Monthly Archives: December 2020

  • The Prom

    Ryan Murphy (2020)

    When their musical biopic of Eleanor Roosevelt (Eleanor!) closes after a single performance, on-the-skids stars Dee Dee Allen (Meryl Streep) and Barry Glickman (James Corden) drown their sorrows in the company of perennial chorus girl Angie Dickinson (Nicole Kidman) and – behind the bar – Trent Oliver (Andrew Rannells), a Juilliard graduate turned resting actor.  Dee Dee and Barry decide they need a cause to reboot their careers and create the entirely misleading impression that they’re interested in someone other than themselves.  Angie learns on Twitter about Emma Nolan (Jo Ellen Pellman), a lesbian teenager in Edgewater, Indiana whose school prom has been cancelled because she wanted to attend with another girl as her partner.  The New York theatre foursome sets off for Edgewater to adopt Emma as their cause and win Hoosier hearts and minds.

    The Prom started life as a stage musical, with music by Matthews Sklar, lyrics by Chad Beguelin and book by Beguelin and Bob Martin.  Originally staged in Atlanta for a few weeks in 2016, it opened on Broadway two years later.  Although it got plenty of critical praise and Tony (etc) nominations, the show didn’t show a profit.  The Prom‘s commercial future looked rosier from the moment that Ryan Murphy, the hugely successful and influential TV showrunner, announced, in April 2019, that he wanted to turn it into a film.  Murphy lost no time making things happen.  Within a matter of weeks, he’d signed up Meryl Streep, Nicole Kidman, James Corden and others.  The Prom, with a screenplay by Beguelin and Martin, started shooting before the end of the year.

    The result has a few things in common with Mamma Mia!  They’re musicals in which Meryl Streep stars and epitomises the whole cast’s zestful enjoyment of what they’re doing, daft and camp as it mostly is.  Both films are disorienting, though for different reasons.  Whenever a lot of people sang and danced together in Mamma Mia!, the number plunged into organised chaos.  Phyllida Lloyd, a much-respected theatre director, was a film-making novice, and how it showed.  Like her, Ryan Murphy is better known for work in a different medium but has directed two feature films before this one (the poorly-received 2006 adaptation of Augusten Burroughs’s startling, funny memoir Running with Scissors and, four years later, Eat Pray Love, which made plenty of money despite mediocre reviews).  Murphy’s direction isn’t all over the place as Lloyd’s was.  His film’s silliness is far more knowing.  Even so, The Prom is bewildering – it’s hard to keep up with the rapid shifts in tone.

    The opening satire of self-obsessed luvvies is so broad that the first few minutes are like a comedy sketch (an expensively produced one).  You know this can’t be sustained for the length of a feature film, and it isn’t.  The situations and characters in Edgewater are broadly drawn, too, but the film isn’t making fun of Emma’s plight or of the anxieties of Alyssa Greene (Ariana DeBose), her closeted inamorata, whose mother (Kerry Washington) is the robustly narrow-minded chair of Edgewater High School’s PTA.  Emma and Alyssa need help.  Once they and the visitors to Indiana meet, the latter must therefore be a force for good, in spite of their ignobly egocentric motives for descending on the place.  After all, Dee Dee, Barry et al aren’t faking their belief in gay rights, which sets them apart from any of the locals in evidence, except Tom Hawkins (Keegan-Michael Key), the high school’s liberal-minded principal.  With the battle lines drawn, the narrative veers rapidly back and forth between making fun of the main characters and making sure that they carry the day.

    The Prom, improbably, manages to keep this going for over two hours without getting dull – even though a big difference between it and Mamma Mia! is that the songs here, though very numerous, are no great shakes.  The entertainment quotient is thanks mostly to Matthew Libatique’s vivid cinematography and the high-powered cast.  There are no real weaknesses in it although, if The Prom hadn’t already existed, you might suspect the thin role of Angie Dickinson (why does she share her name with a real star of yesteryear?) was invented to give Nicole Kidman something, but not enough, to do.  Meryl Streep, who looks lovely, and James Corden overplay with almost indecent verve.  They complement each other well until the gulf between them in acting range emerges as Murphy turns to the melancholy backstories of Dee Dee and Barry – her unhappy marriage, his tragically isolated formative years (Sam Pillow plays him as a teenager).  Barry is revealed to be a narcissist faute de mieux ­­– because the homophobic culture he grew up in denied him self-respect as a gay man.  In these supposedly touching moments, James Corden is phony as he never is doing the OTT thespian.  (It probably doesn’t help that Tracey Ullman, who briefly appears as the mother who rejected Barry and must now make belated amends, gives the impression of having walked into the film straight from her quick-fire impressions TV show.)  For Meryl Streep, in contrast, the temporary switches into but-seriously mode are effortless.  Neither side of Dee Dee is any kind of stretch for Streep, though she gets a good physical workout in the role.

    Jo Ellen Perlman is very likeable as Emma but the most striking character in Edgewater – in the whole film, in fact – is Principal Hawkins.  That’s partly because Keegan-Michael Key is relatively, and appealingly, low-key; partly because of what the concoction he’s playing says about The Prom’s mechanics.  Dee Dee immediately likes the look of Tom Hawkins; he immediately tells her he’s a super-fan – of musical theatre and her especially (he’s made repeated trips to New York to see her Broadway shows).  Although she’s pleased with the adoration, Dee Dee is also disappointed:  she assumes the good-looking, unmarried Tom, since he knows all her big show numbers backwards, must be gay.  As the role is written, he might just as well be – except that he’s not (by the end of the film, he and Dee Dee are an item).  Don’t ask either how this modern, enlightened man came to be appointed high-school principal in a town like Edgewater.

    Because its name signals Backwater, I assumed Edgewater was a made-up place but a quick look online tells me it really exists.  You’re bound to wonder what its residents think of The Prom‘s characterisation of their culture, especially since Emma’s story is inspired by an actual controversy ten years ago at a Mississippi high school.  (Ryan Murphy was born and raised in Indianapolis but that doesn’t explain the choice of setting: it’s the same in the original stage show, whose authors aren’t from Indiana.)  It’s remarkable, however, that the film keeps the locals who appear on screen to a minimum.  Alyssa’s mother and four dreary straight teenagers, who verbally abuse Emma and blame her for the prom’s cancellation, all see the light in due course.  Benighted Hoosiers are otherwise conspicuous by their absence from the film – most conspicuously at the climactic rearranged prom, which appears to draw LGBTQ+ youngsters from across the country.  

    Peter Bradshaw concludes his enthusiastic review in the Guardian as follows:

    ‘Of course there is no question of the music-theatre megastars seriously conceding anything to conservative-minded locals, other than the time-honoured virtue of putting aside your self-love for a bit.  But self-love is the whole point.’

    True enough and Ryan Murphy does illustrate different kinds of self-love, ranging from Emma and Alyssa’s proper self-esteem to Dee Dee and Barry’s extravagant ego-tripping, which is improper but supposedly irresistible.  There’s a smug hypocrisy behind this apparent generosity, though:  Murphy, Chad Beguelin and Bob Martin are predictably selective about the contexts in which self-approval is a virtue and/or a hoot.  It’s OK when it reflects the ethos of liberal-minded Broadway, not OK in small-town Indiana – except where it opposes the status quo.  Muffling its own prejudices, The Prom is as blinkered as it’s right on.  This can’t have been the film’s intention but it ended up reminding me there’s no one more self-loving than Donald Trump.

    17 December 2020

  • Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom

    George C Wolfe (2020)

    Five years have passed since Denzel Washington announced the forthcoming screen adaptation of all ten plays in August Wilson’s ‘Pittsburgh Cycle’, four years since the first adaptation, Fences, came to fruition.  The idea was that one film-of-the-play would be released each year on HBO.  The project has since moved to Netflix though Washington has retained his overall executive producer role for the series.  It’s been a long interval between Fences and the next adaptation – of Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, now streaming on Netflix after a short theatrical release (very short in London, thanks to the latest COVID closure of cinemas).  The good news is that George C Wolfe’s film was worth waiting for.  I managed to see Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom at BFI shortly before the place went dark again and watched it a second time, eight days later, on Netflix.

    The time is 1927, the place a Chicago recording studio, where Gertrude ‘Ma’ Rainey (Viola Davis), ‘Mother of the Blues’, is about to record songs for a new album.  Ma has a reputation for being difficult.  Her failure to arrive punctually for the session increases the jitters of her manager, Irvin (Jeremy Shamos), and Mel Sturdyvant (Jonny Coyne), who owns the studio.  The delay also allows time for tempers to fray in Ma’s four-man band.  The senior members – trombonist Cutler (Colman Domingo), double bassist Slow Drag (Michael Potts), and, especially, white-haired Toledo (Glynn Turman), the band’s pianist – are repeatedly, intentionally provoked by Levee (Chadwick Boseman), an ambitious, cocksure young trumpeter.  Determined to succeed in the music industry, Levee writes his own compositions, which Sturdyvant has asked to see.  To settle an argument, Cutler asks Irvin which version of a song is to be used for the session ahead – the band’s usual arrangement or Levee’s variation on it.  Irvin’s answer isn’t the one that Cutler, Slow Drag and Toledo were banking on.

    Ma Rainey gets off to a slightly awkward start, though the very first sequence is effective.  In Bainesville, Georgia, two Black teenage boys run through a dark wood; on the soundtrack, dogs bark.  You naturally fear that the boys are fleeing racist pursuers who mean them harm.  Instead, beyond the edge of the wood, are crowds, lights and a banner advertising a Ma Rainey show.  The boys aren’t running away; they’re running towards a good time for the local Black community.  After a bit of Ma’s singing, the screen cuts to contemporary newspaper front pages that encourage Black Southerners to head North for better (menial) jobs, then to another Ma Rainey show, in Chicago, enjoyed by a similarly enthusiastic African-American audience.  As scene-setting, this works well enough but it entails George C Wolf playing his Ma card too early.  Her late arrival at the recording session is surely designed to build expectation of her singing.  Wolfe reveals the performer and the voice before the film is barely underway.

    Wolfe has directed cinema features (and television) before but remains much better known for theatre, most notably as director of the original Broadway production of (both parts of) Tony Kushner’s Angels in AmericaMa Rainey’s uncertain opening may reflect Wolfe’s lack of film-making imagination but perhaps the same quality, combined with a theatre director’s appreciation of Wilson’s play as a play, strengthens what follows.  The action does occasionally move out of the recording studio.  We see Ma’s departure from her hotel, accompanied by Dussie Mae (Taylour Paige), her young girlfriend, and Sylvester (Dusan Brown), her nephew; a kerfuffle with a white policeman (Joshua Harto), following an incident with Ma’s car as it approaches the studio; the sea of white faces that confronts two of the band when they go to a nearby bar in search of the Coca Cola that Ma demands.  Wolfe doesn’t do much, however, to disguise Ma Rainey‘s theatrical nature and the sequences mentioned don’t feel like attempts to open out the material for the sake of doing so.  Nor do they detract from the emotional momentum developing inside the studio.  After a while, the tensions there are so strong that the short external interludes are a chance to draw breath.

    Wolfe’s use of the recording area and other small rooms within the studio is much more confident and consistent than Denzel Washington’s use of the Maxson family house and backyard in Fences.  In any case, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom looks to be – assuming that Ruben Santiago-Hudson’s screenplay is faithful to Wilson’s original script – a better play.  It has a slender plot but an expansive back story.  In a series of monologues, Ma and her band members give voice to recollections of key moments in their personal history, and to their conflicting outlooks on the world and their place in it.  Even if parts of these testimonies are embroidered or invented, they’re both passionately individual and illustrative of Black American history more generally in the early years of the twentieth century.  And of course it doesn’t matter that (as I understand it) Ma Rainey is the only one of these five characters based on a real person.

    The principals are representative, too, of different stages in the evolution of blues music.  Levee insists that his more improvisational approach is the future; he derides his fellow instrumentalists and, by extension, Ma Rainey herself as ‘jug band’ merchants.  (His seduction of Dussie Mae in another room of the studio is a complementary aspect of his resolve to usurp Ma’s authority.)  Sturdyvant’s eventual rejection of his pieces is the rebuff that triggers Levee’s appalling act at the end of the film.  In its closing sequence, a white band is recording in the studio.  The vocalist’s rendition (of a number called ‘Skip, Skat, Doodle-Do’) is, compared with Ma Rainey’s singing, impersonal and uninteresting but it’s fine by Sturdyvant, now noticeably more relaxed than hitherto.  This finale is far from pat, though.  Levee, screwed by Sturdyvant, destroys his own future but isn’t wrong about the jazz future.

    At one point, Levee draws a knife on the three other musicians but hasn’t used it by the time Wolfe cuts to a resumption of the recording session that includes the full quartet.  The bad feelings between the men haven’t been resolved but the threat of violence seems to have been averted.  It re-emerges and is shockingly realised after Sturdyvant tells Levee his compositions aren’t what the record-buying public wants.  Like Ma, Levee, at the start, arrives at the studio in his own time.  Before doing so, he sees a flash pair of shoes in a shop window and buys them.  At the other end of the film, Toledo inadvertently treads on Levee’s foot.  Toledo can’t do more than scuff one of the new shoes but Levee reacts as if they’re ruined.  And so they are:  the shoes are an expression of Levee’s self-regarding difference from the rest of the band and, as such, akin to his now rejected songs.  (As an emblem of prestige, the shoes also echo Ma, who comes to the studio draped in a fur boa – then complains of the heat.)  Levee won’t let the matter drop; Toledo’s mild apologies and telling him to calm down make matters worse; the younger man draws his knife again and stabs the older man, who dies in his arms.  On one level, Levee’s action hardly makes sense; on another, the climactic blood-letting in Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom is a necessary catharsis.  It’s a real coup de théâtre, superbly played by Chadwick Boseman and Glynn Turman.

    With Denzel Washington and Viola Davis reprising their Tony-winning roles from the 2010 Broadway revival of the play, the screen version of Fences often came across as an attempt to preserve on film a celebrated stage production.  This isn’t the case with Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, first staged on Broadway in 1984 and last revived there in 2003.  Instead, the film has turned out to be a different, sadder commemoration, of Chadwick Boseman, who died in August this year, during post-production.  The film is dedicated to Boseman, ‘in celebration of his artistry and heart’.  Watching him, perhaps especially as he delivers Levee’s expletive-ridden denunciation of divine injustice, it’s hard to put out of your mind that he’s no more and Boseman’s dynamism makes it even harder.  So do the often static backgrounds, which throw that dynamism into sharper relief.

    There’s a minor disadvantage to this:  Wolfe’s direction has the effect of showcasing the actors in a way that keeps you very aware that these are performances.  That’s particularly the case in Viola Davis’s first scenes, where Wolfe seems too keen to stress Ma Rainey’s larger-than-life presence and does so simply by keeping the camera on her, without much else going on.  The problem vanishes once Davis gets the chance to interact with others, and to develop her physical portrait of Ma.  With her low-slung bosom and prominent belly (Davis either put on plenty of weight for the film or has been expertly padded), and gold teeth colour-coordinated with her shiny gown, she cuts an extraordinary figure.  Her deliberate walk is essential to her personality.  Ma knows how musically special she is but has no illusions about the music industry’s strictly circumscribed interest in her.  (Foreseeing the end of that interest, she likens it to a john rolling dispassionately away from the hooker who has served her purpose.)  Ma therefore knows, too, how much she needs to keep asserting her specialness.

    The self-assertion doesn’t always require shouting.  Davis often conveys Ma’s aggressive authority more imaginatively – and powerfully – than by raising her speaking voice.  It’s when she sings (and she does her own singing) that she lets rip.  Her delivery of the song that gives the piece its title, and whose funny, risqué lyrics give a sense of the subversive nature of the blues as they started to impact on white audiences, is tremendous.  Among the supporting cast, Glynn Turman is outstanding as Toledo, an underdog bristling with dapper rectitude; Colman Domingo and Michael Potts are both effective as the less forthright members of the band.  I wasn’t so keen on Taylour Paige albeit that she has little to do but strike coquettish poses.  Paige is, in effect, a feed for the leads to show their character’s feelings about Dussie Mae, which Viola Davis and Chadwick Boseman both do wonderfully.  Jeremy Shamos and Jonny Coyne are adequate as Irvin and Sturdyvant but their playing is busily stagy beside that of the Black actors.

    If the visual mobility of the film (shot by Tobias A Schliessler) is limited, the emotional mobility of the main performances and the plot is anything but.  In one of her monologues, Ma Rainey describes what blues music means to her.  As she finishes ‘Black Bottom’, Viola Davis expresses Ma’s delight at laying down a track the way she wanted.  It’s a highly effective touch that her euphoria is short-lived.  Ma has insisted that Sylvester, despite his serious speech impediment, deliver the album intro (‘I promised his mama’).  Several takes are needed before he manages to subdue his stammer to utter a couple of sentences.  No sooner has Ma completed the song, her face breaking into an excited, uncharacteristic grin, than Sturdyvant informs her the recording has failed because of Sylvester’s microphone.

    At its close, George C Wolfe’s film has moved a long way from its unsure start.  Levee clutches the man he’s slain; in the back of her car, driving away from the studio, Ma looks dejected and exhausted.  The two images differently capture the characters’ particular tragedies and the heft of ethnic history that August Wilson uses them to represent.  Well into the last month of 2020, a succession of high-profile disappointments – Da 5 Bloods, Hillbilly Elegy, I’m Thinking of Ending Things, Mank, The Trial of the Chicago 7 – was getting me down.  To some cineaste eyes, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom may not be properly filmic yet it’s a better screen drama than any of these others.  Its story ends with a knife in the back but the film is a shot in the arm.

    10, 18 December 2020

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