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MTV: The Medium Movie Directors Really Love
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11846 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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8 / 1987 |
1,711 Words |
| Author
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William J. Ruhlmann William J. Ruhlmann is a music writer based in New York. |
Why would a famous movie director beg a pop music star for a chance to make a four-minute video? In the past, it was usually the pop star who tried to talk a big director into working for him, but Stanley Donen, celebrated for such films as Singin' in the Rain, Two for the Road, and Charade, is not alone in seeking the MTV route.
In recent years, the pairing of top movie directors and popular musicians has flourished. They include John Landis and Michael Jackson; John Sayles and Bruce Springsteen; Brian De Palma and Bruce Springsteen; Tobe Hooper and Billy Idol; Spike Lee and Miles Davis; William Friedkin and Barbra Streisand; the late Andy Warhol and the Cars; Paul Bartel and Christine McVie; and George Miller and Tina Turner. Martin Scorsese, whose film, The Last Waltz, is the standard by which movies about performing musicians are judged, has recently completed a music video featuring Michael Jackson.
In March 1986, while producing the Academy Awards show, Donen got in touch with pop singer Lionel Richie, nominated for an Oscar for Best Song for his theme from White Nights, to ask him to take part in the program. Richie invited Donen down to his recording studio to talk about it. That was when Donen heard Richie's new song, "Dancing on the Ceiling."
"I asked him," Donen later told Billboard magazine, "if he was aware that I had done a film with Fred Astaire dancing on the ceiling (Royal Wedding, 1951). I don't think he was, but by the night of the Oscars, I think he'd found out."
'Dancing on the
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