Second Chorus
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| Second Chorus | |
|---|---|
re-release poster | |
| Directed by | H. C. Potter |
| Written by | Frank Cavett (orig. story)[1] |
| Screenplay by | Elaine Ryan Ian McLellan Hunter Johnny Mercer (contributor) Ben Hecht (uncredited) |
| Produced by | Boris Morros |
| Starring | Paulette Goddard Fred Astaire |
| Cinematography | Theodor Sparkuhl |
| Edited by | Jack Dennis |
| Music by | Artie Shaw Hal Borne Johnny Mercer |
Production company | |
Release date |
|
Running time | 84 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Second Chorus is a 1940 Hollywood musical comedy film starring Paulette Goddard and Fred Astaire and featuring Artie Shaw, Burgess Meredith and Charles Butterworth, with music by Artie Shaw, Bernie Hanighen and Hal Borne, and lyrics by Johnny Mercer. The film was directed by H. C. Potter and produced independently for Paramount Pictures by Boris Morros, with associate producers Robert Stillman and (uncredited) Fred Astaire.[2] The film's copyright expired in 1968 and it is now in the public domain.[3]
Plot
[edit]Danny O'Neill and Hank Taylor are friends and rival trumpeters with "O'Neill's Perennials", a college band. Both have managed to prolong their college careers by failing seven years in a row. At a performance, Ellen Miller catches the eye of Danny and Hank. She serves them a summons notice for her boss, a debt collector. However, the fast-talking O'Neill and Taylor soon have her working as their manager, where her business savvy increases their gigs. Meanwhile, tired of losing several gigs to the Perennials, Artie Shaw persuades Ellen to be his booking manager.
Ellen tries to get Danny and Hank an audition for Shaw's band, but their jealous hijinks get them the boot. Ellen talks Shaw into letting rich "wannabe" mandolin player, J. Lester Chisholm, back a concert. When Hank pretends to be Ellen's jealous husband, then her brother, the plan to get Chisholm as backer nearly fails. But using the "brother" ploy, Danny and Hank get Chisholm back on board, then get Shaw to agree to put Danny's song into the show. All they have to do is keep Chisholm and his mandolin (which he wants to play in the concert) away from Shaw until after the show. Hank's solution is to drop sleeping pills into Chisholm's drink, but Chisholm knocks out Hank the same way.
To Ellen's relief, Danny finally acts responsibly and arranges his number for the show, which Shaw says "has really grown up into something special." He hands the baton to Danny, who successfully conducts his composition while tap-dancing in front of the band. Danny and Ellen then drive off into the night.
Cast
[edit]
- Fred Astaire as Danny O'Neill
- Paulette Goddard as Ellen Miller
- Artie Shaw as himself
- Charles Butterworth as Mr. Chisholm
- Burgess Meredith as Hank Taylor
- Frank Melton as Stu
- Jimmy Conlin as Mr. Dunn
- Don Brodie as clerk
- Marjorie Kane as secretary
- Joan Barclay as receptionist
- Willa Pearl Curtis as scrubwoman
- Billy Butterfield as himself / Shaw's Band Trumpeter
- William Benedict as ticket taker (uncredited)
Cast notes
- Billy Butterfield dubbed Burgess Meredith's trumpet solo.
Musical numbers
[edit]


Hermes Pan collaborated with Astaire on the choreography.
- "Sugar": Astaire is shown leading a college band in a jazz standard by Marceo Pinkard. Astaire's trumpet playing is dubbed by Bobby Hackett, while Meredith's is dubbed by Shaw's bandsman Billy Butterfield.
- "Everything's Jumping": A brief number for Artie Shaw and his band.
- "I Ain't Hep to That Step But I'll Dig It": This comic song and dance duet for Astaire and Goddard was, according to Goddard - whose dance ability and experience was limited - done "just once, one Saturday morning ... I'm glad it was all right for I couldn't have done it again". It was the last of Astaire's duets to be filmed entirely in one take. The dance incorporates a new step, the "Dig It" which involved snapping both feet together and then hopping while keeping them together. The rest of the dance involves original use of partnered teetering, scooting and dodging steps with some jitterbugging thrown in. In his first film appearance, Hermes Pan can be seen as the clarinetist in the band (standing farthest back).[4]
- "Sweet Sue": Another Astaire (Hackett) and Meredith (Butterfield) mime routine, this time to a Victor Young standard.
- "Love of My Life": Johnny Mercer and Shaw wrote this song one day over lunch at Mercer's house, and when the excited Shaw wanted to show it to the studio, Mercer persuaded him to wait three weeks explaining: "If you tell them you just wrote it over lunch they won't think it's any good". It is delivered by Astaire to Goddard and garnered an Academy Award nomination for Best Song.
- "Kamarinskaya": A brief comic number for Astaire, who plays a Russian doing a Moiseyev-style dance to the traditional Russian melody while singing a pseudo-Russian version of "Love of My Life" in a thick accent.
- "Poor Mr. Chisholm ": Accompanying himself on the piano Astaire sings this folk-parody Mercer-Henighen number for Shaw's approval.
- "Concerto for Clarinet": Like many jazzmen of his time – Benny Goodman, Paul Whiteman, Jimmy Dorsey and Duke Ellington among them – Shaw occasionally produced pieces with titles more commonly associated with classical music; Shaw, however was characteristically modest about this attractively episodic extended piece, composed especially for the film: "I never intended it for posterity ... It filled a spot in the picture". It features the string section – Shaw's "mice men" as he liked to call them, which he had just added to band – most famously in "Frenesi" - the year before.
- "Hoe Down the Bayou/Poor Mr. Chisholm (dance)": Astaire "conducts" the band while performing a tap solo.
The only number involving Astaire and Pan, the choreographic collaboration responsible for many routines featuring Astaire in the 1930s, was "Me and the Ghost Upstairs", which was cut from the final film but has been included in some home video releases. In it, Pan, shrouded in a sheet, creeps up on Astaire and begins to mimic him in a riotous number involving Lindy lifts and jitterbugging.
Production
[edit]In a 1968 interview, Astaire described this effort as "the worst film I ever made." Astaire explained that he was attracted to the film by the opportunity to "dance-conduct this real swingin' outfit". In an interview shortly before his death, Shaw admitted this film put him off acting.
Astaire and Shaw shared a striking series of personality traits in common: an obsessive perfectionism and seemingly endless appetite for retakes, profound musicality and love of jazz, personal modesty and charm, and in a late interview Shaw expressed his opinion of Astaire: "Astaire really sweat - he toiled. He was a humorless Teutonic man, the opposite of his debonair image in top hat and tails. I liked him because he was an entertainer and an artist. There's a distinction between them. An artist is concerned only with what is acceptable to himself, where an entertainer strives to please the public. Astaire did both. Louis Armstrong was another one."[5]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Notes
- ^ Decker, Todd. Music Makes Me: Fred Astaire and Jazz Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 2011. ISBN 0520950062
- ^ "AFI|Catalog".
- ^ Simosko, Vladimir (2000). Artie Shaw: A Musical Biography and Discography. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810833975.page 89
- ^ John Franceschina, Hermes Pan: The Man Who Danced with Fred Astaire (Oxford University Press, 2012); ISBN 0199913064
- ^ Interviewed in Fantle, Dave and Johnson, Tom. Reel to Real. Badger Books LLC, 2004, p.304. ISBN 1932542043
Bibliography
- Mueller, John. Astaire Dancing - The Musical Films of Fred Astaire, Knopf 1985, ISBN 0-394-51654-0
- Shaw, Artie. Artie Shaw, Television documentary, British Broadcasting Corporation, 2003
External links
[edit]- Second Chorus at IMDb
- Second Chorus at the TCM Movie Database (archived version)
- Second Chorus at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
- Second Chorus is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive
- Second Chorus in HD on YouTube
- "Me and the Ghost Upstairs" deleted scene with Fred Astaire and Hermes Pan on YouTube
- Artie Shaw playing Concerto for Clarinet on YouTube
Second Chorus
View on GrokipediaPlot and Characters
Plot Summary
Second Chorus follows Danny O'Neill and Hank Taylor, two trumpet-playing college students who have spent seven years at their university by deliberately failing classes, allowing them to remain part of the campus band, O'Neill's Perennials. As best friends and fierce rivals, they constantly compete for solos and leadership in the group, their antics fueled by a shared passion for music and a reluctance to enter the real world. Their carefree existence is upended when Ellen Miller, a determined young woman working as a bill collector, arrives to demand payment for an outstanding debt from the band. In a comedic scheme to recruit her, Danny and Hank stage a chaotic confrontation that results in her dismissal from her job; grateful for their persistence, Ellen accepts the role of the band's manager.[4][1] Under Ellen's astute guidance, the band achieves unexpected success, booking high-paying gigs and even outshining professional ensembles like Artie Shaw's orchestra, which heightens Danny and Hank's ambitions to join the big leagues. However, Ellen soon receives a prestigious offer to become Shaw's booking manager in New York, prompting her departure and leaving the duo scheming to follow her while vying for her affections. Upon arriving in the city, Ellen arranges auditions for them with Shaw's band, but their rivalry erupts into slapstick sabotage—each trying to upstage the other with improvised disruptions during the performance, leading to their humiliating rejection. Desperate for work, Hank takes a job as a bugler at a racetrack, enduring humorous mishaps like startling horses mid-race, while Danny disguises himself as a Cossack dancer in a Russian restaurant, where his trumpet playing inadvertently draws a crowd but also chaos. To secure a breakthrough, Hank impersonates Ellen's overprotective brother to gain access to J. Lester Chisholm, a wealthy amateur musician and Shaw admirer; the ploy works, as Chisholm, charmed by Ellen's pitch during a comically mismatched job interview attended by society ladies, gangsters, and teens, agrees to sponsor a grand concert featuring Shaw's band.[1][5][4] The path to the concert is riddled with further comedic conflicts, as Danny and Hank's jealousy escalates: Hank attempts to undermine Danny by tampering with his trumpet, only for the scheme to backfire spectacularly, while Hank attempts to undermine Chisholm by slipping sleeping pills into his drink, but the scheme backfires when Chisholm switches the drinks, drugging Hank instead. On the night of the premiere, a groggy Hank misses the event entirely, forcing Danny to step up despite his nerves. Motivated by his love for Ellen and a desire to prove his talent, Danny conducts his original composition for the orchestra, incorporating his signature dance moves in a triumphant fusion of music and rhythm that captivates the audience and earns Shaw's praise as a mature, innovative piece. With the concert's success cementing his position in the band, Danny resolves his rivalry with Hank through forgiveness and shared triumph, while romantically, he wins Ellen's heart, leading to a joyful reconciliation as the two drive off together into a promising future.[1][5][4]Cast and Roles
The principal cast of Second Chorus features Fred Astaire and Paulette Goddard in the leading roles, supported by Burgess Meredith, Artie Shaw, and Charles Butterworth, whose portrayals blend musical talent with comedic rivalry to establish the film's lighthearted, swing-era tone.[1][6]| Actor | Role | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Fred Astaire | Danny O'Neill | A perpetual college student and trumpeter leading a campus orchestra; Astaire mimes the trumpet solos, dubbed by Bobby Hackett, marking his sole on-screen trumpet role in a film.[1][7] |
| Paulette Goddard | Ellen Miller | A resourceful band manager who navigates the musicians' antics; Goddard, transitioning from comedic roles to romantic leads, demonstrates surprising dance aptitude in her duet with Astaire.[1][6] |
| Burgess Meredith | Hank Taylor | Danny's rival trumpeter and bandmate, employing physical comedy in their competitive dynamic; Meredith's trumpet playing is dubbed by Billy Butterfield.[1][7] |
| Artie Shaw | Himself | The renowned bandleader whose real-life orchestra appears on-screen; Shaw's authentic, non-acting presence adds musical credibility to the ensemble scenes.[1][6] |
| Charles Butterworth | J. Lester Chisholm | An eccentric elderly businessman and music enthusiast who becomes entangled in the group's schemes; Butterworth's deadpan delivery enhances the film's whimsical humor.[1][8] |