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An American
In Paris (1951)
In Vincente Minnelli's Best Picture-winning musical:
- the opening voice-over, introducing the film's character
and why he had settled in Paris as a painter: "This is Paris.
And I'm an American who lives here. My name, Jerry Mulligan, and
I'm an ex-GI. In 1945, when the Army told me to find my own job,
I stayed on. And I'll tell you why. I'm a painter. All my life
that's all I've ever wanted to do. And for a painter, the Mecca
of the world for study, for inspiration, and for living is here
on this star called Paris. Just look at it. No wonder so many artists
have come here and called it home. Brother, if you can't paint
in Paris, you'd better give up and marry the boss' daughter..."
- American expatriate and ex-GI Jerry Mulligan's (Gene
Kelly) song/dance to neighborhood street children to "I Got
Rhythm"
- Jerry's romantic song/dance with waifish pretty perfume-shop
clerk Lise Bouvier (Leslie Caron) on the quay next to the bank of
the Seine River to "Our Love is Here to Stay"
- vaudeville star Henri Baurel's (French music hall
star Georges Guetary) elaborate and lush Folies Bergere-like rendition
of "I'll Build a Stairway to Paradise" with lavish-costumed
chorus girls
- the performance of Lise's "Embraceable You" -
with five colorful facets of her personality appearing in this order
through dance montages: (1: "an exciting girl" 2: "she's
sweet and shy" 3: "she's adventurous and modern" 4: "she
reads incessantly"
5: "she's the gayest girl in the world")
- Jerry's performance of a song/dance with Henri in
the Latin Quarter titled "S'Wonderful"
- Adam Cook's (Oscar Levant) dream sequence in which
he conducted and performed Gershwin's "Piano Concerto in F" with
members of the orchestra
- the sequence of Jerry's final goodbye scene with 19
year old girlfriend Lise Bouvier before she departed to marry successful
music-hall star entertainer Henri Baurel, because of the protection
he had offered her for five years during the Resistance; Jerry told
Lise: "Now what have I got left? Paris. Maybe that's enough
for some, but it isn't for me anymore. Because the more beautiful
everything is, the more it'll hurt without you"
Final Goodbye Scene
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- the most extravagant number - the closing audacious
13-minute symphonic "American in Paris"
ballet with lavish, colorful and impressionistic backdrops, fountains
and artistic settings based on the works of famous and celebrated
French painters (Dufy, Utrillo, Renoir, Van Gogh, Rousseau, and Toulouse-Lautrec);
Jerry pursued Lise through the continually-changing backdrop of Paris;
it began with Jerry in front of a black and white backdrop picking
up a red rose dropped by Lise; the next sequence was in a Madeleine
flower market where Jerry danced with GIs and gendarmes, and also
with straw-hatted hoofers; then came a passionate emotional, mating
dance (during a smoky night) between Jerry and Lise around a fountain
in the Place de la Concorde followed by a Moulin Rouge-styled dance
in a cafe
- the number ended with everything suddenly vanishing
and the crowd disappearing; Jerry found himself alone with his red
rose in front of the black and white sketch backdrop in a deserted
Paris - with a zoom closeup of the red rose in his hand; the rose
dissolved into his lovelorn, romantically desolate face
The Extravagant "American in Paris" Finale
Ballet
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- in the concluding happy reconciliation - Jerry saw
Lise giving Henri a grateful farewell kiss after which he released
her from her engagement and stepped aside; Lise ran up a long flight
of stairs into Jerry's arms, ecstatically reunited in a loving
embrace; the camera panned upwards to a twinkling Paris skyline
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Introducing Jerry Mulligan (Gene Kelly)
"I Got Rhythm"
"Our Love Is Here to Stay"
"I'll Build a Stairway to Paradise"
"Embraceable You"
"S'Wonderful"
"Piano Concerto in F"
Concluding Reconciliation Between Jerry and Lise
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