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8 - Footlight Parade: The New Deal on Screen

from Part III - Movies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 April 2017

Harvey G. Cohen
Affiliation:
University of Maryland
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Summary

When Footlight Parade went before the cameras during the summer of 1933, the Warner Bros ‘Great Depression musicals’ template was already established, but it represents the highlight of this series. Busby Berkeley was comfortably ensconced at Warners with a crew he could trust and who understood his eccentric approach to staging dance numbers. The studio executives, while concerned about costs, mostly stayed out of his way. And for the first time in the series, a real movie star had climbed on board. Propelled by James Cagney in the lead role, Footlight Parade sports a modern, breakneck pace, as the characters fight for artistic and financial survival in the midst of economic and cultural dislocation, conditions not far removed from those that many Americans were facing during the Great Depression.

Furthermore, Footlight Parade echoed the optimism and energy generated during the initial months of Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration. Immediately upon attaining office, the new administration attacked the problems underlying the Great Depression by securing congressional enactment of an unprecedented quantity of substantive legislation during its first 100 days. The strong and speedy start made by FDR's New Deal programme inspired hopes that better times were nigh. Part of what makes the film so powerful and singular is its resistance to the usual conventions, both of its own time and the decades that followed. Very little in Footlight Parade is done by rote. As well as viscerally representing the mood of many Americans during the Great Depression, it epitomises the Warner Bros film ethos of championing the underdog struggling to get ahead in the face of amassed power, something the Warners themselves had needed to do during their ultimately successful quest to make their studio one of the majors in the 1920s. Footlight is more gritty, grimy and realistic, and quicker-paced than the typical musical – even the Warner Bros ones that preceded it. The people who populate the movie are often desperate, sometimes profane (at least by Hollywood standards), and concerned with survival. Most of the best numbers are saved for the end of the film, instead of being doled out steadily throughout. Nobody breaks into song unless it is part of a real stage number; in the world of Footlight, no orchestra arises dreamily out of nowhere to accompany a character in a fanciful romantic moment.

Type
Chapter
Information
Hollywood and the Great Depression
American Film, Politics and Society in the 1930s
, pp. 161 - 180
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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