Musical Monday: And 5, 6, 7, 8!

Friday, February 02, 2007 by
Alright kittens, just to confirm that we're homosexual down to our very marrow, we're going to talk about something very near and dear to our hearts which is also not coincidentally very, very gay.

Musicals, darlings. They're like cinematic crack to us. No matter how bad or busy our day gets, there is no amount of stress that can't be eliminated by watching a big dumb musical. Give us Ann Miller in a ridiculous costume vibrating her legs like a grasshopper and we're in gay nirvana.

But it's not all camp value with us. Even though we can poke fun at the silliness of it all, we love musicals as an art form as well and we bristle when we hear so many people dismiss them as ONLY silly or as relics from another time. In fact, the one thing that will guarantee us getting all huffy and puffy is when someone utters that tired old line about them being "unrealistic."

Puh-leez, bitches.

Movies aren't realistic by their very nature - ALL movies. As an audience member, you always approach a movie on its own terms and passively accept the constraints of the genre or the medium. Whether it's science fiction or your basic romantic comedy, none of them are realistic and if they're good, the audience never really has a problem with that.

Here's something to remind yourself when watching a musical. It's something audiences in bygone eras understood implicitly, probably because they were only one generation removed from vaudeville. What is it? Simply this: the characters aren't really dancing and singing.

What? Is that shocking? Do thine eyes deceive thee? Really, it's true. Liesl isn't really singing and dancing with Rolf; she's flirting with him. The Jets and the Sharks aren't really pirouetting through the streets of Manhattan, they're threatening each other. Barbra isn't really singing that she's the greatest star, she's fast-talking her way into an audition. Gene Kelly and Leslie Caron aren't really dancing their way through works of famous French artists; they're falling in love in the most romantic city in the world.

See kittens, the singing and dancing is merely a way of expressing emotional states or advancing the plot. It's a form of window dressing crucial to the genre and you're supposed to laugh and clap and be swept away by it, but not for one minute are you supposed to "believe" that the characters all broke into song at exactly the same moment. There is of course an exception to be made when talking about certain "stage door" musicals, where all the singing and dancing is done by characters who are performing on a stage, such as Cabaret. Even so, in most of those instances - and most especially in Cabaret - the songs are still meant to tell the story or reveal the characters.

We are always happy to see Hollywood trot out the form for another go 'round (see Dreamgirls), but we have made it our life's work to make people understand how much value lies in those big technicolor extravaganzas of years past. If you really want to know about the social norms of the forties, fifties, and sixties, you could do a lot worse than to start by looking at the musicals of the period. Because classic musicals almost always have at their hearts, the idea of utopia. A perfect world through song and dance and color.

So! To further your education and to have a little fun, we're introducing Musical Mondays here at T Lo. Each Monday, we give some classic musical the patented GayBoy treatment, replete with bitchy screencaps. As penance for our sin against St. Judy, we thought we'd start off with another icon, so on Monday, life's candy and the sun's a ball of butter, bitches because we are taking on Funny Girl.

50 comments:

macasism said...

You bitches rock my world. I will never understand people with so little imagination that they can't enjoy Fred Astaire.

Speaking of Fred, while you're watching any of his thrilling films, remember that each of his dance numbers were filmed in one take and the camera always shows the dancers' entire body. No tricky editing. Those people could really dance.

Ann Miller! That's one of my favorite numbers, ever!

Anonymous said...

OMG, do you guys have regular day jobs? When do you have time for all the blogging?

Not complaining, I am in AWE.

frogboots said...

you know, i have always wished that, just for a day, my life could be like a musical. you know, walking down the street, shopkeepers popping out to sing and dance, sexy men twirling me around, standing on fountains or other public statuary and proclaiming how great it is to be a girl.....all while fabulously dressed (like grace kelly in rear window) and dancing in killer high heels.

my life is almost the exact opposite of this.

how depressing.

annabelle said...

Musical Mondays? Really? I love musicals. I grew up with them. When I was in elementary school, the thing I was most excited about for high school was doing the musicals.

Thank you Gay Boys! You've just made everything better, again!

Yomanda said...

I've never seen Funny Girl, but I anxiously await your take on it. Loved what you did for White Christmas (which I have seen about 100 times).

Seriously, though, when do you guys go to your "real" jobs? And when do you sleep? How do you have time for 3 blogs that are all outstanding?

Keep the fabulousness coming. Just get some rest, k? I'm worried about you.

KarinGal said...

Thanks for all you do. You guys are the gay boyfriends I've always wished I had.

Vic said...

Thank you! My personal Hollywood musical library is huge. Mom and I used to sing all the great songs at the top of our lungs as she drove me around in the good old days.

Please do not forget Fred and Ginger. Their movies were not shot in glorious technicolor, but they might as well be. That's how I remember them.

Jules said...

Boys, you are the BEST! I loooove musicals & raised my daughter to loooove musicals. We love to debate soundtracks of stage vs. screen productions of the same show, whether a "better" voice did a given role, lamenting a favorite song being omitted in the transition from stage to screen, etc.

Can't WAIT for your Musical Mondays!

net said...

I adore you. Nuf said

twodogmom said...

Just when I thought things couldn't get any better- Musical Mondays - yippee!!! You 2 boys have NO idea how refreshing your blogs are, and how much fun they add to my day. Rave on, girlfriends!!!!!

VpO said...

Well Said!

I love you bitches!

thombeau said...

XOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXO!!!

This is something that people either get or they don't. If they don't, they tend to discount the genre completely, which shows a marked lack of imagination on their part.

People forget that cinema is the art of sound and vision. It doesn't have to make any sense what-so-ever. It's all about imagery, artifice, and archetypes. Plot and character development are secondary. Ultimately, it's about ritual and primal symbolism, though most people don't view a film with those things in mind. And they don't have to. Just go for the ride and enjoy it!

I know we all look forward to your views on these techinicolor extravaganzas, and the dialogues that will ensue. Glamour! Glitz! Ethel Merman! Mitzi Gaynor! Gay dancers and designers! What's not to love?!

Anonymous said...

WHHHAAAAT???? People don't just break out in song in the middle of conversation? Dear GAWD, no wonder I get strange looks from passersby....

Vera said...

This post made me a little tear-y. Especially the last photo. God damn that bitch was beautiful in Show Boat.

Personal favorites (short list);

-Jane Russell's entire perforamnce in "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes."

-Ann Miller's "Too Darn Hot" number from "Kiss Me Kate" (the reason I turned to theatre at age 4 and never looked back)

-Howard Keel (a.k.a. my baby daddy) in just about anything, but especially "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers"

-The entire film "Gigi."

Gorgeous Things said...

I love it! Where else can I get my fix of musical movies! Oh, I can't wait for critiques of such beauties as "Meet Me in St. Louis", "Camelot", and of course, that classic of classics, "Xanadu".

But let's also not forget some of the littler screen gems - like the "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and "Scrubs" musical episodes too, please????

Anonymous said...

Do you know how CLOSE I was to writing to you and saying, "I love you, but honestly, where are the musicals?"

You just made me very happy.

And damnit - now I've got so many movies to get off of Netflix and annoy the hell out of my sisters with.

- The Maljax

mjude said...

funny girl is my favorite movie of all time. i have loved babs since i was a little catholic irish/italian girl.
be kind bitches!

Mishi said...

Omigod! I love you! Can I feel special and ask if my dreamgirls e-mail had anything to do with this? Because I asked if you'd write about that. Which you should see because the clothes are fucking fabulous (and the music is good too) And yayyyy! I'm such a musical theatre geek/broadway junkie/whatever.

Anonymous said...

Musical Mondays??? I WORSHIP YOU!!! <3

Anonymous said...

I love you guys, and I am a big fan of musicals. Are you going to review my favorites, the original, Rex Harrison in tight pants, "Dr. Doolittle"? and I await "my fair lady " with baited breath.

Thanks for being so damn awesome

madelineanne said...

Can you guys feel the love tonight?! Because I am sending you a spoonfull of sugar, the stars and the moon, and 76 trombones of love!!
I can't wait!
I especially love the inclusion of Gene Kelly, one of the most joyous performers ever!!!
And if you guys haven't ever seen "Funny Face" (which I don't think gets the attention it deserves) you should check it out. Audrey Hepburn, Fred Astaire, Paris. *SWOOOON*
Thank you darlings!!

twc said...

Musical Mondays!! YES!!!

There is little that thrills me more than senseless bursting into song and gratuitous tap-dancing. I've been captivated by musicals since my early teens, and passed that on to my kids.

I was incredibly envious of one of my kids, who was able to take a class entitled, "History of American Musical Theater," in college and get credit for writing about Gwen Verdon. It was a terrific paper, if I must say so myself. (This in spite of the fact that the kid in question has a very technical major.)

Anyway, I'm looking forward to your take on the shows. I've probably seen them all ... except "Cats." I just couldn't bring myself to sit through that one.

xoxoxo!

BrianB said...

You guys have my heart!

Your take on movie musicals being a reflection of the cultural and social norms of their times couldn't be more right! People who dismiss them aren't seeing that behind the dance numbers, costumes and plotlines are real statements about what people are going through in their lives. Musicals just give you life with a lot more pizazz.

My hope is that you'll blog "The Band Wagon", one of the most wonderful musicals of all and one that so many people don't know about.

Oh, and my personal theory is that it was written into Gene Kelly's contract that the ass in all his trousers was to be tailored exactly to his perfect cheeks! Take a look in any of his movies, NOT A WRINKLE!

Now I'm going to watch "Cover Girl" with Gene's ass and Rita Hayworth in all that Technicolor!

BrianB

la glitterati said...

I know we're talking about MOVIE musicals, BUT I would definitely say that the stage musical as an artform has been devolving over the past few decades...Seriously, though- you two should start a campaign to get Steve to write one more good 'un! Bounce! Come on, Mr. Sondheim, you can do better than that!

P.S. If you're going to tackle an icon: Liza, boys, Liza...with a muthaf-ing Z!

winged_sheep said...

Wowwww... I can't wait for Mondays now! How do you guys keep crawling inside my hetero middle-aged woman's head and telling me what ideas are inside, but more cogently than I could ever do? And braver too? Bring on the Mondays!

Suzanne said...

Oh my God I about passed out. Funny Girl!!! I am verklempt!

Alice said...

YEAH MUSICALS! What a way to make Mondays enjoyable. When I was little my sister and I watched every old musical and dance and sing along. I think I was 10 when I saw A Chorus Line for the first time and learned all about T & A.

Sewhat? said...

THIS is why I love you two.

Clio Bluestocking said...

Yes! YES! YES!! You put it so beautifully! The singing and dancing are metaphors for those incredible emotional moments in life when you really do want to break out in song. Then, the incredible talent those actors had.

This: "Vibrating her legs like a grasshopper" is probably the dirtiest thing I have read, well, in longer than I'd care to remember.

Valpal said...

"Vibrating her legs like a grasshopper" is probably the dirtiest thing I have read, well, in longer than I'd care to remember.

Or maybe since the last T&L entry!

Bill said...

Just when you think life can't get any better, along comes Musical Monday!!!

You guys are like Christmas!

You bitches better dish, too, 'cause Kay Medford and Lee Allen got screwed out of a great song and dance because the movie dropped some terrific numbers from the Broadway stage version.

riley of oc said...

Every morning I end my daily online news reading with your blogs. I've been a sideline participant, laughing and relishing your posts while silently cursing you because I wish I could write such perfect bitchery.

Nonetheless, Musical Mondays prompted me to write in. Please add one of my favorites, Brigadoon, to your list. Gene Kelly, Van Johnson and Cyd Charisse...big sigh.

Granite Janet said...

Sigh. Leslie Caron. I fell in love with her eons ago.

I adore musicals and have been known to trot off by myself to an old fashioned theater (the kind with velvet flocked seats and a Whirlitzer) just so I can escape into something spectacular, such as Singing in the Rain.

Anonymous said...

LOVE.IT.

Please say you are going to announce each Monday's Musical ahead of time. This will give each of us "musical"-ly challenge fans a chance to view it first.

Anonymous said...

Funny Girl. OMG! When Nicky Arnstein (Omar Sharif, OMG!) whispers "I love you" to Fanny Brice on the pier... To this day my heart still skips @ that line even though I used to watch that flick daily. Can't wait!

Love you guys!

Anonymous said...

vera said...
-Howard Keel (a.k.a. my baby daddy) in just about anything, but especially "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers"

YES!
The Human Oak Tree. When HK was in the movie, you just felt secure. Sex personified in Kiss Me Kate. The only reason I even bothered to watched Dallas.
Gorgeous, gorgeous man.

Carly said...

OH.
DEAR.
GOD.
Musical Mondays. I just need a moment to take it all in :D

Anonymous said...

OK I will be the first one to admit that I just don't get musicals. But after reading your remarks, I will try to be less judgmental. I will try to be more tolerant of things I don't generally respond to. Your insights are always keen and worthy of reflection.

Tom in Chicago said...

OK, I feel about Barbra the way you feel about Judy. I just don't get it. But whatever, I'm sure (as with all of your blogging) I'll enjoy it any way.

Gene Kelly's ass---is there anything finer? He is a GOD--I love "Singin' in the Rain", but he saves "Summer Stock".

Sigh.

Well I guess I know what I'm doing instead of watching the Super Bowl.

Anonymous said...

Oh my god, so happy to hear you're taking this on.
Can you please solve the problem of Vera Ellen's Waist? I think she's made of pipe cleaners.

personette said...

i just want to say in advance that i am going to cry if you say anything too nasty about barbra and funny girl.

HOWEVER, the original broadway cast album is LEAGUES (leagues I tell you) better than the motion picture soundtrack.

living in gayland...
p

K. said...

ha. i think the people at netflix are going to be bewildered by the sudden surge in requests for the likes of "brigadoon" and "funny face."

Granite Janet said...

Ha! Just told my nine year old about Musical Mondays. His response? "Ooohhh, mom. Do we have to?"

Ha! What a great torture method. Makes up for those early two-year old trantrum days. :-D

Granite Janet said...

PS -- Is it ok to admit I don't get Judy or Babs?

kora in hell said...

There are musicals and then there are Busby Berkeley's gorgeous, lunatic spectacles.

Aside from cinema classics like 42nd St. (a work art), let's talk about that obscenely surreal "The Gang's All Here":

Carmen Miranda AND kaleidoscopically choreographed giant bananas: if that isn't a gay heaven (or at least a really good acid trip) then tell me what is?!

yawningdog said...

Can't wait until you get to my favorites, "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes", "Victor/Victoria", and "My Fair Lady".

BigAssBelle said...

the idea of utopia. A perfect world through song and dance and color.

i am thrilled with the idea of musical mondays. fabulous.

terri said...

Love, love LOVE musicals!

I almost dumped the boyfriend last month when he kept on interrupting Gigi on AMC. He kept on whining and wanted to watch Star Trek or something, lol.

chicksinger said...

Casting my vote for "On the Town." I watched it a few years ago with a couple of straight guys who are into film but not necessarily musicals, and I'd never realized what an odd musical it is. Definitely not what they were expecting when I told them we'd be watching a musical.

Anonymous said...

Can't wait 'til you get to the 80s! Can't Stop the Music, Xanadu, The Apple - "classic" bad musicals all.

KiP