Let's Dance (1950 film)
Let's Dance | |
---|---|
Directed by | Norman Z. McLeod |
Screenplay by | Allan Scott Dane Lussier (add. dialogue) |
Produced by | Robert Fellows |
Starring | Betty Hutton Fred Astaire |
Cinematography | George Barnes (cinematographer) |
Edited by | Ellsworth Hoagland |
Music by | Robert Emmett Dolan |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date | November 29, 1950 |
Running time | 111-112 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $2.4 million (US rentals)[1] |
Let's Dance is a 1950 musical romantic comedy Technicolor film starring Betty Hutton and Fred Astaire, and released by Paramount Pictures.
Plot
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A war widow returns to work with her former dancing partner, but her upper class mother-in-law is aghast that her grandson is being exposed to show business and takes legal steps to gain custody.
Cast
- Betty Hutton as Kitty McNeil
- Fred Astaire as Donald Elwood
- Roland Young as Edmund Pohlwhistle
- Ruth Warrick as Carola Everett
- Lucile Watson as Serena Everett
- Gregory Moffett as Richard Everett
- Barton MacLane as Larry Channock
- Shepperd Strudwick as Timothy Bryant
- Melville Cooper as Charles Wagstaffe
- Harold Huber as Marcel
- George Zucco as Judge Mackenzie
- Peggy Badley as Bubbles Malone
- Virginia Toland as Elsie
Production
Buoyed by the great success of MGM teaming Astaire with their biggest female musical star Judy Garland in the 1948 musical blockbuster Easter Parade, Paramount decided to team Astaire with their biggest female musical star (Hutton) hoping that the same box-office magic would happen. Unfortunately, the film did not repeat the earlier film's success.
While the film did reasonably well financially, overall it proved to be a disappointment. Let's Dance was completely overshadowed by Hutton's other musical film of 1950, Annie Get Your Gun, which became one of the highest-grossing films of the year.
Ironically, Hutton was loaned to MGM to replace Garland (because of illness) as Annie Oakley in Annie Get Your Gun. Also, Astaire's character's first name in Let's Dance (Don) is the same first name as his character in Easter Parade.
Frank Loesser wrote the music.
References
Notes
- ^ 'The Top Box Office Hits of 1950', Variety, January 3, 1951
External links
- Let's Dance at IMDb
- Let's Dance at the TCM Movie Database
- Let's Dance at AllMovie
- Let's Dance at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
- 1950 films
- 1950s musical comedy films
- 1950s romantic comedy films
- American musical comedy films
- American romantic comedy films
- American romantic musical films
- Films directed by Norman Z. McLeod
- Paramount Pictures films
- Films based on novels
- English-language films
- Films shot in Technicolor
- Musical comedy film stubs
- Romantic musical film stubs