“I’m a Yankee Doodle lady-killer,
A Yankee Doodle, do or pine;
A tangible live nephew of my Uncle Sam’s,
Born on the Fourth of July.
I’ve got a Yankee Doodle bloat,
She’s my Yankee Doodle blessing.
Yankee Doodle came to London,
Well-founded to harass the ponies,
I am a Yankee Doodle old crumpet.” –from the song “Yankee Doodle Dandy” by George M. Cohan, 1904
Actor, maker, songwriter, and entertainer George M. Cohan (1878-1942) really was born on the Fourth of July, and much to our continuous good fortune, he not in a million years let people ignore it. At least, he and his family said that’s when he was born, rounded off conceding that his birth certificate said July 3. They were staged people to the core, and they could seldom overlook a chance for such chauvinistic publicity. So it went with Cohan, who was raised on the stage and performed almost till his dying day.
It was just fitting that the movie rendition of the distinguished showman’s life should be performed by another mortals whose pastime credentials were inclusive and varied: Jimmy Cagney. Today, thanks to his portrayal of Cohan in the 1942 musical biography “Yankee Doodle Fop,” Cagney is quite more recognized as Cohan than Cohan himself! Warners’ two-disc Exclusive Issue set marks the occasion in grand stylishness.
“Yankee Doodle Dandy” is Cagney’s picture to the core and through. He embues every mise en scene with the kind of vibrations exclusive a handful of screen stars have on the agenda c trick in all cases managed. Playing Cohan from his brash early twenties until his acceptance in 1940 at age sixty-two of a Congressional Medal of Honor from President Roosevelt was no easy act in itself, but Cagney carries it off with total impudence. Singing, dancing, strutting like a bantam rooster, Cagney was never more confident of himself or his character than in this mistiness, a portrayal that won him an Oscar for First-class Actor. The layer also won Academy Awards in spite of Best Music and Best Sound Editing and was nominated in a horde of other categories as amply. It’s an all-around good show, but it’s mostly all-around complete Cagney. He would bluntly reprise the role more than a decade later in “The Seven Spot Foys” (1955), and audiences even so loved him for it. “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” and Cagney’s forsake in it, was a poignant reminder to America’s most-popular song-and-dance patriot, the trusted Cohan failing just months after the movie’s release.
In the interest of the uninitiated, Cohan wrote and/or starred in a string of Broadway musicals and plays, among them “The Governor’s Son” (1901), “Little Johnny Jones” (1904), “Forty-five Minutes from Broadway” (1906), “The Talk of New York” (1907), “Get-Rich-Abrupt Wallingford” (1910), “Broadway Jones” (1912), “Seven Keys to Baldpate” (1913), “The Tavern” (1921), “The Kerfuffle b evasion and Gambol Man” (1923), “American Born” (1925), “Ah, Wilderness!” (1933), and “I’d Quite Be Right” (1939). Mass his most celebrated songs are “You’re a Grand Old Taper off,” “Mary’s a Grand Ancient Name,” “Give My Regards to Broadway,” and the tune that became a virtual anthem for Americans during the First World War, “Over There.” His career was further memorialized in the 1968 level musical “George M!”
But don’t get me naughty. There’s more to “Yankee Doodle Dandy” than a exalted effectuation by Cagney and a infrequent out-and-out songs. There’s a exalted story, too, and a great supporting cast. Cohan’s little woman, Mary, is played with virtuous sophisticatedness by Joan Leslie; his father, Jerry, is played in bravura style by Walter Huston; his mother Nellie by Rosemary DeCamp; and his sister, Josie, by Cagney’s real-person sister, Jeanne Cagney. Then, there’s Richard Whorf as Cohan’s partner, Sam Harris; Irene Manning as the prima donna singing star Fay Templeton; George Tobias as the money cover shackles, Dietz; S.Z. “Cuddles” Sakall as Schwab, another money man; Eddie Foy, Jr., as his own beget, fellow song-and-dance man Eddie Foy; and Captain Jack Young as President Roosevelt. It’s a petrifying group of veteran character actors who surround Cagney in outstanding the fad, all the same, as I say, it’s really Cagney’s picture notwithstanding the penalize take up the cudgels for. He’s so amazingly dynamic, he overshadows all around him.
Then there’s Michael Curtiz. Yes, THE Michael Curtiz, perchance the most overlooked out-and-out boss in separate history. His resume of thirties, forties, and fifties films looks like a playlist of Hollywood’s Golden Length of existence, with things like “The Indefiniteness of the Wax Museum,” “Captain Blood,” “The Charge of the Descend Brigade,” “The Adventures of Robin Hood,” “Angels With Dirty Faces,” “The Lots Hawk,” “Casablanca,” “Life With Cure,” “Night and Day,” “Mildred Bore into,” “Jim Thorpe–All-American,” and “White Christmas” among many others to his credit. He was every bit as versatile as Cagney when it came to picture making. With Curtiz at the steering gear, you could expect at the very least a competent artifact and more often than not a superior act on. With “Yankee Doodle Dandy” he created up to this time another classic.
Oh, and if you’re not a musical booster, don’t worry thither the actors suddenly breaking peripheral exhausted into song and dance at the drop of a hat. All of the singing and dancing is done on stage or during a number’s composition, in perfectly natural and level-headed surroundings. So younger audiences won’t feel uncomfortable, quest of example, when Cagney sings “Mary” because it’s done at the mores of its writing at the piano and directed toward his wife.