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Michael Feinstein

Carol Channing at Closing Night
photo by SJ Wegg
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Song and dance lights up fest finale
Any apprehension I had about closing the
Palm Springs International Film Festival with a morph of That's Entertainment vanished when a dozen Fred Astaires filled the screen and reminded us just how
good dancing used to be. For seventy-three minutes (culled for this event from
the over three hours/147 songs of this stunning "songumentary") Michael
Feinstein's The Great American Songbook provided ample evidence of what
American films do best: musicals!
The evening got off to a hilarious start
with emcee Bruce Vilanch's over-the-top humour: "White men come to Palm Springs
to get brown; Red men come to get rich!" And when Carol Channing took the stage
to introduce her fellow stars, which were sprinkled throughout the VIP section,
she delivered her patter and asides with skill and timing that could only be
envied by other personalities half of her age. Dolly has not left the
building!
Not surprisingly, the weakest parts of
the documentary occur when Feinstein and his always noticeable Baldwin—framed by
a covey of instruments that look as if they've never uttered a phrase—bring us
an illustrative selection that wasn't available on film. The voice is fine and
the stylings are unobtrusive, but the camera seems to have just three shots
(including the slow pan peek-a-boo through the piano lid's stick) and only
demonstrates how superior the footage of decades past is to the current day.
And it was bitter-sweet reminder to see
blacks as haulers and servers (Groucho Marx singing "Lydia the Tattooed Lady")
or nearly repulsive to view Al Jolson in blackface, but this was somewhat
tempered by a clip of the fabulous Nicholas Brothers (with Faynard looking on
from the audience) effortlessly executing leaps and splits that are in a class
all to themselves.
The generous helpings of Judy Garland,
particularly in the sequences with Ray Bolger (The Wizard of Oz) and
James Mason in A Star is Born are worth the entire price of admission.
The detailing of George Gershwin's life
and sudden death at 38, like Mozart (35) and Schubert (31) made me wonder what
they all could have produced if they'd made it to 50!
The Stage Door Canteen segment (also
playing live at the Palm Springs Follies, cross-reference below) with the
incomparable Kate Smith stirring the hearts and nationalism of her listeners
(including a telling cut-away to Ronald Reagan) as the U.S. is drawn into WW II,
jogged my memory to a very uncomfortable moment in The Pianist (cross-reference
below) when the battered Poles wondered why their affluent American cousins
did not use their considerable influence to force the government into action
much sooner. Ah yes, the glories of war!
When Elvis Presley finally slithered
onto the screen for "Jailhouse Rock," I found it instructive that, compared to
the roar for Howard Keel in Annie Get Your Gun, the applause was merely
polite. To many in the audience (including a resplendent looking Keel) rock and
roll is still to be endured, not worshipped.
Following the screening, Michael
Feinstein kept the show going with a mini-set of songs from the remaining parts
of the production (airing on PBS in March and released on DVD in April). In
Irving Berlin's "I Love a Piano," he winked hard as the original word "Steinway"
was (yours in sponsorship!) replaced with "Baldwin." Ah, the power of
commerce. But the question remains, if, say Canada's Asper family had ponied up
with the film's production money, would Feinstein wink again and present The
Really Good (we're such a modest people) Canadian Songbook, Eh? 
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Co-Producers |
Michael Feinstein, Andy Kuehn |
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Music |
147 songs from Berlin to Gershwin to Elvis |
Cross-references: The
Fabulous Palm Springs Follies; Polanski's
The Pianist