Cabaret (film)
| Cabaret | |
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Theatrical release poster |
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| Directed by | Bob Fosse |
| Produced by | Cy Feuer |
| Written by | Joe Masteroff (Play) |
| Screenplay by | Jay Allen |
| Story by | Christopher Isherwood |
| Starring | Liza Minnelli Michael York Joel Grey Fritz Wepper |
| Music by | Songs: John Kander Fred Ebb (Lyrics) Adaptation score: Ralph Burns |
| Cinematography | Geoffrey Unsworth |
| Editing by | David Bretherton |
| Studio | ABC Pictures Allied Artists |
| Distributed by | Twentieth Century Fox |
| Release date(s) | February 13, 1972 |
| Running time | 124 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English German |
| Budget | $6 million |
| Box office | $42,765,000[1] |
Cabaret is a 1972 musical film directed by Bob Fosse and starring Liza Minnelli, Michael York and Joel Grey.[2] The film is set in Berlin during the Weimar Republic in 1931, under the ominous presence of the growing National Socialist Party.
The film is loosely based on the 1966 Broadway musical Cabaret by Kander and Ebb, which was adapted from The Berlin Stories of Christopher Isherwood and the play I Am a Camera. Only a few numbers from the stage score were used; Kander and Ebb wrote new ones to replace those that were discarded. In the traditional manner of musical theater, every significant character in the stage version of Cabaret sings to express emotion and advance the plot; but in the film version, the musical numbers are entirely diegetic, and only two of the film's major characters (The Emcee and Sally) sing any songs.
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[edit] Plot
In 1931 Berlin, American singer Sally Bowles (Liza Minnelli) performs at the Kit Kat Klub. A new arrival in the city, Brian Roberts (Michael York), moves into Sally's apartment building. A reserved English academic and writer, Brian gives English lessons to earn a living while completing his German studies. Sally unsuccessfully tries to seduce Brian and suspects he may be gay. Brian tells Sally that on three previous occasions he has tried to have physical relationships with women, all of which have failed. The unlikely pair become friends, and Brian is witness to Sally's anarchic, bohemian life in the last days of the German Weimar Republic. Later in the film, Sally and Brian become lovers despite their earlier reservations, and Brian and Sally conclude with irony that his previous failures with women were because they were "the wrong three girls."
Sally befriends Maximilian von Heune (Helmut Griem), a rich playboy baron who takes her and Brian to his country estate. It becomes ambiguous which of the duo Max is seducing, epitomized by a scene in which the three dance intimately together in a wine-induced reverie. After a sexual experience with Brian, Max loses interest in the two, and departs for Argentina. When Sally triumphantly tells Brian that she slept with Max, Brian begins to laugh and reveals that he slept with Max as well. After the ensuing argument, Brian storms off and picks a fight with a group of Nazis, who beat him senseless. Brian and Sally make up in their rooming house, where Sally reveals that Max left them an envelope of money.
Later on, Sally finds out that she's pregnant and is unsure whether Brian or Max is the father. Brian offers to marry her and take her back to his university life in Cambridge. After a scene that strongly hints Sally prefers the life of a singer to the life of a mother and housewife, she proceeds with an abortion. When Brian confronts her, she shares her fears and the two reach an understanding. The film ends with Brian departing for England by train, and Sally continuing her life in Berlin, singing "Cabaret" to a highly appreciative audience.
[edit] Subplots
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A subplot concerns Fritz Wendel (Fritz Wepper), a German Jew passing as a Christian. Fritz eventually reveals his true religious background when he falls for Natalia Landauer (Marisa Berenson), a wealthy German Jewish heiress. Although they marry, the audience are left wondering what their fate will be.
The Nazis' violent rise is a powerful, ever-present undercurrent in the film. Though explicit evidence of their actions is only sporadically presented, their progress can be tracked through the characters' changing actions and attitudes. While in the beginning of the film National Socialist members are sometimes harassed and even kicked out of the Kit Kat Klub, a scene midway through the film shows everyday Germans rising in song to rally around National Socialism, and the final shot of the film shows the cabaret's audience is dominated by Nazi party members.
While he does not play a role in the main plot or subplot, the "Emcee" (Joel Grey) serves in the role of storyteller throughout the film, acting as a sort of voyeur in the circus atmosphere. His surface demeanor is one of benevolence and hospitality ("Willkommen"), but when the floor show gets underway, he exposes the audience to the seedy world of the Cabaret. His intermittent songs in the Kit Kat Klub are risque and pointedly mock the Nazis.
The rise of the National Socialist movement and their increasing influence on German society is dramatically demonstrated in the beer garden scene: A boy — only his face seen — sings to the seated guests what first seems an innocent lyrical song about the beauties of nature. This gradually becomes the strident "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" as the camera shifts to show that the boy is wearing a brown Hitler Youth uniform and lifts his hand in the Nazi salute. One by one, nearly all guests in the beer garden get up and voluntarily join in the singing and saluting. The oldest gentleman among them, however, obviously feels differently, and does not share the common exaltation, he obviously has grown wise enough not to join the chorus and turns away uneasily. Max and Brian flee the beer garden after the show of grass roots solidarity, realising that the Nazis will be difficult to "control" now. Earlier in the film the NSDAP enjoyed relative favor with the main characters, due to their strong opposition to Communism, which was a natural risk to the trio's increasingly lavish lifestyle.
Although the songs throughout the film allude to and advance the narrative, every song except "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" is executed in the context of a Kit Kat Klub performance. The voice heard on the radio reading the news throughout the film in German was that of Associate Producer Harold Nebenzal, whose father, Seymour Nebenzahl made such notable Weimar films such as M, Testament of Dr. Mabuse, and Three Penny Opera.
[edit] Cast
- Liza Minnelli as Sally Bowles
- Michael York as Brian Roberts
- Joel Grey as The Emcee
- Helmut Griem as Maximilian von Heune
- Fritz Wepper as Fritz Wendel
- Marisa Berenson as Natalia Landauer
- Helen Vita as Frost
- Oliver Collignon (Mark Lambert, singing) as Nazi youth
[edit] Production
[edit] Pre-production
In 1971, Bob Fosse learned through Harold Prince, director of the original Broadway production, that Cy Feuer was producing a film adaptation of Cabaret through ABC Pictures and Allied Artists. Determined to direct the film, Fosse urged Feuer to hire him. Chief executives Manny Wolf and Marty Baum preferred a bigger name director such as Joseph Mankiewicz or Gene Kelly. Furthermore, Fosse’s many difficulties in directing the highly unsuccessful film adaptation of Sweet Charity gave Wolf and Baum serious concerns. Feuer appealed to the studio heads, citing Fosse’s talent for staging and shooting musical numbers, adding that if inordinate attention was given to filming the book scenes at the expense of the musical numbers, the whole film could fail. Fosse was ultimately hired.
Over the next months, Fosse met with previously hired writer Jay Presson Allen to discuss the screenplay. Originally unsatisfied with Allen’s script, he hired Hugh Wheeler to rewrite and revise Allen’s work. To this day, Wheeler is referred to as merely a "research consultant" while Allen retains screenwriting credit. The final script was based less on Joe Masteroff’s original book of the stage version and more on The Berlin Stories and I am a Camera.
Fosse and Feuer traveled to Germany, where producers chose to shoot the film, in order to finish assembling the film crew. During this time, Fosse highly recommended Robert Surtees for cinematographer, but Feuer and the top executives saw Surtees’ work on Sweet Charity as one of the film’s many artistic problems. Producers eventually chose British cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth. Designers Rolf Zehetbauer, Hans Jürgen Kiebach and Herbert Strabel served as production designers. Charlotte Flemming designed costumes. Fosse dancer Kathy Doby and John Sharpe were brought on as Fosse’s dance aides.
[edit] Casting
Feuer had cast Liza Minnelli as Sally Bowles (a role previously denied her in the stage version) and Joel Grey (reprising his stage role) long before Fosse was attached to the project. Fosse hired Michael York as Sally Bowles’ openly bisexual love interest. Several smaller roles, as well as the dancers in the film, were eventually cast in Germany.
[edit] Filming
Rehearsals and filming took place entirely in Germany. For reasons of economy, indoor scenes were shot at Bavaria Film Studios in Grünwald, outside of Munich. Location shots took place in and around Munich and Berlin as well as the regions of Schleswig-Holstein and Saxony. Editing on the film took place in Los Angeles before the eventual theatrical release in February, 1972.
[edit] Differences between film and stage version
The film is significantly different from the Broadway musical. To accommodate Minnelli, Sally Bowles is Americanized. The character of Cliff Bradshaw was renamed Brian Roberts and made British, though he still remained bisexual. The characters, and plot lines involving, Fritz, Natalia and Max do not exist in the play (although there is a minor character named Max in the stage version, the owner of the Kit Kat Club, who bears no relation to the character in the film). The Broadway version used special settings to separate the fantasy world of the Cabaret from the darker rest of the world.
Fosse cut several of the songs, leaving only those that are sung within the confines of the Kit Kat Klub, and "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" - sung in a beer garden, though in the stage play it is sung first by the cabaret boys and then at a private party. Kander and Ebb wrote several new songs for the movie and removed others; "Don't Tell Mama" was replaced by "Mein Herr," and "The Money Song" (retained in an instrumental version as "Sitting Pretty") was replaced by "Money, Money." Interestingly, "Mein Herr" and "Money, Money," which were composed for the film version, have, due to their popularity, now been added to performances of the stage musical alongside the original numbers. The song "Maybe This Time," which Sally performs at the cabaret, was not written for the film. Kander and Ebb had written it years earlier (for their unproduced musical Golden Gate), thus making it ineligible for an Academy Award nomination. Though "Don't Tell Mama" and "Married" were removed as performed musical numbers, both appeared in the film. The former's bridge section appears as instrumental music played on Sally's gramophone; the latter is initially played on the piano in Fraulein Schneider's parlor and later heard on Sally's gramophone in a German translation ("Heiraten") sung by cabaret singer Greta Keller.
Several characters were cut from the film (including Herr Schultz, with Fraulein Schneider's part greatly reduced and the whole romantic subplot removed) and several from Isherwood's original stories put back in. The entire score was re-orchestrated, with all the numbers being accompanied by the stage band.
The following songs from the original Broadway production are missing in the film version, but are still available on the Original Broadway Cast album:
- So What?
- Don't Tell Mama
- Telephone Song
- Perfectly Marvelous
- Why Should I Wake Up?
- Meeskite
- What Would You Do?
[edit] Musical numbers
- All songs written by John Kander and Fred Ebb
- "Willkommen" (Welcome) - Master of Ceremonies, the Cabaret Girls
- "Mein Herr" - Sally
- "Maybe This Time" - Sally
- "The Money Song" - Master of Ceremonies, Sally
- "Two Ladies" - Master of Ceremonies, two of the Cabaret Girls
- "Sitting Pretty" - Instrumental
- "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" - Nazi youth
- "Tiller Girls" - Master of Ceremonies, the Cabaret Girls
- "Heiraten (Married)" - Greta Keller
- "If You Could See Her (The Gorilla Song)" - Master of Ceremonies, (unknown) in a gorilla suit
- "Cabaret" - Sally
- "Finale" - Master of Ceremonies
[edit] Home releases
The film was first released to DVD in 1998. There have been two subsequent releases in 2003 and 2008.
The international ancillary distribution rights to the film are owned by ABC (currently part of The Walt Disney Company), while Warner Bros. (which inherited the film from Lorimar, Allied Artists' successor-in-interest) has domestic distribution rights. Today, Warner shares the film's copyright with production partner ABC.
Fremantle Media (owners of UK DVD rights under license from ABC/Disney) originally planned a Blu-ray release of the film, and several dates in 2008 and 2009 had been put forward, but have now announced they no longer plan to release the film on Blu-ray.
[edit] Critical response
The film was nominated for ten Academy Awards in 1973, winning a total of eight:[3]
- Best Director (Bob Fosse)
- Best Actress in a Leading Role (Liza Minnelli)
- Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Joel Grey)
- Best Cinematography (Geoffrey Unsworth)
- Best Film Editing (David Bretherton)
- Best Original Song Score or Adaptation Score (Ralph Burns)
- Best Art Direction (Rolf Zehetbauer, Hans Jürgen Kiebach, Herbert Strabel)
- Best Sound (Robert Knudson, David Hildyard)
It was also nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture and Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, losing both to The Godfather. Cabaret holds the record for most Academy Awards won by a film which did not win the Best Picture award.[4]
The film also won seven BAFTA Awards including Best Film, Best Direction and Best Actress as well as the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture (Musical/Comedy).
In 1995, Cabaret was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Film Registry as being deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". In 2006, Cabaret ranked #5 on the American Film Institute's list of best musicals; the song "Cabaret" was ranked #18 on their 100 Years...100 Songs list in 2004. In 2007, this film ranked #63 on AFI's 10th anniversary list of the 100 Greatest American Movies.
The film currently holds a 97% "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with the consensus "Great performances and evocative musical numbers help Cabaret secure its status as a stylish, socially conscious classic".[5]
The making of Cabaret is recounted in Cabaret (Music on Film) by Stephen Tropiano (Limelight Books, 2011).
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ "Cabaret, Worldwide Box Office". Worldwide Box Office. http://www.worldwideboxoffice.com/movie.cgi?title=Cabaret&year=1972. Retrieved January 21, 2012.
- ^ Obituary Variety, February 16, 1972, page 18.
- ^ "The 45th Academy Awards (1973) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. http://www.oscars.org/awards/academyawards/legacy/ceremony/45th-winners.html. Retrieved 2011-08-28.
- ^ "Films Winning 4 or More Awards Without Winning Best Picture". Oscars.org. AMPAS. March 2011. http://awardsdatabase.oscars.org/ampas_awards/help/helpMain.jsp?helpContentURL=statistics/indexStats.html. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
- ^ Cabaret at Rotten Tomatoes
[edit] External links
- Cabaret at the Internet Movie Database
- Cabaret at Rotten Tomatoes
- Cabaret at Metacritic
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- 1972 films
- American films
- 1970s drama films
- 1970s musical films
- American LGBT-related films
- American musical drama films
- English-language films
- German-language films
- Films directed by Bob Fosse
- Best Musical or Comedy Picture Golden Globe winners
- Best Original Music Score Academy Award winners
- Bisexuality-related films
- Films about entertainers
- Films featuring a Best Musical or Comedy Actress Golden Globe winning performance
- Films featuring a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award winning performance
- Films featuring a Best Supporting Actor Golden Globe winning performance
- Films featuring a Best Actress Academy Award winning performance
- Films set in Berlin
- Films set in the 1930s
- Films that won the Best Sound Mixing Academy Award
- Films whose art director won the Best Art Direction Academy Award
- Films whose cinematographer won the Best Cinematography Academy Award
- Films whose director won the Best Director Academy Award
- Films whose editor won the Best Film Editing Academy Award
- United States National Film Registry films
- Allied Artists films