| Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Oscar
Levant , Billie Burke, Gale Robbins, George Zucco
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! |