This seemed like a fairly safe assumption, but given the sheer quantity of Westerns that were produced for film and television on or before 1968, the fact that only four have a title that ends with "of the Gun" suggests this wasn't a common formula for Western titles at all.
No idea. Background players are not listed on the production documents we've seen.Apologies if someone else has already answered the following question.
Who played the silent Yeoman in CITY ON THE EDGE?
This reminds me of the dream ballet in Oklahoma! (1943).Today: Red Skies, Red Garters
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What #StarTrek and Lost In Space’s respective Western episodes' looks appear to be aping is the Oscar™ nominated Best Production Design for the musical western Red Garters (1954), which featured abstracted sets and bold sky colors.
The look is so close one can imagine Kirk and the boys stepping in to watch Calaveras Kate (Rosemary Clooney: George’s aunt) belting out this number there…and Scotty making a fool of himself after some hootch and being thrown out a window.
A bunch of pix and more over in the twitter feed. (link)
He was involved in the script. I don't know that he had any influence on the production design.Oh, it makes sense that Tashlin was involved in the film's look.
We'll be discussing dream/stage sequences on our tweets today (Thursday) with a really fun clip.This reminds me of the dream ballet in Oklahoma! (1943).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dream_ballet
Comparison of a musical production's (1998 Royal National Theatre Cast's) with the 1955 film's:
And directed "Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?" which has Majel Barrett!rank Tashlin—who had directed some really innovative and cinematic cartoons at Warner Bros. and Columbia (notably The Fox and the Grapes in 1941, which basically is the mitochondrial DNA of the blackout gags and structure of Chuck Jones' Road Runner cartoons starting 6 years later)—had moved to live action
It looks like that video has been blocked on Youtube.From today's posts...
Minimalist sets were nothing new even then of course. They were a common stage convention and also utilized in film fantasy sequences, and not in the film’s broader setting. Here’s a striking example from 1953’s The Band Wagon.
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Yeah...I just changed the link to the same one you shared. It had worked fine until just this morning!It looks like that video has been blocked on Youtube.
Here's one posted by Turner Classic Movies. Is it the same scene?
Kor
And she's Nana Visitor's aunt!I'm gay but man I cannot take my eyes off Cyd Charisse in the club dance scene. She's mesmerizing, and almost spider-like.
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