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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Phil Powrie (University of Surrey, UK) , Marie Cadalanu (Jean Perrin à Saint-Ouen-l’Aumône, France)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic USA Dimensions: Width: 15.00cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 22.60cm Weight: 0.580kg ISBN: 9781501373879ISBN 10: 1501373870 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 23 March 2023 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents1. Introduction 2. Multi-language Versions 3. The French Operetta 4. Pills and Tabet and the Marseille Operetta 5. Fréhel and Édith Piaf 6. Josephine Baker and Charles Trenet 7. The Classical Music Film 8. The Big Band Film 9. The Musical Sketch Film 10. Tino Rossi 11. George Guétary and Luis Mariano 12. D’où viens-tu Johnny? and the Transition to the Modern Musical 13. Jacques Demy and the New Wave 14. The Opera Film and the Modern Classical Music Film 15. The Modern Musical 16. Nostalgia 17. Conclusion Filmography References IndexReviewsPhil Powrie and Marie Cadalanu’s book categorically disproves the cliché about French cinema having no musical tradition, with the one exception of Jacques Demy. In this ground-breaking volume, the authors reveal the extraordinary wealth and diversity of the musical tradition in French cinema since the coming of sound. Encompassing popular and auteur film, they demonstrate that, if there is not one ‘musical genre’ in France, there are myriad ways in which French film interacts with a wide range of cultural traditions, from cabaret, music-hall, chanson réaliste, operetta and opera to jazz bands and pop music, in an unbroken line from René Clair to François Ozon and Christophe Honoré, via Josephine Baker, Charles Trenet, Edith Piaf and Johnny Hallyday. * Ginette Vincendeau, Professor in Film Studies, King’s College London, UK * Powrie and Cadalanu excavate the vibrant and varied tradition of the French film musical from the early sound musicals of René Clair to the recent nostalgia-inflected revival of the form. The authors illuminate the genre’s iconic performers, Edith Piaf and Josephine Baker, but weave fresh figures into the story, notably fou chantant Charles Trenet, crooners Tino Rossi, Luis Mariano, and Georges Guétary, and big band powerhouse Ray Ventura and his Orchestra. Especially welcome is the information on the French film musical’s production contexts from the 1930s through the 1950s, when the genre embraced jazz, big band, and operetta. The authors rightly identify the musicals of Jacques Demy as a turning point from popular to auteur-inflected work and provide welcome attention to the musicals of Godard, Varda, Akerman, and Resnais. Wisely avoiding the argument that the French film musical died with the birth of yéyé and youth culture, the authors instead reveal the never-ending transformation of the genre, emphasizing its nostalgia for community and its productive recycling of earlier forms of entertainment. * Kelley Conway, Communication Arts Partners Professor, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA * Phil Powrie and Marie Cadalanu's book categorically disproves the cliche about French cinema having no musical tradition, with the one exception of Jacques Demy. In this ground-breaking volume, the authors reveal the extraordinary wealth and diversity of the musical tradition in French cinema since the coming of sound. Encompassing popular and auteur film, they demonstrate that, if there is not one 'musical genre' in France, there are myriad ways in which French film interacts with a wide range of cultural traditions, from cabaret, music-hall, chanson realiste, operetta and opera to jazz bands and pop music, in an unbroken line from Rene Clair to Francois Ozon and Christophe Honore, via Josephine Baker, Charles Trenet, Edith Piaf and Johnny Hallyday. * Ginette Vincendeau, Professor in Film Studies, King's College London, UK * Powrie and Cadalanu excavate the vibrant and varied tradition of the French film musical from the early sound musicals of Rene Clair to the recent nostalgia-inflected revival of the form. The authors illuminate the genre's iconic performers, Edith Piaf and Josephine Baker, but weave fresh figures into the story, notably fou chantant Charles Trenet, crooners Tino Rossi, Luis Mariano, and Georges Guetary, and big band powerhouse Ray Ventura and his Orchestra. Especially welcome is the information on the French film musical's production contexts from the 1930s through the 1950s, when the genre embraced jazz, big band, and operetta. The authors rightly identify the musicals of Jacques Demy as a turning point from popular to auteur-inflected work and provide welcome attention to the musicals of Godard, Varda, Akerman, and Resnais. Wisely avoiding the argument that the French film musical died with the birth of yeye and youth culture, the authors instead reveal the never-ending transformation of the genre, emphasizing its nostalgia for community and its productive recycling of earlier forms of entertainment. * Kelley Conway, Communication Arts Partners Professor, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA * Author InformationPhil Powrie is Emeritus Professor of Cinema Studies at the University of Surrey, UK. He is Chair of the British Association for Film, Television and Screen Studies and Chief General Editor of Studies in French Cinema. Marie Cadalanu is an independent researcher working as a teacher in a lycée in the Paris, France area. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |