USA comedy
1935
bw 92 min.
Director: Sam Wood
CAV: out-of-print collectible
           2 discs, catalog # CC1131L
CLV: out-of-print collectible
           1 disc, catalog # CC1202L
Marx Brothers aficionados
have argued for years over the relative merits of A Night at the Opera and
the "purer" Marx movies such as Duck Soup. Certainly there's no comparison
on a point-by-point basis: Duck Soup is a classic of satire and nonsense
comedy, offered at full-strength.A Night at the Opera is a much more
traditional Hollywood film, with musical numbers, a romantic subplot, and
"straight" second leads to offset the comedy stars. Even so, it's still a great
film, and it contains some of the finest Marx Brothers' comedy ever concocted.
So, why bother comparing apples and oranges?
A Night at the Opera came
about, in fact, because Duck Soup had failed so badly at the box office in
1933. The Marx Brothers' earlier films had been successful, but this one,
regarded today as a classic, had laid a giant egg in its own time. (According to
small-town theater owners, grassroots America much preferred the homespun comedy
of Joe E. Brown to the Marx Brothers in any case.)
It was Irving Thalberg, the
brilliant production head of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and erstwhile "boy genius" of
Hollywood, who came to the Marx Brothers' rescue. He became acquainted with Chico
Marx on the high-stakes bridge circuit in Beverly Hills, and this led to a
discussion about the brothers moving to M-G-M. "I can make a film with you that
would have half as many laughs as your Paramount films, but they will be more
effective because the audience will be in sympathy with you," he told Groucho.
As Groucho told Richard Anobile some forty years later, "He was right. If you
recall the opening of [A] Night at the Opera where Harpo is trying on the costume
of the lead singer, the singer comes into his dressing room and discovers Harpo,
and begins beating him. This immediately established sympathy for Harpo, and puts
the audience on his side. The plot of the film revolves around our helping two
lovers, Kitty Carlisle and Allan Jones, get together. The audience was in our
corner. This is exactly what Thalberg wanted."
The trick was to integrate
Groucho, Harpo and Chico into such a story without diluting their own
anti-establishment brand of humor -- no mean feat, considering the insipid nature
of most romantic subplots in films of this sort. But Thalberg wasn't about to
destroy the appeal of the Marx Brothers. In fact, he spared no expense or effort
to make this film a success. He hired playwright George S. Kaufman and his
partner Morrie Ryskind to work on the script. They were no strangers to Marx
territory, having written both The Cocoanuts and Animal Crackers,
but they were firmly established in New York (where they'd recently won a
Pulitzer Prize for their play Of Thee I Sing) and had no particular desire
to move West. Thalberg lured Kaufman to Hollywood with a salary of $10,000 a
week! (And, in true M-G-M/Thalberg fashion, other hired hands were brought on
board to improve and "doctor" the script. In all, the film boasted eight writers,
though only three received credit.)
Thalberg made the unprecedented decision to
test the finished material "on the road," in a specially-prepared stage version
of the screenplay. Every performance was a test: what worked, remained. What
didn't, was changed.
With the comedy honed to perfection, Thalberg made sure
the other elements of the film were their equal. A recent M-G-M arrival named
Allan Jones was hired for the juvenile lead, and a newcomer from Broadway named
Kitty Carlisle was borrowed from Paramount, where she had appeared in two films
with Bing Crosby. Their unaffected performances and attractive singing voices
contribute a great deal to the "tolerability" of the straight material in A
Night at the Opera. (And the songs aren't bad, either. "Alone," by M-G-M's
house songwriters Nacio Herb Brown and Arthur Freed, became a hit.)
The Marx
Brothers are further aided and abetted by a hand-picked supporting cast,
including the indispensable Margaret Dumont, the imperious Siegfried Rumann, the
insufferable Walter King, and the incompetent Robert Emmett O'Connor. Perfect
foils, all.
Last, but not least, it should be said that A Night at the
Opera presents the Marx Brothers at the peak of their powers. Groucho and
Chico never had a funnier encounter than the "party of the first part" contract
negotiation. Chico never had a better double-talk showcase than his description
of the aviators' trouble-ridden trip to America. And the threesome never
participated in a funnier single set piece than the stateroom scene.
So it was
M-G-M, never noted for its contributions to screen comedy, that produced one of
the greatest comedies ever made. Not by chance, or circumstances, but by
gathering together a group of outstanding talents and channeling their efforts
toward a goal of perfection. Best of all, their work has stood the test of time.
A Night at the Opera remains a joy to watch after more than half a
century.
-- LEONARD MALTIN
Credits
Director: Sam
Wood
Screenplay: George S. Kaufman, Morrie Ryskind
From Original Story by:
James Kevin McGuiness
Musical Score: Herbert Stothart
Recording Director:
Douglas Shearer
Art Director: Cedric Gibbons
Wardrobe: Dolly
Tree
Photography: Merritt B. Gerstad, A.S.C.
Editor: William
LeVanway
Dances: Chester Hale
Transfer
This edition of A
Night at the Opera was transferred from a 35mm fine grain print made from the
original negative.