The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Director Stanley Donen, famed for landmark film ‘Singin’ in the Rain,’ dies

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STANLEY Donen, the former dancer who directed some of Hollywood’s greatest musicals including Gene Kelly’s landmark ‘Singin’ in the Rain’, ‘Seven Brides for Seven Brothers’ and ‘On the Town’, has died at age 94, according to media reports.

Donen, who was given an honorary lifetime achievemen­t Oscar in 1998 and wowed the crowd with an impromptu song-anddance routine, died of a heart attack on Thursday in New York City, the Chicago Tribune said, citing one of his sons, Mark Donen.

The former Broadway dancer brought hugely imaginativ­e dance sequences to film - Fred Astaire danced up a wall and across a ceiling in ‘Royal Wedding’ (1951) - during a career that establishe­d him as one of the masters of the movie musical.

But Donen also excelled in other genres, directing the witty Faustian comedy ‘Bedazzled’ (1967) with Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, the romancethr­iller ‘Charade’ (1963) with Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn, and the romantic comedy ‘Indiscreet’ (1958) with Grant and Ingrid Bergman.

‘Singin’ in the Rain’ (1952), which Donen co-directed with Kelly, is a song-and-dance classic hailed by the American Film Institute in 2006 as the greatest movie musical ever made.

The film boasts one of most memorable sequences in the history of American cinema - Kelly singing the title song while carrying a umbrella and dancing through a downpour on a street-scene set in an acrobatic, virtuoso solo performanc­e.

The movie, set in the Hollywood of 1927 as films transition­ed from silent to talkies - was only a modest success at the time of its release but gained stature over the years.

Unlike many other musicals, it was made expressly for film and was not an adaptation of a Broadway show. Donald O’Connor, Debbie Reynolds, Jean Hagen and Cyd Charisse co-starred.

Donen also co-directed ‘On the Town’ (1949) with Kelly, who starred with Frank Sinatra in the tale of three sailors on shore leave. The film was shot on location in New York City - the first time that had been done for a musical - and featured enduring songs including “New York, New York.”

‘Royal Wedding’ two years later was Donen’s first solo directing job, with Astaire starring alongside Jane Powell.

Donen directed the ambitious ‘Seven Brides for Seven Brothers’ (1954), which starred Powell and Howard Keel and was nominated for an Oscar as best picture. Like ‘On the Town’, it won an Oscar for best music.

The last of the three films codirected by Donen and Kelly was ‘It’s Always Fair Weather’ (1955). Other musicals Donen directed included: ‘Funny Face’ (1957) with Astaire and Audrey Hepburn; ‘The Pajama Game’ (1957) with Doris Day and codirected by Broadway legend George Abbott; and ‘Damn Yankees!’ (1958) with Tab Hunter, also co-directed with Abbott.

Donen was fortunate enough to work with two of the most accomplish­ed dancers in Hollywood in Kelly and Astaire, and they conjured up breathtaki­ng sequences.

Working as a choreograp­her on ‘Anchors Aweigh’ (1945), directed by George Sidney, Donen created a sequence in which Kelly dances with cartoon mouse Jerry of ‘Tom and Jerry’ fame in a smooth blend of live action and animation.

A year earlier, also working as a choreograp­her, he created a sequence in the film ‘Cover Girl’, directed by Charles Vidor, in which Kelly dances with a ghostly image of himself.

“That was my lucky break,” Donen told the Los Angeles Daily News in 1998. “The director (Vidor) said it couldn’t be done and didn’t want anything to do with it. Harry Cohn, who ran Columbia Studios, asked Gene, ‘Do you think the kid knows what he’s talking about?’ Gene said yes, and Cohn let me do it. So there I was, 19 and filming this sequence.”

 ??  ?? The new movie, voiced by Jay Baruchel, America Ferrera, Cate Blanchett and F. Murray Abraham, tells the story of young Hiccup and his dragon Toothless as a surging dragon population forces them to seek a “Hidden World” supposed to be a utopia for the winged creatures.
The new movie, voiced by Jay Baruchel, America Ferrera, Cate Blanchett and F. Murray Abraham, tells the story of young Hiccup and his dragon Toothless as a surging dragon population forces them to seek a “Hidden World” supposed to be a utopia for the winged creatures.
 ??  ?? Donen hugs his Oscar backstage after receiving the honorary award for life-time achievemen­t Mar 23 at the 70th Annual Academy Awards. — Reuters photo
Donen hugs his Oscar backstage after receiving the honorary award for life-time achievemen­t Mar 23 at the 70th Annual Academy Awards. — Reuters photo

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