Warner Home Video slipped out a tasty DVD morsel just
before Christmas - the 1943 Lucille Ball musical Best
Foot Forward. Available exclusively on amazon.com,
this is a tuneful Technicolor treat sure to provide a
little extra sunshine on a dark winter's day.
Adapted from a hit Broadway show, Best Foot Forward
is basically a college musical with the college in this
case played by the fictional Winsocki Military Institute.
A young cadet has written a fan letter to Lucille Ball
asking her to the prom, never expecting that she'll
actually show up. But show up she does, along with her
manager who sees this as a great way to drum up a little
extra publicity. Unfortunately, the cadet's prom date isn't
so high on the idea. Ball is delightful and sexy playing
herself, and she shows off some very pleasing comic timing,
though she is far from the only attraction. June Allyson,
Gloria DeHaven and Nancy Walker shine as prom dates, and
supplying fine Hugh Martin-Ralph Blane music throughout is
Harry James and His Music Makers band.
It's especially nice to see June Allyson in her feature
debut since the actress died only within the last year. She
and Nancy Walker were both imported from the Broadway
production of Best Foot Forward by producer Arthur
Freed, who certainly knew talent when he saw it (or heard
it). The Broadway show, in fact, was enough for MGM to
sign Allyson to a studio contract; a year later, with the
monster hit Two Girls and a Sailor (1944), she
became a star.
Walker also makes her movie debut in Best Foot
Forward, practically stealing the show with her sharp
wisecracks - most of which are aimed squarely at her
plain-Jane self. "For everyone else it's a dance. For me
it's a concert," she quips. "I'd hang myself but I got a
dentist appointment on Tuesday," she jokes. Walker later
played "Rosie the waitress" in a series of Bounty paper
towel commercials, in addition to a hit television career.
Here, she and Allyson and DeHaven all get to show off their
dancing skills in the film's best number, "The Three B's,"
in which they take turns making cases for three musical
styles: the barrel house, the boogie-woogie and the blues.
The energy of this song-and-dance number is infectious, and
it's worth noting that it and all the other musical numbers
were directed by Charles Walters, who would go on to direct
the best college musical of the era, Good News
(1947), which also starred Allyson. His work in Best
Foot Forward reveals that he already knows how to use
wide shots for maximum impact, something sorely lacking in
modern movie musical numbers.
Other songs in this picture include "Buckle Down,
Winsocki," the lovely ballad "You're Lucky" (with Ball's
voice dubbed by Gloria Grafton), and the energetic "Alive
and Kickin'," in which Walker sings on her own and dances
to comic effect with Harry James. Indeed, James has quite a
bit more to do in this movie than just lead his band, with
some occasional dialogue and dancing and one funny moment
where his entire band shouts "Lucille Ball!" as a throwaway
joke. Mostly, though, the movie is a fun showcase for his
band's musical talents.
Extras include the trailer, an excellent cartoon and a
so-so short film. The cartoon, One Ham's Family, is
a delightfully mean-spirited and clever Tex Avery
concoction. The short, The Knight is Young (1938),
is one of a series of musical subjects featuring Allyson
before her feature career got going, and it's really of
interest only for that reason.
There are far less pleasant ways to spend an hour and a
half than by experiencing the bright color and lighthearted
entertainment value of Best Foot Forward, and
Warner's DVD looks superb, with nary a scratch.
For more information about Best Foot Forward, visit
Warner Video. To purchase Best Foot Forward, visit Amazon and do a search by title.
by Jeremy Arnold
Best Foot Forward - Lucille Ball in BEST FOOT FORWARD - An Amazon Exclusive on DVD!
by Jeremy Arnold | August 30, 2006

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