Betty Comden Movies
The collaborative relationship has become a ubiquitous force in the authorship of stage and film musicals, to such a degree that many individual lyricists and composers are fated to go down in history as one half of a lifelong partnership -- from Rodgers & Hart to Kander & Ebb. This particularly applies to film and stage librettist, playwright, and occasional film scenarist Betty Comden, forever associated with writing partner Adolph Green. By teaming up with Green, Comden chose to share her fame, but in so doing, co-created such seminal works as Singin' in the Rain, On the Town, and Bells Are Ringing, and forever altered the face of the Broadway and Hollywood musical. The Comden-Green catalogue of tunes never fails to astonish; with such titles as "New York, New York," "It's Love," "Just in Time," "Some Other Time," and "The Party's Over," it reads like a cruise through the Great American Songbook.Born on May 3, 1917, in Brooklyn, NY, to an attorney father and a schoolteacher mother, Elizabeth Cohen attended Erasmus Hall High School and then enrolled as an undergraduate drama student at New York University, where she took the stage name Betty Comden, had rhinoplasty to render herself more "suitable" for the Broadway stage, and performed with the Washington Square Players. During this period, Comden became acquainted not only with Green, but with John Frank, Alvin Hammer, and Judy Holliday. Fast friends but never romantically involved with one other, Comden and Green moved jointly to Greenwich Village and persuaded several of the aforementioned colleagues, including Holliday and an aspiring composer named Leonard Bernstein, to form a cabaret troupe christened "The Revuers." The thesps -- neophytes at the time -- then boldly marched up to Max Gordon, owner of the legendary Village Vanguard (c. 1939), and pitched the act to him. He bought it instantly, and club attendance shot skyward. The titles of early Revuers sketches included "The Baroness Bazuka" (an operetta) and "The Banshi Sisters."
The triumph of the Vanguard gig yielded a film contract, and the Revuers headed west in the early '40s, where they landed parts in Greenwich Village (1944), a now forgotten musical directed by Walter Lang and starring Don Ameche and Carmen Miranda. The blink-and-you-miss-it nature of the onscreen appearances drove Comden and Green straight back to New York, where they resumed club dates. The bookings were short-lived, however, for an offer instantly materialized to work on a major theatrical production. Bernstein called and referenced his co-authorship, with Jerome Robbins, of a new ballet about life in the Big Apple called "Fancy Free." Bernstein and Robbins believed -- correctly -- that they could send the show straight to Broadway, but needed a couple of hands to write the book and lyrics. Comden and Green seized the opportunity; the four artists retitled the work and emerged weeks later with On the Town, a now infamous production about three sailors on shore leave in Manhattan. The musical's popularity skyrocketed after its timely debut in the winter of 1944, selling mass numbers of tickets and running from December 28, 1944, to February 2, 1946. It also created a new song standard; months after its premiere, thousands of New Yorkers could be heard humming the tune: "New York, New York, a helluva town -- the Bronx is up and the Battery's down. The people ride in a hole in the ground...." Comden and Green doubled up with roles in the production, as the anthropologist Claire de Loone and Ozzie the sailor. Comden and Green followed it up with a sophomore Broadway musical, Billion Dollar Baby, with a score by Morton Gould, choreography by Jerome Robbins, and the direction of George Abbott. The production debuted on December 21, 1945, and though it failed to attract a sizeable audience on par with On the Town, it did last seven months, wrapping on June 29, 1946.
Deeply impressed, Tinseltown beckoned once more, and a spate of successful musicals followed, with Comden and Green as lyricists and occasional scenarists. These included Good News (1947), starring June Allyson, Morris Ankrum, Tom Dugan, and Connie Gilchrist; The Barkleys of Broadway (1949), with Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire; and On the Town, an adaptation of the 1944 stage show -- this one starring Frank Sinatra, Gene Kelly, and Jules Munshin. As directed by Kelly and Stanley Donen, that film gained a historical footnote also, for being the first Hollywood movie musical to carry cameras out onto the actual streets of Manhattan and stage production numbers among the civilians. Comden and Green landed their two broadest and most enduring cinematic successes, however, during the '50s. The seminal 1952 musical Singin' in the Rain marked the first, and by far the most important. This comic elegy to Hollywood's transition from silents to talkies, which reunited the librettists with On the Town collaborators Kelly and Donen, has since become one of the most historically important and beloved motion pictures in film history, and topped the 1988 National Film Registry preservation list and the 1998 AFI list for the 100 Greatest American movies of all time, alongside the iconic Wizard of Oz, Citizen Kane, and Casablanca.
The second triumph arrived one year later, in the form of Vincente Minnelli's 1953 The Band Wagon. Though somewhat overshadowed by An American in Paris, Gigi, and Singin' in the Rain, the picture has earned a fond place in the hearts of critics and musical lovers, and, like its Comden-Green-Kelly-Donen predecessor, received the National Film Registry classification (in 1994). The story, which bears marked thematic similarities to Singin', tells of a down-and-out Hollywood actor (Fred Astaire) who makes an admittedly choppy transition to Broadway and romances a ballerina (Cyd Charisse). The Band Wagon yielded such standards as "I Guess I'll Have to Change My Plan," "That's Entertainment," and "A Shine on Your Shoes," and netted a Best Screenplay Oscar nomination for Comden and Green.
Comden and Green also returned to Broadway throughout the '50s, penning the lyrics for such acclaimed productions as Two on the Aisle (1951), Wonderful Town (1953), and Bells Are Ringing (1956). The pair adapted the latter as a hit movie musical in 1960, directed by Vincente Minnelli and starring Judy Holliday as a telephone operator who becomes implicated in the lives of her clients and falls for a bumbling playwright (Dean Martin).
For the remainder of the 1960s, '70s, and '80s (and into the early '90s), Comden and Green largely abandoned film but remained active on stage, with varying degrees of success. Their authorship during this period includes such productions as Subways Are for Sleeping (1961), Fade Out -- Fade In (1964), Hallelujah, Baby (1968), Applause (1970), On the Twentieth Century (1978), the disastrous A Doll's Life (1982, a musical continuation of the story in the Henrik Ibsen play), and the Broadway sensation The Will Rogers Follies (1991), starring Keith Carradine.
That same year, Comden and Green received the 1991 Kennedy Center Honors for their enduring contributions to the American stage and screen musical. In 1999, innumerable Broadway legends, including Elaine Stritch and Brian Stokes Mitchell, performed a musical salute to the pair at Carnegie Hall. And in response to Green's October 2002 death, a legion of Broadway heavies turned out to pay homage to the beloved lyricist.
Throughout her life, Comden occasionally acted, alone, in non-musical dramatic roles on the big and small screens. These included Greta Garbo in the haunting final scene of Sidney Lumet's Garbo Talks (1984), Mrs. Wheeler in James Ivory's 1989 Slaves of New York, and the voice of Linda in a 1994 episode of the NBC series Frasier. She also published a 1995 memoir, Off Stage, which touched only fleetingly on her professional experiences but meditated at length on her childhood, her son Alan's drug addiction and bout with AIDS, and her marriage to designer Steven Kyle in 1942, which lasted until his death in 1979.
After several years of professional inactivity, Betty Comden died of heart failure in her native Manhattan on November 23, 2006. She was 89. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

- 2002
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On the short list of great cinema dancers, Gene Kelly led a multi-faceted career that included acting, directing, and choreography. This documentary, narrated by Stanley Tucci, offers a look at the man's driving work ethic and his rich talent that led to such memorable classics as Singin' in the Rain, On the Town, and the Oscar-winning An American in Paris. The DVD release of this documentary offers a complete Gene Kelly filmography. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Stanley Tucci, Gene Kelly, (more)
When Maris to goes to the hospital for some cosmetic surgery, Frasier (Kelsey Grammer) pays her a visit. He also runs into an ex-policeman named Artie (Lincoln Kilpatrick), who is also having an operation -- and who happens to be the former partner of Frasier's dad, Martin (John Mahoney). Aware of the quarrel that drove Artie and Martin apart many years earlier, helpful Frasier tries to stage-manage a reconciliation. The "guest-voice" cast in this episode will give a kick to fans of Singin' in the Rain. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Based on the stories by Tama Janowitz, this film follows the relationships and problems of a group of artists struggling to survive in New York City. ~ Iotis Erlewine, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Bernadette Peters, Nick Corri, (more)
Including such songs as "Broadway Baby," "I'm Still Here," "The Ladies Who Lunch," and "Losing My Mind," this video features a filming of the well-known Stephen Sondheim musical as it was performed at New York's Lincoln Center in 1985. ~ Iotis Erlewine, All Movie Guide
This bittersweet comedy is, among many other things, a tour de force for the marvelous Anne Bancroft. The star is cast as Estelle Rolfe, an unconventional divorcee who resides in New York, in close proximity to her grown son Gilbert (Ron Silver) and his wife Lisa (Carrie Fisher). Though his wife yearns to move back to her home state of California, Gilbert cannot quite cut the silver cord that binds him to his mother. Upon learning that Estelle is dying, her dutiful son offers to honor her last request to meet the reclusive actress Greta Garbo. The rest of the film plays wonderful variations on this theme, involving such peripheral characters as a gay Garbo fan (Harvey Fierstein), an elderly Shakespearean actress (Hermione Gingold), a "female Joe Papp" director (Denny Dillon), and an ageing papparazzi (Howard Da Silva). Without giving away the ending, it is worth noting that the divine Garbo shows up in the person of playwright/lyricist/ performer Betty Comden. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Anne Bancroft, Ron Silver, (more)
This lavishly produced, big-budget comedy (it cost $20 million in 1964 dollars) stars Shirley MacLaine as Louisa, a widow who is worth $200 million dollars. However, she's convinced that her fortune is cursed, and she wants to give all her money to the IRS. As she explains her sad tale to her psychiatrist, Dr. Stephanson (Robert Cummings), it seems that when Louisa was young she had the choice of marrying rich playboy Leonard Crawley (Dean Martin) or poor but decent Edgar Hopper (Dick Van Dyke). She chose Edgar, but soon he became obsessed with providing a fine home and fortune for her; he got rich but worked himself to death in the process. Despondent, Louisa flies to Paris, where she strikes up a romance with expatriate artist Larry Flint (Paul Newman). When Larry invents a machine that creates paintings based on sounds, he becomes wealthy and famous -- and dies. Louisa returns to America, where she figures to break her streak by marrying Rod (Robert Mitchum), a business tycoon who already has lots of money. He resolves to take life easier and becomes a farmer, only to die in a strange accident with a bull. Louisa is drowning her sorrows one night at a sleazy night spot when she falls for second rate entertainer Jerry (Gene Kelly). They marry, and a now-wealthy Jerry develops a relaxed, carefree quality to his act that makes him a huge star, which leads to his being crushed by a mob of his biggest fans. What a Way to Go! boasted a screenplay by Betty Comdon and Adolph Green that featured many amusing film parodies and a score by Nelson Riddle; it also marked the final screen appearance of comic actress Margaret Dumont, best remembered as Groucho Marx's straight woman in several films. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Shirley MacLaine, Paul Newman, (more)
Judy Holliday re-creates her Broadway role of flibbertigibbet telephone operator Ella Peterson in Bells are Ringing. Ella works for Susanswerphone, a hole-in-the-wall answering service run by her cousin Sue (Jean Stapleton). Our girl Ella can't help but become involved in the lives of her customers, which brings her to the attention of a dimwitted police detective, Barnes (Dort Clark), who suspects that Susanswerphone is a front for a house of ill repute. The cop is so obtuse that he never notices the story's genuine criminal, a flamboyant German bookie (Eddie Foy Jr.) who poses as a record executive and uses the names of composers as code for the various racetracks around the country. To avoid Barnes' wiretapping, Ella goes around New York in person to minister to the needs of her clients--most notably playwright Jeffrey Moss (Dean Martin), who is in danger of becoming an alcoholic if he can't come up with a good idea for a play. Assuming a false identity, Ella prattles on about some of her other clients, notably a dentist (Bernie West) who composes pop songs on his air hose. Moss is inspired by Ella, and eventually falls in love with her. Because she will not reveal who she really is to Jeffrey, Ella decides that her relationship is founded on lies, and walks out of his life. But Moss, together with the other Susanswerphone customers who have been "rescued" by Ella, show up at Ella's doorstep for a happy ending. Bells are Ringing is not an example of MGM's Arthur Freed unit at its best, but Judy Holliday is luminescent in this, her last screen role (incidentally, Holliday's "blind date" in one scene is played by her then boyfriend, jazz musician Gerry Mulligan). The film's songs, by Betty Comden, Adolph Green and Jule Styne, include the hit numbers "Just in Time" and "The Party's Over". ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Judy Holliday, Dean Martin, (more)
Auntie Mame began as a novel by Patrick Dennis (aka Ed Fitzgerald), then was adapted into a long-running Broadway play by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee. This 1958 film version permits Rosalind Russell to recreate her stage role as Mame Dennis, the flamboyant, devil-may-care aunt of young, impressionable Patrick Dennis. Left in Mame's care when his millionaire father drops dead, young Patrick (Jan Handzlik) is quickly indoctrinated into his aunt's philosophy that "Life is a banquet--and some poor suckers are starving to death." Social-climbing executor Dwight Babcock (Fred Clark) does his best to raise Patrick as a stuffy American aristocrat, but Mame battles Babcock to allow the boy to be as free-spirited as she is. In 1974, Auntie Mame was remade as the filmmusical Mame with Lucille Ball. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Rosalind Russell, Forrest Tucker, (more)
Cooked up by Betty Comden and Adolph Green, It's Always Fair Weather could well have been titled On the Town Ten Years Later. Like 1949's On the Town (also a Comden/Green collaboration), this MGM musical follows the exploits of three servicemen buddies, played by Gene Kelly, Dan Dailey and Michael Kidd. The difference here is that the threesome has just been discharged from service. The boys agree to get together again exactly ten years after their parting. Flash-forward to 1955: Kelly, who'd dreamed of being a show biz entrepreneur, is a small-time boxing promoter, heavily in debt to the Mob; Dailey has abandoned his plans of becoming an artist in favor of a stuffy, grey-flannel existence as an ad executive; and Kidd, who'd aspired to being a master chef, is running a modest diner. On behalf of TV-personality Dolores Gray, network-staffer Cyd Charisse contrives to reunite the three men on a This is Your Life style TV special, but all three are hostile to the notion. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Gene Kelly, Dan Dailey, (more)
One of the most subtle and sophisticated of the musical comedies that came out of MGM's Arthur Freed Unit in the '40s and '50s, The Band Wagon stars Fred Astaire as Tony Hunter, a movie star whose career is in a downturn. Looking for a boost, Tony decides to try starring in a Broadway musical. His friends Lester and Lily Marton (Oscar Levant and Nanette Fabray) have written a show they feel would be just right for Tony, and the three team up with Jeffrey Cordova (Jack Buchanan), a self-styled "genius" director, who gets the idea to turn the play into a revised version of Faust. Cordova's more pretentious ideas don't always sit well with the Martons, and Tony isn't too happy with his leggy co-star, Gaby Gerard (Cyd Charisse), whom he's convinced is too tall (then again, she thinks he's too old). But when the show proves a disaster in out-of-town tryouts, everyone realizes they have to put aside their differences if they want a show that will be on Broadway for longer than four hours. The Band Wagon featured a rare American appearance for British musical star Jack Buchanan, who does a fine soft-shoe with Fred Astaire on "I Guess I'll Have to Change My Plan." Astaire also shines in the numbers "Shine on Your Shoes" and "The Girl Hunt," a witty Mickey Spillane parody. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Fred Astaire, Cyd Charisse, (more)
Hollywood, 1927: the silent-film romantic team of Don Lockwood (Gene Kelly) and Lina Lamont (Jean Hagen) is the toast of Tinseltown. While Lockwood and Lamont personify smoldering passions onscreen, in real life the down-to-earth Lockwood can't stand the egotistical, brainless Lina. He prefers the company of aspiring actress Kathy Selden (Debbie Reynolds), whom he met while escaping his screaming fans. Watching these intrigues from the sidelines is Cosmo Brown (Donald O'Connor), Don's best pal and on-set pianist. Cosmo is promoted to musical director of Monumental Pictures by studio head R.F. Simpson (Millard Mitchell) when the talking-picture revolution commences. That's all right for Cosmo, but how will talkies affect the upcoming Lockwood-Lamont vehicle "The Dueling Cavalier"? Don, an accomplished song-and-dance man, should have no trouble adapting to the microphone. Lina, however, is another matter; put as charitably as possible, she has a voice that sounds like fingernails on a blackboard. The disastrous preview of the team's first talkie has the audience howling with derisive laughter. On the strength of the plot alone, concocted by the matchless writing team of Betty Comden and Adolph Green, Singin' in the Rain is a delight. But with the addition of MGM's catalog of Arthur Freed-Nacio Herb Brown songs -- "You Were Meant for Me," "You Are My Lucky Star," "The Broadway Melody," and of course the title song -- the film becomes one of the greatest Hollywood musicals ever made. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Gene Kelly, Donald O'Connor, (more)
Three sailors on a 24-hour pass -- Gabey (Gene Kelly), Chip (Frank Sinatra), and Ozzie (Jules Munshin) -- decide to soak up the sights and sounds of New York. Each one finds romance within those 24 hours: Gabey with aspiring dancer Ivy Smith (Vera-Ellen), Chip with lady cabbie Hildy Esterhazy (Betty Garrett), and Ozzie with paleontology student Claire Huddesten (Ann Miller). That's all, right? Wellll....Ivy passes herself off as a celebrity, but she's actually a kootch dancer in Coney Island. Claire and the boys inadvertently topple a dinosaur replica at the Museum of Anthropological History. And Hildy breaks any number of speeding laws attempting to get the lovers together and straighten out all misunderstandings. Adapted from the Broadway musical by Betty Comden, Adolph Green, and Leonard Bernstein, On the Town is one of the freshest, most exhilarating musicals turned out by the old MGM regime. The stars' verve and camaraderie are contagious, and the songs are staged by legendary musical director Stanley Donen and Kelly himself with wit and innovation. Highlights include the opening "New York, New York" number, shot on location and flat-cutting from one image to another at a dizzying pace, and Gene Kelly and Vera-Ellen's ""Miss Turnstyles Ballet."" ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, (more)
The Barkleys of Broadway became Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers' "reunion" picture purely by accident. Originally conceived as a follow-up to the successful Astaire-Judy Garland vehicle Easter Parade, Barkleys was to have starred Fred and Judy as a successful musical comedy team that breaks up when the female half decides to become a "serious" artist. Just before shooting started, Garland fell ill, Rogers replaced her, and the rest, as they say, is history. The script is as thin as a spider's web, a mere coat-rack upon which to hang several topnotch musical numbers. Fred and Ginger aren't quite as footloose and fancy-free as they were in their RKO heyday, but they still work together seamlessly. The film's highlights include "My One and Only Highland Fling," "You'd Be Hard to Replace," a reprise of "They Can't Take That Away From Me" (originally performed by Astaire and Rogers in Shall We Dance?), and Oscar Levant's keyboard rendition of "The Sabre Dance." The film's least memorable moment is the play-within-a-play wherein Rogers, cast as the young Sarah Bernhardt, passionately recites "The Marseillaise" as an audition piece! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, (more)
This second film version of the DeSylva/Brown/Henderson Broadway musical Good News may not be the best of the Arthur Freed-produced MGM musicals, but it's certainly one of the peppiest. The film is set at Tait college during the Roaring 20s. The wisp of a plot involves Tait football-star Peter Lawford, who will be ineligible to play in the Big Game if his grades don't improve. June Allyson is the demure Tait coed who takes on the task of tutoring Lawford, while campus vamp Patricia Marshall takes action when she believes (rightly so) that she is losing Lawford to Allyson. The film is deftly stolen by comic relief Joan McCracken, who stops the show with her energetic rendition of "Pass That Peace Pipe"--which, like the famous Lawford/Allyson duet "The French Lesson," was specially written for this 1948 version of Good News. Retained from the original score is the rousing "Varsity Drag." Mel Torme, Tom Dugan and Donald McBride are among the familiar supporting-cast faces in this bubbly Technicolor musical, which was adapted for the screen by Betty Comden and Adolph Green. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- June Allyson, Morris Ankrum, (more)
Those willing to accept Carmen Miranda as a "typical" 1920s type will be able to swallow the rest of the lavish but rather silly 20th Century-Fox musical Greenwich Village. Most of the action takes place in a New York speakeasy managed by tough guy Danny O'Mara (William Bendix). Providing entertainment in this rowdy establishment is songwriter Kenneth Harvey (Don Ameche), singing sensation Bonnie Watson (Vivian Blaine) and fortune-teller/dancer Princess Querida (Carmen Miranda). Harvey aspires to become a serious composer, while O'Mara has yearnings to produce a hit Broadway show. Everything works out to everyone's satisfaction by fadeout time, and Harvey (of course) falls in love with Bonnie. Specialty acts included the ballroom dance team of Tony and Sally De Marco, the precision-tap specialists The Four Step Brothers, and an up-and-coming group of nightclub comedians called The Revuers (Judy Holliday, Adolph Green, Betty Comden and Alvin Hammer), whose main routine, alas, ended up on the cutting room floor. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Carmen Miranda, Don Ameche, (more)
























