
suitor Tony (Henry Wadsworth) in which they sat on a steel girder
- ending with their 'first love' kiss - and then their next date
high atop a skyscraper while overlooking the New York buildings and
sights below
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Suicidal Death of Kitty Darling
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Daughter April Taking Her Mother's Place
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- the disturbing end scene in which April (after
saying goodbye to Tony at the subway) told her mother - "Nothing
matters now but you, Mommy. We'll always have each other. Nothing
is ever going to separate us again"; she forced herself to
dance sordid burlesque (and vowed to give the crowd their 'money's
worth': "I'll show them") in place of her mother
- April's performance in front of leering, middle-aged
men as her mother died of suicidal poisoning in the dressing room
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Burlesque Dancers Chorus Line
Split Screen: Kitty's Unfaithful Lover "Bad Boy"
Kitty On-Stage
April's All-Night Date With Sailor
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