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London Town | |
---|---|
Directed by | Wesley Ruggles |
Written by | Val Guest Sig Herzig Elliot Paul |
Produced by | Wesley Ruggles |
Starring | Sid Field Petula Clark Greta Gynt Kay Kendall Sonnie Hale Tessie O'Shea |
Cinematography | Erwin Hillier |
Edited by | Sidney Stone |
Music by | Jimmy Van Heusen (lyrics by Johnny Burke) |
Distributed by | Eagle-Lion Distributors Limited |
Release date |
|
Running time | 126 min |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £1 million[1] or $2 million[2] |
London Town (also known as My Heart Goes Crazy [3]) is a 1946 Technicolor musical film directed by Wesley Ruggles and starring Sid Field and Petula Clark.[3] The screenplay was by Sig Herzig, Val Guest and Elliot Paul, based on a story by Ruggles. According to Allmovie, the film was "one of the most notorious flops in the history of the British cinema."[4]
Comedian Jerry Sanford arrives in London believing he has been hired as the star of a major stage production, when in fact he is merely an understudy. Thanks to his daughter Peggy, who sabotages the revue's star Charlie de Haven, he finally gets his big break. The premise allows for a variety of musical numbers and comedy sketches.
The critical and financial failure of the extravagant film, Britain's first major Technicolor musical, is part of British film legend. Financed by the Rank Organisation at a time of rationing and shortages of materials in the period immediately after World War II, it was filmed in the shell of "Sound City Shepperton", which had been made available as a film studio after being requisitioned during the war as a factory for aircraft parts. (The studio was later renamed Shepperton Studios and is still used for film production).[6]
Music Hall performer Field had cheered up wartime London audiences with his hugely successful stage variety shows, including Strike a New Note (1943), Strike it Again (1944), and Piccadilly Hayride (1946), so he seemed a natural for the lead. As he was of the opinion that no British director was capable of making a good musical, he insisted on having an American at the helm, and the task fell to Wesley Ruggles, who produced as well.[6]
Given that Ruggles had no experience with the genre – his best-known films at that point were the Academy Award-winning Western epic Cimarron (1931) and the Mae West comedy I'm No Angel (1933), both more than a decade old – and his Hollywood career was on a downslide, he was an odd choice indeed.[7]
Val Guest said he did not write the script but he "did a script of all Sid's stuff" because they had worked together on stage.[8]
J. Arthur Rank spent large sums of money for American songwriters (Jimmy Van Heusen and Johnny Burke), musicians (Ted Heath and his orchestra), and costumes by the legendary designer Orry-Kelly, while at the same time re-equipping the studio from the ground up. He was confident that box-office business was booming at the time and that demand for a flashy musical entertainment would be such that he would make a healthy profit, so his financial controls were slack.
Kay Kendall was promoted as England's answer to Lana Turner. "Nobody had ever heard of me but they called me a star", she later recalled. "I opened bazaars, signed autographs, went to premieres, did everything a star was supposed to do. My photograph was on magazine covers and front pages of newspapers. And all before we'd ever finished the picture."[9]
Guest said "Wes Ruggles needed somebody firm on top of him and he didn’t have anybody. I think they were overawed by his “weight” [gravitas] because his biography read like movie history. It just didn’t hang together, it was a very bad script". He added, "I spent quite a lot of time down there trying to hot things up, it was heart-breaking. Sid was also doing a show at the same time, and was having slight drinking problems – not a lot... Wes was sober during shooting yes, absolutely paralytic at night."[8]
So much was spent on production that the film needed to perform better than possible just to break even. However, dismissed by critics (who described it as "tacky" and "tasteless") and ignored by audiences, it was a legendary flop. In hindsight, however, especially for nostalgia fans, many of its kitschy aspects make it fascinating, and film historians consider it an interesting record of the times in which it takes place. Following Britain's victory in the war, it can be seen as a tribute to London and its residents, and as a celebration of popular Cockney culture, especially its music hall traditions.
It should also be pointed out that according to trade papers, the film was a "notable box office attraction" at British cinemas in 1946.[10] According to Kinematograph Weekly it was a runner-up for best box office success in 1946 Britain.[11]
Kay Kendall said after the film's release there were "no more bazaars to open, no more premieres, no more autographs."[9] However her career later recovered and she became a major star of British films, before dying of leukaemia in 1959 at the age of just 32.[12]
According to Val Guest "after it folded in America, they took all Sid’s routines out of the picture and joined them all together and issued it. As a sort of comedy half-hour. And that became the rage in Hollywood, everybody had it at their parties because they thought he was quite fabulous. And Sinatra had special showings, it went around all the people there, it became a cult thing."[8]
Ruggles and Guest were going to make a film together about the Rolls Royce family but those plans ended after the financial failure of London Town.[8]
London Town was the starting point for the career of Susan Shaw.
Songs in London Town include "You Can't Keep a Good Dreamer Down", "The 'Ampstead Way" (most definitely inspired by "The Lambeth Walk" from the earlier stage production Me and My Girl), "Any Way the Wind Blows", a medley of Cockney songs ("Knock 'em in the Old Kent Road"/"Any Old Iron"/"Follow the Van"), "Don't Dilly Dally on the Way" (sung by Charles Collins), and "My Heart Goes Crazy", which was the title under which an abridged U.S. version of the film was released by United Artists in 1953.[13][14]
In September 2006, the film's soundtrack – plus bonus tracks including four early studio recordings by Clark – was released on CD by Sepia Records.[13]
The original two-hour-12 minute version, which never was released commercially, is now available for viewing at the archives at the BFI Southbank.[15]
In September 2011, the full-length version of the film was made commercially available for the first time, when it was released on a PAL DVD by Odeon Entertainment in the U.K. (Running time is listed as 122 mins. on Amazon UK, so that would be shortened. Or, that might simply be running fast at PAL speed, 25 frames per second instead of transferred correctly at film speed of 24 fps.)