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"Grease" from 1978 is still the word for fun movie musicals, 45 years later! |
The film version of Grease—the
original High School Musical—came out
June 15 in 1978, the summer after I graduated from Manistique High School in
Upper MI. Grease is also set mostly in
1959, the year I was born. The '50s nostalgia boom was in full bloom, plus
thanks to Mom, I was very familiar with the music and stars of that era.
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Olivia Newton-John & Travolta as Sandy & Danny, opposites who attract, "Grease." |
The film version of Grease
reminded me of TV's pseudo '50s smash Happy
Days, without the musical numbers. At the time, I found Grease lightweight fun, and especially enjoyed
the singing and dancing. Having seen it twice since its release 45 years ago,
I'm a bit more critical and in general agreement with the critics of the era: Grease feels a bit generic, most of the
cast are obviously in their early '30s, the production is a bit sloppy, and the
humor sitcom-ish. BUT, there are many reasons Grease is still a popular film favorite: the cast is winning, songs
are memorable, dancing energetic, and attitude good-natured. PLUS, the two
stars are most appealing. Olivia Newton John is fresh-faced, wholesome, and has
the perfect ingénue spirit, especially when singing, if not acting. AND John
Travolta is the best reason to watch Grease:
his comedic tough guy is caricatured, but charming and charismatic, and with
real feeling when called for. He's no Elvis vocally, but he has a pleasant way
of putting a song over, and his dancing is energetic, excellent, and often
electrifying.
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Olivia Newton-John as Sandy, surrounded by the Pink Ladies, in 1978's "Grease." |
Producer Allan Carr used the old casting trick that similar
schlock-meisters Aaron Spelling and Ross Hunter utilized: Mix promising newcomers
with beloved veteran stars. The focus is on relative youngsters Travolta,
Olivia, Stockard Channing, Jeff Conaway, Didi Conn, and Dinah Manoff; and it is
great fun to see Eve Arden, Dody Goodman, Joan Blondell, Alice Ghostley, Sid
Caesar, and more have their moments, too. Not to mention Grease era heartthrobs like Frankie Avalon and Edd Byrnes in cameos,
and the title song sung by Frankie Valli.
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The T-Birds of "Grease," with Jeff Conaway far left, & John Travolta, far right. |
Aside from her age, Stockard Channing did well enough as
Rizzo, but I felt she was doing a Bette Midler shtick most of the time. Still,
Channing's a good contrast to Olivia's blonde Bambi, and Stockard was a strong
vocalist. I read that Carrie Fisher was considered for Sandy, but it occurred
to me that Fisher would have been a great Rizzo and a dozen years younger than
30-something Channing. And did you know that Maude's Adrienne Barbeau originated the role of Rizzo on
Broadway?
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Stockard Channing as the lead Pink Lady, Rizzo, in 1978's "Grease." |
Jeff Conaway once played in the stage version of Grease, as did Travolta. He's great as
Kenickie and loved him as Bobby on Taxi.
Sure, he had to set his ego aside to play second lead in the film Grease, especially when his character's “Greased
Lightning” went to John Travolta's Danny, but it made movie star sense.
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Jeff Conaway as Kenickie in "Grease." Conaway & Travolta were TV heart throbs! |
The Broadway show of Grease
was more rough-edged than the film and took place in Chicago. The movie version
is supposed to take place somewhere less urban, but it sure looks like
California! Watching Grease today, a
reunion at Rydell High may seem like pure fluff, but it's still fun fluff. Your feet will be tapping
along from the first musical number, "Summer Nights." It’s so great
to see Olivia lovely and singing like a bird, John Travolta in his talented
peacock prime, adorable Jeff Conaway, wise-cracking Stockard Channing, and Didi
Conn so endearing as Frenchy.
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Eve Arden was perfect casting as the principal in 1978's "Grease!" |
Grease
was
John Travolta's biggest-grossing movie ever, which snowballed from the success
of Saturday Night Fever. Plus the
soundtrack, the mix of the show and the new tunes, made for a 30 million
selling double album.
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John Travolta in his considerable 1978 prime, in the "Greased Lightning" number. |
I think Travolta, the soundtrack, the nostalgia
for the ‘50s, and the stars of the film version sell this movie, after all
these years. This movie
is the ‘70s equivalent of Viva Las Vegas:
cheesy but good natured fun, with iconic stars that have stayed in our hearts.
So, enjoy a 45th reunion with the Pink Ladies and T-Birds!
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Olivia Newton-John spiced up her image when Sandy got a sexy makeover, "Grease!" |
I'm glad you admit that the purpose of seeing "Grease" is to have fun. I remember the movie in its first run at theaters (yes, I am over 21.) There were newspaper and magazine columnists taking it all so seriously, op-ed articles decrying what this movie said about "gender roles." Sheesh, as one might say. Olivia Newton John's appearance in spandex for the final number was thought by some to be sending quote "a bad message" to women, as if anyone was so suggestible. "Grease," especially the singalong version, can still do a good business in rep house theaters, and some of the audience is young, which is good to see.
ReplyDeleteIf I remember correctly, the original stage version (which has since been revised more than once) began at a class reunion, with the participants then "flashing back" to their days as students. So that might be where the conceit of using obviously older-than-high-school performers came into play (even though back then it was almost unheard of for actual teens to play teens in movies. So many flicks had early-20s performers playing teenagers!) I was 12 when it came out so everyone seemed old to me. Ha ha!! Never even dawned on me then that the people were too old since I'd never even been inside a high school to that point. ONJ was always so fresh and clean looking. Her finale look was QUITE the eye-opener! (Though sadly spoiled in the bulk of the movie's advertising.) I used to play the hell out of that 2-record soundtrack album as a kid. It really was only later that I appreciated the use of the veterans you speak of. That makes it fun now to see those folks being used in colorful supporting parts. I can't forget the time I bought "Grease 2" on DVD and the cashier said, "OH GREASE! I love it! ... oh, this isn't the good one...." and I said, "I already have the good one. Now I want the bad one!" It is bad, but not as intolerable as some might have you believe. It has its own legion of fans, too. Take care! (Poseidon-3)
ReplyDeleteHey Poseidon, I've never seen the original stage "Grease," just read up on it. The conceit of having the current day characters play their young selves reminds me of "Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean," or especially, "Peggy Sue Got Married." Seemed "Grease" baddie characters made up most of the obvious over 40 crowd. As you say, ONJ looked fresh. Travolta was actually pretty young. Really Grease reminded me of Happy Days with singing and dancing, which is the best part of the movie. Just light weight fun! Have yet to watch Grease 2! Cheers, Rick
DeleteThe only obviously aged out character to me was the actress who won the dance off.
ReplyDelete