being
happy
by Douglas Messerli
Beatrice Banyard (screenplay, based on her radio program), Al Boasberg (director) Myrt and Marge / 1933
In this case, almost everything. For one,
the dancing chorus girls in this movie make Ruby Keeler seem like a fairy-light
ballerina; their hard pounding taps should bring the house down even if the
applause of the small audiences they attract wouldn’t be able to drown out the
sound of dropping hair pin.
Foy, who later in his career would reveal
his significant talent (his performances of “It’s a Simply System” in Bells
Are Ringing and “I’ll Never Be Jealous Again” in The Pajama Game
represent two of the greatest topical comic songs in film musical history), is
here a fairly gifted dancer in bad need of a good choreographer. But the jokes
radio-and-screen-writer Beatrice Banyard hands him only demonstrate his roots
as a vaudevillian ham. It’s hard to be convinced of his character’s love for
Marge when it is so evident that he holds himself in far greater esteem. When
he crawls into Marge’s bed late in the story to deter the Angel’s determination
to receive some amorous pleasures as payback for his investments, you kind of
wish that he’d held off and let the backer get in a couple of smooches before
he slugged him in the kisser. But this heavy-footed and heavy-handed film
squelches almost of the fun with the old-fashioned slug-fest played out in the
dark, with no time for a little gay sexual insinuation.
Minster has a nice, slight, crackle of an
amateur voice but her dancing is a mix of gymnastics and contortionism. And for
utterly no earthly reason except for the film’s Deus ex machina—when she
suddenly takes over the role of the show’s angel—Marge’s heavy-set mother
(Trixie Friganza) trots along with the company to make sure no one might touch
her baby still clinging to her more than ample bosom.
There is a little jab at possible racist
Asian humor when the company dines at a local Chop Suey joint, but luckily they
either forgot the punch-line or immediately lost interest in the skit. There is
But then heaven does sometimes deliver up
lovely strangelings in her stork’s beak. For the pansy-player of this creation
is born into the script not only for a line or two, but serves as the stage
manager and hangs out with the entire team until the end. Beloved by both his
fellow thespians and the script, Clarence (Ray Hedge) dishes out catty comments
and comebacks to several members of the cast. In the film’s very first scene as
he gathers up the chorus girls’ costume accessories into a trunk, he notes by
the tired look on the face of one girl that she’s been out late the night before
with a lover, accessing the situation as being “catch as catch can.” The cheap
perfume of a second girl smells to him “like a goat.” Turning to his assistant
he observes, “If we could get the run on this show I could make the second
payment for my kimono.” A third chorus girl hands him her boa saying, “Put that
in the trunk and don’t wear it.” He hisses back, “Selfish!” Later, when yet
another of the chorus beauties shows up with a pair of net stockings which, she
insists, have just a little a rip, he, inspecting it more carefully, declares:
“A rip? My dear, it looks like King Kong going to a masquerade.”
A moment later the producer Grady shows
up to tell the suddenly gathered cast the worst news first (he and his partner
are bankrupt). As he begins “You know how much I love you all,” Clarence
snipping back, “That’s the worst!”
“My partner and I are insolvent,”
announces Grady.
“Well, we can’t all be happy,” Clarence
quips.
While his lines alone may not be terribly
funny, his character is, and we can’t wait to hear what might come out of his
mouth whenever he’s around (not enough, alas, to save the film or the show its
actors are in). But not since Eadweard Muybridge’s two women walked up to one
another in 1887 to engage in a kiss or William Kennedy Dickson’s young men took
one another in their arms in 1894 to dance has a truly gay figure in film
really appeared to be enjoying himself. Far more than the Wildeian attempts at
wicked wit of the sad players in the band of boys gathered for a party in Mart
Crowley’s 1970 work, this queer boy from 1933 is perfectly delighted to throw
out a riposte for each and every occasion, while his subjects are equally
pleased to bow down to him for his superior naughty wit. What a gift this silly
little film has given us in Clarence. If they only knew it, Beatrice Banyard
and Boasberg might have handed over their collective BB-guns to Clarence to let
him take endless shots at the entire cast.
All we have left is a little buckshot in
the rear, as our resident queer, dining in the aforementioned Chinese
restaurant teaches Bonnell how to properly knit while he patiently sits for a
while to play straight man to her comic attempts to explain where she was born
(“My Aunt Minnie’s house.” “And where did this Aunt Minnie live?” “She moved.”
“Exactly where were you born?” “In the front room on Thursday morning.” “How do
you know it was Thursday?” “’Cause the next day they wouldn’t give me any
meat.” It goes on....) Tired of playing “second banana,” he stands, announcing
“I’m a wreck. I’ve been on my feet ironing all day.”
Moving off to another table, he declares
it’s his birthday, so he’ll take every check, which once presented to him, he
holds out his hand out to ask politely for the money with which to pay them.
Unlike Harold’s birthday party in The Boys in the Band, no one goes home
bitter or unhappy here, for Clarence’s humor is never mean but simply points up
all of our self-delusions. I shall always imagine Myrt and Myrtle’s gay boy
lounging about in his kimono with a good book or even a cute boy waiting in his
bed.
Los Angeles, April 6,
2021
Reprinted from My
Queer Cinema blog and World Cinema Review (April 2021).



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