Charles Walters: The Director Who Made Hollywood Dance

Author:   Brent Phillips
Publisher:   The University Press of Kentucky
ISBN:  

9780813169712


Pages:   368
Publication Date:   25 April 2017
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Charles Walters: The Director Who Made Hollywood Dance


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Author:   Brent Phillips
Publisher:   The University Press of Kentucky
Imprint:   The University Press of Kentucky
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9780813169712


ISBN 10:   0813169712
Pages:   368
Publication Date:   25 April 2017
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

MGM musical lovers -- be they longtime or more recent sweethearts -- will lap up this gracefully presented study of director Charles Walters. [... ] The author's thoroughly readable, enlightening study scores a hit for the University Press of Kentucky. -- Book Reviews by David Marshall James</p>


[A] lively biography... Charles Walters: The Director Who Made Hollywood Dance is really a backstager, opening a curtain on a veritable musical factory, where the workers were all experts and the product a lesson in self-confidence. - Ethan Mordden, Wall Street Journal An extremely significant contribution to film scholarships, full of very precise detail about Walters' multifarious contributions to the show business world in which he operated, demonstrating throughout a serious commitment to its subject, a very great director whose life and work have been grievously overlooked until now. - David Ehrenstein, Keyframe and Cahiers du Cinema A much-needed, very welcome reminder of the genius of Charles Walters, whose work has been too long neglected by historians and students of American film. Phillips offers a lively, convincing argument that Walters should take his place alongside such other greats of musical film as Vincente Minnelli, Stanley Donen, and Gene Kelly. - William J. Mann, author of Kate: The Woman Who Was Hepburn and Tinseltown: Murder, Morphine and Madness at the Dawn of Hollywood It's a treat that readers (like me) will have the opportunity to discover the underrated director-choreographer who created some of the most defining screen numbers for Garland, Astaire, Kelly, Crosby, Sinatra, and others. Get Happy, We're a Couple of Swells , Well Did you Evah? The numbers in his films have been some of my favorites since I was a teenager - this book is for anyone who loves Broadway and Hollywood musicals. - Casey Nicholaw, Tony Award-winning Broadway director-choreographer of The Drowsy Chaperone, The Book of Mormon, and Disney's Aladdin Brent Phillips has provided anyone with a passion for the golden age of Hollywood musicals with a much needed and wonderfully informative biography of director Charles Walters. Phillips makes an excellent case that Walters, who hitherto has been dismissed as a mere company man, was actually a genuine artist whose taste and skill not alone shaped his own films but made enormous contributions to films directed by other better known directors. Phillips also writes sensitively and not sensationally about Walters' private life and how a brave talented gay man could swim through the rough waters of Homophobic Hollywood with his integrity intact. - Charles Busch, actor/playwright ( The Tale of the Allergist's Wife, Die Mommie Die) Easter Parade, The Barkleys of Broadway, and Summer Stock were among my favorite movie musicals as a child - indeed the work of Charles Walters inspired me to become a director and choreographer myself. Now Brent Phillips shines the spotlight on the unsung genius behind some of Hollywood's most iconic musicals, and takes us on the ultimate backstage tour. This book is a must-have for any movie or theater lover's library. - Susan Stroman, Tony Award-winning director and choreographer of The Producers, The Scottsboro Boys, and Bullets Over Broadway Brent Phillips consistently wins the confidence of the reader with his precise, no-nonsense look at the career of director and choreographer Charles Walters. He gives us a full, satisfying account of how Walters worked on films such as EASTER PARADE, SUMMER STOCK and TORCH SONG. Thanks to Phillips' fine work, Walters' place in the history of the MGM is no longer a mere footnote. - Brian Kellow, author of Pauline Kael: A Life in the Dark, Ethel Merman: A Life, and The Bennetts: An Acting Family Brent Phillips makes a staggeringly persuasive case that Charles Walters is one of the most underappreciated directors and choreographers in the annals of film history. The book also brings to light the trailblazing Walters did living openly as a gay man during an era when such things were strictly taboo. Exhaustively researched and impeccably written, this addictive treatise made me rabid to rediscover and reassess Walters' entire oeuvre. It is absolutely essential reading! - Sam Irvin, author of Kay Thompson: From Funny Face to Eloise Chuck Walters was Hollywood's best kept secret. Thankfully, his days as an overlooked and underappreciated artist are finally over. In this informative and engaging biography, Brent Phillips examines the life and legacy of the multi-talented director, dancer and choreographer who brought his special brand of showmanship to every production. From Fred Astaire and Judy Garland strolling along Fifth Avenue in Easter Parade to an invincible Debbie Reynolds on the road to somewhere in The Unsinkable Molly Brown, Walters was responsible for some of the most beloved images in American film. Through careful consideration of Walters's work on Broadway and in Hollywood, Phillips reclaims a life and career worthy of much greater attention. - Mark Griffin, author of A Hundred or More Hidden Things: The Life and Films of Vincente Minnelli I'm a huge fan of the great MGM musicals. I've read just about every book written about the people who were involved in creating those wonderful movies. And yet, Chuck Walters was hardly ever mentioned. His name would fly by during the credits of some of the best musicals - and that was it. I never saw anything written about him. Never an interview or a documentary. I always wondered why he was so ignored. Well, now I know why. His story is fascinating. Chuck Walters was a gifted and decent man in a world of ego driven bullies and sharks. The Director Who Made Hollywood Dance makes it clear that this modest, self-deprecating, incredibly talented man was happy and grateful to be doing his job and didn't need publicity or headlines. For people like me, who admire the geniuses that gave us some of the best entertainment of the century, this book is an important piece of the puzzle about one of its greatest talents...a beautifully written biography. - Barry Manilow, Grammy, Emmy, and Tony Award-winning singer-songwriter Phillips' diligently researched tome, which draws on letters and oral histories, teases out this contradictory figure: the star who ceded the spotlight to others, the self deprecating man in a cut-throat world, the visionary renowned for generous collaboration. - Dance Today As Brent Phillips reveals in his lively biography, Walters was an unremarkable man with remarkable abilities... Charles Walters: The Director Who Made Hollywood Dance is really a backstager, opening a curtain on a veritable musical factory, where the workers were all experts and the product a lesson in self-confidence... This is the story of a time in American culture when our life coaches were singers and dancers, because they made happy endings look easy, even deserved. Forget your troubles and just get happy. - Wall Street Journal A top biography which receives my very highest recommendation. - Laura's Miscellaneous Musings Despite a career of several decades directing and choreographing an impressive number of famed Hollywood movies, Charles Walters hasn't received the recognition of his peers...That's now been resolved by Brent Phillips' film-devouring, sexually knowing Charles Walters. - Bay Area Reporter Brent Phillips' biography on the director/choreographer is just as bouncy and lyrical as the director it's about. - Journeys in Classic Film MGM musical lovers - be they longtime or more recent sweethearts - will lap up this gracefully presented study of director Charles Walters. [... ] The author's thoroughly readable, enlightening study scores a hit for the University Press of Kentucky. - Book Reviews by David Marshall James


Author Information

Brent Phillips is a former Joffrey Ballet soloist. He currently serves as the Audiovisual Archivist at the Rockefeller Archive Center in Tarrytown, New York.

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