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Folies Bergre de Paris

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Wikipedia article




'Folies Bergre de Paris' is a 1935 American musical comedy film produced by Darryl Zanuck for 20th Century Films, directed by Roy Del Ruth and starring Maurice Chevalier, Merle Oberon and Ann Southern. At the 8th Academy Awards, the Straw Hat number, choreographed by Dave Gould, won the short-lived Academy Award for Best Dance Direction, sharing the honor with I've Got a Feelin' You're Foolin' from 'Broadway Melody of 1936'. The film, based on the 1934 play 'The Red Cat' by Rudolph Lothar and Hans Adler, is a story of mistaken identity, with Maurice Chevalier playing both a music-hall star and a business tycoon who resembles him. This was Chevaliers last film in Hollywood for twenty years, and reprised familiar themes such as the straw hat and a rendering of the French song "Valentine".Lhomme des Folies Bergere, according to Chevalier by Gene Ringgold and DeWitt Bodeen, published in 1973 by The Citadel Press, Secaucus, New Jersey, (p 130-135). This is also the last film to be distributed by Twentieth Century Pictures before it merged with Fox Film in 1935 to form 20th Century Fox.

Zanuck simultaneously produced a French-language version of the story, also directed by Roy Del Ruth, called '[https://catalog.afi.com/Film/1273-LHOMME-DESFOLIESBERGRE?sid=ebb2f38c-8490-4774-9eac-ea7eea84f538&sr=18.400354&cp=1&pos=0 L'homme des Folies Bergre]'. It stars Chevalier and Natalie Paley and Sim Viva. Because that film was intended for the French market, they shot scenes showing chorus girls bare breasted. When censor Joseph Breen heard of it, he insisted that the Production Code be enforced even in a film destined for another country. The American Film Institute catalog site describes Zanuck's losing battle with the censors.

'The Red Cat', which was produced for the Broadway stage by Zanuck, ran for only 13 performances, but the studio benefited from four film adaptations. The third and fourth versions were in Technicolor, these being 'That Night in Rio,' (1941) directed by Irving Cummings (and starring Don Ameche, Alice Faye and Carmen Miranda) followed by 'On the Riviera' (1951), directed by Walter Lang (and starring Danny Kaye, Gene Tierney and Corinne Calvet.

Cast



* Maurice Chevalier as Eugene Charlier / Baron Fernand Cassini

* Ann Sothern as Mimi

* Merle Oberon as Baroness Genevieve Cassini

* Eric Blore as Francois

* Ferdinand Munier as Morrisot

* Walter Byron as Marquis Ren de Lac

* Lumsden Hare as Gustave

* Robert Greig as Henri

* Ferdinand Gottschalk as Perishot

* Halliwell Hobbes as Monsieur Paulet

* Georges Renavent as Premier of France

* Phillip Dare as Victor

* Frank McGlynn Sr. as Joseph

* Barbara Leonard as Toinette

* Olin Howland as Stage Manager

See also



* Folies Bergre

References



* Green, Stanley (1999) Hollywood Musicals Year by Year (2nd ed.), pub. Hal Leonard Corporation page 41


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