April in Paris

April in Paris

1952 "When they sing... your heart dances! When they dance... your heart sings!"
April in Paris
April in Paris

April in Paris

5.9 | 1h40m | NR | en | Comedy

A series of misunderstandings leads to a chorus girl traveling to Paris to represent the American theater, where she falls in love with a befuddled bureaucrat.

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5.9 | 1h40m | NR | en | Comedy , Music , Romance | More Info
Released: December. 24,1952 | Released Producted By: Warner Bros. Pictures , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

A series of misunderstandings leads to a chorus girl traveling to Paris to represent the American theater, where she falls in love with a befuddled bureaucrat.

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Cast

Doris Day , Ray Bolger , Claude Dauphin

Director

Leo K. Kuter

Producted By

Warner Bros. Pictures ,

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Reviews

Amy Adler Sam (Ray Bolger) works for the State Department and has made a major mistake. Having worked his way up, he is aghast to find that he has sent an invitation for a diplomatic event in Paris to a chorus gal, Ethel "Dynamite" Jackson (Doris Day). One supposes that in the Thirties, Ethel Jackson is a rather common name. But, when Sam goes to "un- invite" Ethel, he arrives just as her fellow chorus girls are throwing a Bon Voyage party. It's awkward to say the least. Nevertheless, when the party finishes, Sam breaks the news. As can be expected, this Dynamite explodes and cries. Sam leaves. The next day, the State Department superior says it was a stroke of genius that Sam invited Ethel as a common citizen and a beauty to be part of the event. Horrors! Now, Sam has to go and persuade a still upset Ethel to go with the group. He succeeds. As the snooty uppercrust officials try to "reform" Ethel's demeanor, way of speaking, and table etiquette, she rebels. Not only that, Sam, an engaged gentleman with his fiancée on board, starts to fall for Ethel hard and visa versa. Yet, this would probably spell trouble for his future diplomatic career. Will love bloom in an April in Paris? This lovely musical is a winning combination of song, dance, and fun. Day and Bolger are a terrific couple and, wow, can they hoof it and dazzle in song. Some of the numbers are so imaginative, too, with Bolger performing a fun scene with President Washington's portrait! Day, too, dances it up in the ship's galley with pots, pans, and cooks. Viewers will also admire the supporting cast, costumes, scenery, script and direction. Don't wait until April, musical fans, to watch this film. It's a winner twelve months of the year!
dmrn-91617 This is one of the most awful movies I've ever seen. Doris Day is wonderful - obviously it must have been hard for her to not be charming and sing delightfully. Truthfully, I had to skip ahead constantly to the scenes where I could just see Doris Day, but she keeps being crowded by a complete cast of creeps, not least the two main male characters. It's one painful French cliché after the other. But nothing is more painful that the "love interest" between Doris Day and Ray Bolger. Brrrrr.Doris Day must be one of the most badly treated actors in Hollywood, castingwise. It's amazing that she is able to deliver a fresh and spontaneous performance in the midst of that plot, those characters and those costumes. Skip.
James Hitchcock "April in Paris" was originally a song from a 1932 Broadway musical revue entitled "Walk a Little Faster". Although the show was not a great success, the song proved highly popular and was recorded by a number of artists. The story goes that a friend of the lyricist E Y Harburg was inspired by its romantic picture of Paris in springtime to visit the French capital during that month but his holiday was ruined by bad weather. Upon his return to America he complained loudly to Harburg who replied "I wouldn't know. I've never been to Paris in April. I was there in June but I needed two syllables to fit the music". Some twenty years later the title came to the attention of someone in Hollywood who decided (as Hollywood producers sometimes do) that it was too good to waste on a mere song and that should also be a film entitled "April in Paris", and this is the result. "Pretty Woman" and "Sweet Home Alabama" are more recent examples of the same phenomenon. Despite the title, only the last few scenes actually take place in Paris; most of the action takes place in Washington, New York or on a transatlantic liner.Samuel Winthrop Putnam is a junior official with the US State Department. (His official title is Assistant Secretary to the Assistant to the Undersecretary of State). He has been tasked with organising American participation in an International Festival of the Arts in Paris. He intends to invite Ethel Barrymore to represent American theatre, but owing to a mix-up the invitation is sent to a Broadway chorus girl named Ethel Jackson. (It is never explained how this happens. It might have been more plausible if the heroine had a surname like "Barrington" or "Barrowman" rather than "Jackson"). This being a romantic comedy, Ethel and Winthrop have to meet on the way to Paris and fall in love. This being a romantic comedy, however, there also have to be a couple of obstacles to their love. The first is that Winthrop (or Sam, as Ethel prefers to call him) is engaged to Marcia, the pushy, snobbish daughter of his boss. The second is that Ethel seems to have a second admirer in the shape of French singer Philippe Fouquet, although it is eventually revealed that Philippe is actually a happily married family man. (He needs to keep this embarrassing secret hidden from the French public who like to believe that all French public figures, especially entertainers, are successful skirt-chasing lotharios). Doris Day can be something of an acquired taste and. I must admit, one I have never really been able to acquire, particularly in romantic comedy where she could come across as being just too sugary sweet to be true, as she does here. Ethel may be nicknamed "Dynamite", but she gives little hint of anything explosive hidden beneath her placid exterior. Ray Bolger seemed miscast as Winthrop; he would have been 48 in 1952, old enough to be Doris Day's father. This may not always have mattered in the fifties, when older man/younger woman love stories were the rule rather than the exception in the cinema, but in this particular film the age difference seems inappropriate. Winthrop, who has been with the State Department for ten years and still has hopes of promotion followed by a political career, is probably supposed to be in his early thirties, not his late forties. Bolger, moreover, did not have a particularly good singing voice, although on the evidence of this film he was clearly a talented dancer. Quite apart from the casting, the main problem with this film (which is, after all, supposed to be a musical) lies with the music. About the only songs which remain in the memory are the title song (written twenty years earlier) and "Auprès de ma Blonde", a traditional French folksong. The original songs written for the film itself are all very bland and forgettable. The film is also supposed to be a comedy, but much of the humour seems tame and contrived. (When the action finally moves to Paris, there is a running gag about the April weather not living up to Ethel's expectations; the scriptwriter must have heard that same anecdote about Harburg and his friend). "April in Paris" seems to have been popular when it first appeared in 1952, but it is one of those films which has lost much of its appeal over the years. 5/10
lpersons-2 I watched this movie last night for the first time and really liked it. It is a wholesome movie with song and dancing and wonderful costumes. I thought the comedy was great and could be enjoyed by the entire family. The movie had good values. I absolutely loved the dress Doris Day had on in scene on the ship, the color, fabrics, and style were magnificent. I never really watched many Doris Day movies, but I have to say she really comes off as "the girl next door" in this movie. I was reminded in many scenes of Ray Bolgers previous acting in the Wizard of Oz, and that would be the only negative I could find for the movie. Not sure why this movie has such a low rating, but I would recommend this movie to everyone.