Dedications: My four late friends Rory, Stan, Bryan, Jeff - shine on you crazy diamonds, they would have blogged too. Then theres Garry from Brisbane, Franco in Milan, Mike now in S.F. / my '60s-'80s gang: Ned & Joseph in Ireland; in England: Frank, Des, Guy, Clive, Joe & Joe, Ian, Ivan, Nick, David, Les, Stewart, the 3 Michaels / Catriona, Sally, Monica, Jean, Ella, Anne, Candie / and now: Daryl in N.Y., Jerry, John, Colin, Martin and Donal.
Showing posts with label Bette Midler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bette Midler. Show all posts

Friday, 17 October 2014

Kitsch classics: For The Boys, 1991

FOR THE BOYS. Bette Midler's dramedy (comedy drama) vanity production from 1991 was not  a success at the time. I remember 4 other people in the cinema when I saw it back then. It was widely panned as being absolutely dreadful but it bears a re-view now. As I remembered, the 1940s and 1960s sequences are brilliantly done by director Mary Rydell - who also handled Bette's debut in THE ROSE.

Bette Midler gives the brassiest, sassiest performance of her career as Dixie Leonard, a USO singer whose electrifying stage presence, and flair for outrageous comedy, captivates troops and civilians alike. Teamed up with America's beloved song and dance man Eddie Sparks (James Caan) the whole world becomes Dixie's stage through very different wars and 50 years of music and memories, laughter and tears. All of it - For the Boys. 

I like this a lot actually, its another superior soap - Bette runs the gamut, matched by Caan (so good in LADY IN A CAGE, FUNNY GIRL, THE GODFATHER etc) as the devious Bob Hope-like entertainer always going overseas to entertain the troops, with some cheesecake in tow. We go through 1940s wartime England, and then Korea in the Fifties, to the brilliant Vietnam sequence in the Sixties (great music by Cream and others) as Eddie and Dixie entertain while backstage we see how sleazy and petty he is as she grows weary of having to support him, as they do tv sitoms and become a great double act. His treachery in getting rid of her uncle (George Segal - sadly underused) during that witch-hunt era of the early 50s and his getting close to her son, after her husband is killed, also rankle. Now they are wanted together again for a tv celebration - will she bury the hatchet and show up? 
What is hilarious here is their makeup for them as old, under layers of latex and doddering around - which seemed to go on forever when seen in the cinema. She actually looks like one of Matt Lucas's LITTLE BRITAIN creations (thats a reference for UK viewers). Rydell brilliantly stages the 1940s sequence with all those men and lots of lights as Dixie wows them with that delicious number "Stuff like That There" and "P.S. I Love You"; then she also sings a terrific "Come Rain or Come Shine" to her husband, when they surprise her with him when in France.  By the time of the Vietnam era our two leads don't talk to each other, but a reunion with her son before all hell breaks loose is well handled too, after she delivers a poignant version of the Beatles' "In My Life". Its really a nice panorama of American showbiz during the last 50 years or so an ambitious project for Midler, who co-produced. Its certainly worth  re-look now.

Saturday, 4 October 2014

More music news .... return of the oldies !

80 may be the new 70 as a lot of our senior ladies turn 80 this year: Dames Maggie Smith, Judi Dench and Eileen Atkins; Sylvia Syms, and Bardot and Loren (as noted below). In the music biz, some seniors, some in their 70s! are back in action, plus the 80 year old Leonard Cohen, with a very well received new album ....

I was surprised to see my all time favourite Aretha back with a new album, singing Diva classics (like "People", "I Will Survive", "At Last", "Nothing Compares To You" and Adele's "Rolling In The Deep") ----- she also appeared on Letterman (its on YouTube) and sang the Adele number (with a rather sad looking Cissie Houston - Whitney's mother - among her backing singers). At 72 she looked fine, but perhaps should have covered her shoulders and upper arms .... 
she also looks over-made up on the album cover. I've pre-ordered the album which is out in a week or two. Ditto Annie Lennox's new one: NOSTALGIA where she goes back to the songs of the '30s and '40s, like: "Georgia On My Mind", "I Put A Spell On You", "Summertime" and "I Cover The Waterfront" - should be interesting. I still listen to the Eurythmics back catalogue and Annie's stunning DIVA album. How long is it since she and Aretha belted out "Sisters Are Doing It For Themselves .." probably 30 years.

I am holding fire on the new Bette Midler one ITS THE GIRLS,  but it may be a must have, as she goes back and re-interprets the great girl groups with her versions of old favourites like: "You Can't Hurry Love", "Too Many Fish In The Sea", "Tell Him", "Bei Mir Bist Du Schon", "Be My Baby", "One Fine Day" etc. It may be a bit too much, but maybe we will like it ...

I am not bothering with Barbra's PARTNERS, as mentioned in last music post, Dolly also has a new one out after wowing Glastonbury this summer,  and I like Smokey's duets ... also mentioned previously. So, nice to see it not only The Rolling Stones who can keep rolling on ....