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musicalfilm · 1 year
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bing crosby, fred astaire and marjorie reynolds in holiday inn (1942)
✧ :・゚*HAPPY NEW YEAR *:・゚✧
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cressida-jayoungr · 4 months
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One Dress a Day Challenge
Anything Goes December
Holiday Inn / Marjorie Reynolds as Linda Mason
Another Edith Head design. I always knew this dress just had to be gold! The colorized version of this film is honestly not bad, and they took the trouble to research the actual color of the dress. As you can see in the bottom photo, they faithfully reproduced the color. It also has a slit down the back for easy movement. The silver strip creates an interesting effect like a yoked collar, and it also offsets the deepness of the V-neck so that it is less noticeable.
I'm sure Fred Astaire was glad that, unlike the most famous beaded dress on one of his dancing partners, this one didn't have wide sleeves to smack him in the face!
It's also too bad Marjorie Reynolds didn't have more of a film career, because I do find her enjoyable in this.
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citizenscreen · 3 months
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Marjorie Reynolds (August 12, 1917 – February 1, 1997)
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cinematicfinatic · 4 months
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hellooldsmelly · 7 months
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Marjorie Reynolds, 1943
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hollywoodlady · 1 year
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Marjorie Reynolds, Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire in 'Holiday Inn', 1942.
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love-pinups · 2 years
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adamwatchesmovies · 5 months
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Holiday Inn (1942)
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For many reasons, Holiday Inn is a classic but one particular scene prevents it from being a film you'd happily watch over and over. It makes me uncomfortable for multiple reasons but I can kinda-sorta defend it in this movie because of the context in which it's used. It sounds like a weak argument but hold on, listen to what I’ve got to say before you judge. Even if the scene in particular is a deal-breaker, there's a solution.
Jim Hardy (Bing Crosby), his fiancé Lila Dixon (Virginia Dale) and Ted Hanover (Fred Astaire) are a trio of successful singer-dancers. As Jim prepares to retire from the hustle-and-bustle of non-stop performances to live on a farm with his future wife… his partners announce they have no intention of stopping and ditch him. Finding the farm life back-breaking, he converts his home into “Holiday Inn”, an entertainment venue open only on holidays and featuring elaborate dance and musical numbers. The first performer to join Jim's new troupe is Linda Mason (Marjorie Reynolds), whom he quickly falls for but is afraid to show his feelings to due to a broken heart.
Plot-wise, there’s plenty going on. After Holiday Inn is up and running, Linda catches the eye of Ted and his agent, Danny Reed (Walter Abel). They don’t know what her name is, which prompts Jim to hide her from the two and try to keep her “for himself”. It creates all sorts of drama and comedic situations between the whopping twelve original numbers featured throughout this musical. The best and most well-known is White Christmas - yes, this is where that tune comes from. It's never been better than here. The song is romantic and beautiful. Seeing it in its original context fills your heart with warmth. Overall, this is a charming, romantic story filled with sometimes insecure and often messy characters. This is one of those movies that on paper would look awful but in action, works. Big credit goes to Marjorie Reynolds, Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire, who are great together.
Now let’s address the giant stain at the center of this story; the reason why you’ll probably wind up seeing an edited version of it on TV. Once Jim realizes that Ted is searching for Linda, he is desperate to find a way to hide her from his former partner. Unfortunately, he also needs to keep his clients happy with a stage number for Lincoln’s Birthday (February 12, for those who don’t know). His solution is to run the minstrel show number Abraham. This means Crosby and Reynolds (along with the band) appear in blackface so that no one watching will recognize them. It makes your skin crawl and isn’t helped by the limited amount of dialogue given to the black actors in the film (other than Louise Beavers, there aren't any other people of colour in significant roles) but as far as uses of a racist, offensive and disrespectful form of theatrical make-up, it’s probably the least offensive version you’ll see because it's less of a "let's make fun of Black people/find a way to avoid hiring Black actors in our movie" and more of a "hey, it's ok to use this as a costume/disguise, right?". It's still not ideal, but it could've been much worse.
A standout moment in Holiday Inn has aged so poorly that it threatens to derail the entire film. The rest is a funny, romantic and entertaining holiday story. The dance numbers are outstandingly shot, staged and performed. It’s extra exciting to watch because of how few edits break up the footwork and because you know the people making those moves were really doing them. No wires or backgrounds were removed via computer effects. As for the songs, they range from pretty good to instant classics. In the end, I choose not to judge Holiday Inn for its worst scene and would rather focus on its strongest moments. If you don’t think you can, this is one instance where I would break my usual policy and recommend you view the edited-for-TV version. (On DVD, November 30, 2019)
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voidblacktea · 5 months
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Christmas Classics: Holiday Inn (1942) 
Holiday Inn is a weird one, it's a musical-comedy starring Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire, it's a love triangle at a country inn only open during the holidays, it's important because it's the film that gave the world the song White Christmas and this is where the hotel franchise got its name.
There is something very cozy and inviting about the film in general and about the inn where the characters pull together their shows; the story is fun; the songs & dance numbers are great and I really liked Bing Crosby's character, but it features a damn blackface scene that just kills me. In the context of the movie it's not "thaaat bad" I guess - it's a scene where the characters are trying to hide their identity AND the song is praising Abe Lincoln for freeing slaves AND it's 1942 - but it is completely JARRING watching it 80 years later.
You could say Holiday Inn, as a Christmas classic, is the time capsule of a film that contains some really interesting glimpses of both the good and the bad of the time.
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dimepicture · 1 year
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citizenscreen · 7 months
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Bing Crosby, Marjorie Reynolds, Fred Astaire, and Virginia Dale at the HOLIDAY INN (1942)
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cinematicfinatic · 1 year
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hellooldsmelly · 3 months
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Marjorie Reynolds, 1946
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