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Dames (1934)
In Ray Enright's extravagant musical romance:
- in the story, aspiring actor and musical producer
Jimmy Higgens (Dick Powell) was trying to promote his new Broadway
show titled Sweet and Hot, starring Barbara Hemingway (Ruby
Keeler), his distant 13th cousin; her mother was fragile, odd-ball
mother Matilda Ounce Hemingway (Zasu Pitts), the cousin of eccentric
multimillionaire Ezra Ounce (Hugh Herbert) who was in the midst
of a campaign against indecent and "filthy" Broadway
shows, including "black sheep of the family" Jimmy's
proposed show
- Barbara and her mother Matilda were to inherit $10
million from Matilda's cousin Ezra if they maintained strict and
clean morality, according to Ounce's Foundation for the Elevation
of American Morals
- Ounce's portly partner Horace P. Hemingway (Guy Kibbee)
was Barbara's father (Matilda's husband) and also the "sugar
daddy" of Jimmy's sex-pot friend and show-girl co-worker Mabel
Anderson (Joan Blondell); Mabel was able to blackmail Horace (for
an alleged indiscretion on a train) and finance Jimmy's show
- the astonishing Busby Berkeley production numbers,
including the clever "I Only Have Eyes For You,"
in which Barbara and her producer Jimmy fell asleep aboard a subway
train as he dreamt of repeated, subdividing images of her face (chorus
girls holding large Keeler-face masks); he also saw images of dozens
of white-gowned chorus girls standing on a rotating white ferris wheel
and on multiple sets of stairs; the set ended with the chorus girls
(with puzzle pieces strapped on their backs) coming together and reuniting
to form a huge jigsaw puzzle of Barbara's face
"I Only Have Eyes For You"
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- the title number "Dames"
began with producer Jimmy singing to a group of : "Who writes
the words and music to all the girly shows? No one cares, and no
one knows....What do you go for, go see a show for? Tell the truth,
you go see those beautiful dames. You spend your dough for, bouquets
that grow for all those cute and cunning, young and beautiful dames";
this transitioned to the morning routine of showgirl beauties, with
close-ups of the faces of various 'dames' preparing for and responding
to an 11 o'clock casting call; it led to the camera voyeuristically
following the chorus girls through a single day (including their
sleeping, waking, stretching, bathing, powdering, primping, applying
makeup in front of mirrors, etc.); the aspiring dames entered the
stage door, and then segued into scores of chorus girls in black
tights tap-dancing in geometric patterns; a trick reverse-action
camera made it appear that the tap-dancing chorines who flung open
their legs (with the camera whirring through) were also seen flying
straight up from the floor straight into the camera; the musical
number ended with an overhead kaleidoscope star-formation, and the
camera zooming through a surreal view of a tunnel (a spinning square
with a black hole in the middle, with the girls on the four sides)
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Jimmy Higgens
(Dick Powell)
End of "Dames" musical number - Jimmy's
Face Crashing Through the Backdrop of Dancing Dames
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