The fictionalized biography of composer Cole Porter from his days at Yale in the 1910s through the height of his success to the 1940s. The film’s attempted biography matches many public myths surrounding Cole at the time, despite its lack of relationship with truth. For instance, truth and movie are different in regards to: his sex life (he was a gay man in a marriage of convenience with a divorcee friend), his relationship with his wife, Monty Wooley was a contemporary (not Professor), and his French military experience was a hoax., Cary Grant stars in the Michael Curtiz-directed fictionalized biography of Cole Porter, the great American popular songwriter who wrote “You’re the Top,” “I Get a Kick Out of You,” “Begin the Beguine,” and “Night and Day”., The fictionalised biography of composer Cole Porter from his days at Yale around 1910 through the height of his success to the 1940s., Faced with the challenge of writing a screenplay based on the life of fabulously wealthy, fabulously successful composer Cole Porter, one Hollywood wag came up with a potential story angle: “How does the S.O.B. make his second million dollars?” By the time the Porter biopic Night and Day was released, the three-person scriptwriting team still hadn’t come up with a compelling storyline, though the film had the decided advantages of star Cary Grant and all that great Porter music. Roughly covering the years 1912 to 1946, the story begins during Porter’s undergraduate days at Yale University, where he participated in amateur theatricals under the tutelage of waspish professor Monty Woolley (who plays himself). Though Porter’s inherited wealth could have kept him out of WWI, he insists upon signing up as an ambulance driver. While serving in France, he meets nurse Linda Lee (Alexis Smith), who will later become his wife. Focusing his attentions on Broadway and the London stage in the postwar years, Porter pens an unbroken string of hit songs, including “Just One of Those Things,” “You’re the Top,” “I Get a Kick Out of You,” “Begin the Beguine,” and the title number. The composition of this last-named song is one of the film’s giddy highlights, as Porter, inspired by the “drip drip drip” of an outsized rainstorm, runs to the piano and cries “I think I’ve got it!” The film’s dramatic conflict arises when Porter is crippled for life in a polo accident. Refusing to have his legs amputated, he makes an inspiring comeback, even prompting a WWI amputee to remark upon his courage! Corny and unreliable as biography, Night and Day is redeemed by the guest appearances of musical luminaries Mary Martin (doing a spirited if disappointingly demure version of her striptease number “My Heart Belongs to Daddy”) and Ginny Simms, the latter cast as an ersatz Ethel Merman named Carole Hill. Jane Wyman, seen as Porter’s pre-nuptial sweetheart Gracie Harris, also gets to sing and dance, and quite well indeed. Beset with production problems, not least of which was the ongoing animosity between star Grant and director Michael Curtiz, Night and Day managed to finish filming on schedule, and proved to be an audience favorite — except for those “in the know” Broadwayites who were bemused over the fact that Cole Porter’s well-known homosexuality was necessarily weaned from the screenplay., Highly fictionalized account of the life of Cole Porter chronicles the period from 1912-46, and takes him from his days at Yale to his hits on the Broadway and London stages and features more than 20 of his musical compositions.
Night and Day
Year Released:
1946Lang:
EnglishStreaming Date :
1946-08-03Mins :
130Directed By :
Michael CurtizTrending / Upcoming
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