Irving Berlin’s White Christmas — 4K
🎶 Let’s all get up and dance to a song movie that was a hit before your mother was born 🎶 … or your grandmother, maybe. Does anybody under 50 know who Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye were? 1954’s biggest hit may not be today’s current fashion, but it’s got fine music and some great choreography: Rosemary Clooney sings, Vera-Ellen dances. When new it was already nostalgic, and now it’s a time capsule from a completely different era of show biz. In the glory of VistaVision and Technicolor, the Christmasy sentiment pops off the screen.
Irving Berlin’s White Christmas
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital
Paramount
1954 / Color / 1:85 widescreen / 120 min. / Street Date November 5, 2024 / Available from Amazon / 25.99
Starring: Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney, Vera-Ellen, Dean Jagger, Mary Wickes, John Brascia, Anne Whitfield, George Chakiris, Barrie Chase, Johnny Grant, Sig Ruman, Grady Sutton, Herb Vigran.
Cinematography: Loyal Griggs
Art Directors: Hal Pereira, Roland Anderson
Costume Design: Edith Head
Film Editor: Frank Bracht
Dances staged by Robert Alton
Songs by Irving Berlin
Written for the screen by Norman Krasna, Norman Panama, Melvin Frank
Produced by Robert Emmett Dolan
Directed by Michael Curtiz
The biggest box office success of 1954 arrives in a beautiful restoration. White Christmas was once considered mainstream American gold, encapsulating everything great and grand about a prosperous, victorious nation basking in its glory. It has four million dollars’ worth of big stars, knockout Technicolor and music by ‘America’s songwriter’ Irving Berlin.
One would have to be pushing the 80 year mark to remember this one new in theaters. Paramount chose it to premiere VistaVision, its answer to the industry’s format reshuffle. Cinerama was impractical for most movies, and 3-D was rejected by audiences for several reasons. CinemaScope was the big winner, but for overall quality VistaVision was better. Running normal 35mm film sideways (exactly as in a still camera) produced superb large-format images. They were incredibly sharp and vivid after being ‘printed down’ to standard 35mm. White Christmas actually made its debut projected in un-adapted VistaVision, which must have been amazing to see. *
We read that Irving Berlin initiated the movie, as he did the same year’s CinemaScope hit There’s No Business Like Show Business. Both are Berlin song book musicals, and even share bits of tunes, like ‘Heat Wave’. One of the bigger show-biz deals of its year, White Christmas was planned to expand upon an earlier Berlin musical, the 1942 Holiday Inn with Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire.
The screenplay is a featherweight romantic drama that confects a sentimental misunderstanding to provide a third-act conflict. Every reel has a song or dance performance. Army captain Bob Wallace and private Phil Davis (Bing Crosby & Danny Kaye) perform for their fellow troops somewhere in France, and say goodbye to their beloved commanding officer, Major General Thomas F. Waverly (Dean Jagger). Phil saves Bob’s life during an air raid, forming a bond that leads to their song & dance show-biz partnering at the war’s end. Ten years later, they’re big-time celebrities in clubs and TV, and producing their own musical shows. The ‘zany’ Phil is forever pulling mischief on Bob. Finishing a Florida run of their revue ‘Playing Around’, Phil comes to the rescue of the performing Haynes sisters Betty and Judy (Rosemary Clooney & Vera-Ellen), helping them to escape a crooked landlord. The four end up on a northbound train, which doesn’t stop until it reaches the Haynes sister’s next job venue, in Vermont.
Phil’s plan to matchmake a romance between Bob and Betty is joined by another concern. Retired from service, General Waverly is now the owner of a Vermont Inn that is going bankrupt. Even though it is December, there is no snow and therefore no customers; the Inn must fold. The show biz quartet stays on, and Bob and Betty become an item, much to Phil and Judy’s satisfaction. Bob then comes to the Inn’s rescue with a special deal. New York columnist and TV star Ed Harrison (Johnny Grant) agrees to publicize Waverly’s Inn on TV, by letting Bob broadcast a plea for their pals in the old battalion to check into the Inn for a Christmas Eve show to honor the great General. But Bob’s romance is scuttled when Waverly’s desk clerk Emma (Mary Wickes) blabs some erroneous gossip. Thinking that Bob’s big event is an exploitative publicity scheme, Betty leaves for a job back in New York. Will everything end in tragedy?
Have a heart — don’t forget our needy World War II generals!
White Christmas is of course a string of songs glued together with a thin story, that culminates with Irving Berlin’s popular title tune. With its theme of separation, the song is strongly identified with the WW2 experience, to which the movie adds a theme of ‘doing right by our forgotten general.’ Yes, forgotten, impoverished ex-generals are a neglected minority, we’re sure. We’re all choked up about the WW2 experience, but the recently stalemated Korean ‘problem’ isn’t anybody’s idea of a happy memory. Although the sentiment for the general is transparent, the show achieves ‘professional sincerity’: Dean Jagger’s performance makes the good-guy commander decent and deserving.
Bing Crosby still croons like a dream, despite being rather long in the tooth. He was born in the same year as ‘the old man’ Jagger. Danny Kaye’s clowning is top grade, if an acquired taste. He was a major movie comedian, at this time second only to Martin & Lewis in the Paramount corral.
The leading ladies bring even more talent, and class. Vera-Ellen adds needed vitality to the dance numbers. Her first movies were with Danny Kaye, but she didn’t make very many, and was almost always in support of a male lead like Gene Kelly or Fred Astaire. The movie’s warmest personality, major recording star Rosemary Clooney, stands out in every duet and foursome combo. This may be her only really good film role, as even her starring part in Red Garters didn’t fully come off. Clooney manages to be an excellent romantic partner for Bing Crosby, who was a full 25 years her senior.
The Bob Wallace – Phil Davis banter & antics feel like watered-down Hope & Crosby material. The mischievous Phil is forever doing ‘helpful’ things behind Bob’s back, like giving their train stateroom away to the girls. Since the four leads haven’t a real problem or character fault between them, the film’s romantic non-conflicts must be manufactured. Good intentions somehow require keeping secrets. Innocent misunderstandings R Us: the General must be kept in the dark about the big plans to make his snow-challenged snow resort into a success. Phil and Judy fake an engagement to goad Betty into accepting Bob’s advances.
Writers Frank and Panama reported that writing White Christmas was a deathly ordeal. They had to please the giant egos in a star lineup that kept changing, taking the story along with it. Irving Berlin wanted Fred Astaire to play opposite Crosby, to make the show a quasi-remake of Holiday Inn. But Astaire rejected the first script. Pro all-round entertainer Donald O’Connor was then cast to take Astaire’s place. The star of Singin’ in the Rain was a dynamite choice — he and Vera-Ellen had danced together in the previous year’s Call Me Madam.
O’Connor was currently contracted to Universal for the Francis the Talking Mule series. He and Vera-Ellen went into White Christmas dance rehearsals, but not long before the planned shooting date, a cruelly ironic health problem arose. O’Connor came down with a malady called Query Fever, which he caught from the &#%@*! mule.
That prompted the last-minute enlistment of Danny Kaye. Kaye could handle light dancing duties — he’s a superb personality dancer — but not the demanding numbers designed for Astaire and then O’Connor. More rewrites were required to change dialogue and song lyrics, replacing Dance Guy business with Funny Guy business. As Robert Alton’s choreography had all been worked out, top dancer John Brascia took over the big dance duets with Vera-Ellen. They’re terrific together, even though Brascia’s character ‘John’ has no more connection to the central story than do the dress extras. Bob and Phil’s revue troupe is more regimented than the army: when things get cozy after hours, the dance chorus and crew vanish, leaving the public areas of the Inn free for private cooing between Bob and Betty.
The behind the scenes realities clash with the movie’s depiction of big-time Show Business as a noble institution with warm hearts and high ethics. To honor his commanding officer, Bob puts aside all the deal-making and money-grubbing: ‘Ya gotta have heart.’ Yet the composer and stars of White Christmas all fought for every cent they could squeeze out of the project. Donald O’Connor may have been a simple loan out. We’re told that when he had to be replaced, the other key profit profit participants had to give up some points for Danny Kaye.
All those negotiations must have kept some agents and lawyers very busy.
An original soundtrack album didn’t happen for White Christmas, presumably because Crosby and Clooney were represented by different labels unwilling to collaborate. Vera-Ellen’s singing voice was dubbed by Trudy Stevens, who had previously provided a singing voice for Lizabeth Scott. Ms. Stevens may never have received screen credit for anything, and it does not look as if she ever received the late-career acknowledgement given Marni Nixon.
So tonight I’m gonna party like it’s 1935!
Paramount’s big October ’54 release boasted a new state-of-the-art format, with some warm and mellow songs, two of America’s best singers, and three or four dazzling dance numbers — all serving a story suited for the 1930s, with light comedy banter that nobody thought was very funny. It doesn’t matter, because the show serves up the secure & affirming vision that America wanted. Much of the generation that won the war and saved the world wasn’t yet 35 years old; the nation was in the hands of older people that subscribed to pre-war values. Teenagers were just being ‘invented.’ The power of Youth Culture wouldn’t fully kick in until the Beatles and the Summer of Love, a decade later.
One of my first memories (1956?) is sitting with older relatives in Sioux City Iowa watching The Lawrence Welk Show on a tiny B&W TV. When we see White Christmas now, I have to think that Lawrence Welk was striving to give his show the same appeal: no conflict, no challenge, just rosy-cheeked (white) entertainers giving forth with nostalgic tunes.
In the 1960s White Christmas became a holiday perennial on network TV, every December from 1964 to 1968. We must have watched it three years in a row, stretched by at least an hour by corporate commercial breaks. At age 12, I’d fall asleep before the finale, before the Santa Claus costumes and the snow arrived. It was a Great Movie because … everybody said so, it just was. It doubtless prompted as many new color TV sales as the Rose Bowl Parade. We watched it on a 19-inch B&W set, and imagined the colors.
By now, most of the target audience for the movie passed on ten years ago. It can only have second-hand relevance for people of my age. To those born after 1955, it is as irrelevant as ancient history. Entertainment greats of the 20th century are quickly becoming obscure — just ask a non-film-freak college kid who Cary Grant was.
But those people who still care about movie history will find that White Christmas still has appeal. Danny Kaye’s antics are not to everyone’s liking, but his talent is undeniable; Bing Crosby is as subdued-mellow as always. Vera-Ellen is a bit leaner than in On the Town, but is even more of a powerhouse in her showcase dance numbers. It’s amusing to see her lingering mid-dance two-shot with none other than George Chakiris. ←
Rosemary Clooney’s on-screen personality is what puts the movie over the top. Even in the artificial construct of ‘Betty,’ Clooney projects peace and sincerity in everything she does. She’s a showbiz pro, yet also feels like a beloved relative, someone we’d look forward to seeing at holiday time. Clooney made comparatively few films and wasn’t a regular on TV variety shows. Perhaps she found more happiness and satisfaction by staying out of the big-star rat race.
Paramount’s 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital of Irving Berlin’s White Christmas will be prized by collectors and fans of classic musicals. A fine Blu-ray was released ten years ago, but the new 4K disc will really show off one’s home theater. VistaVision’s extra sharpness reminds us of the 4K disc of Vertigo — the art direction doesn’t go in for subtle moods or colors, but the impact on a home theater big screen is just as strong. One can see it right from the beginning — the red background for the titles is solid, but without the ‘glow’ seen on the Blu-ray.
Except for a couple of stock shots and a scene at a train stop, the entire movie plays out inside Paramount sound stages. The interior set for exterior of the Inn is as good as Hollywood artifice gets. The battleground setting for the prologue are completely fake, something few musicals worry about. Director Michael Curtiz just keeps things moving, with cameraman Loyal Griggs turning out shot after perfect shot. The facial tones for the four stars are especially good; the actresses look sensational at all times.
The song ‘Mandy’ has been arranged as a spirited dance number. A Minstrel Show number has a lesser requirement for dancing skill, allowing Clooney and Kaye to join in. The filmmakers had enough sense not to do it in Blackface, unlike Holiday Inn with its ‘Abraham’ number. Another atypical number is a half-improvised reprise of ‘Sisters’ with Crosby and Kaye lip-synching to the girls’s vocals while clowning in half-drag. Kaye’s comedy often leaned on swishy mannerisms; we can see Billy Wilder looking at the number and realizing that his Some Like It Hot will need to be filmed in Black & White.
The video extras are all on the Blu-ray disc, and repeat the contents of the ‘Diamond Edition’ Blu from 2014. Much of it is promotional fluff, but always informative and entertaining. Very much recommended is Rosemary Clooney’s commentary, which must have been recorded at a much earlier date. Her memories are also rosy, but she never sounds like she’s holding back what she thinks. In her opinion, Bing Crosby had more operative authority over the set than director Michael Curtiz.
A digital code is included in the packaging. Good images from White Christmas are not plentiful on the Internet, so we’ve made do with what we can find. None of them quite capture the visual quality of the 4k disc.
Thanks to correspondent ‘B’ for help with this review.
Reviewed by Glenn Erickson
Irving Berlin’s White Christmas
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital rates:
Movie: Very Good +plus
Video: Excellent
Sound: Excellent
Supplements:
Audio Commentary: Rosemary Clooney.
White Christmas Sing-Along
Classic Holiday Moments
Assignment Children
Backstage Stories
Bing Crosby: Christmas Crooner
Danny Kaye: Joy to the World
Irving Berlin’s White Christmas
Rosemary’s Old Kentucky Home
White Christmas: From Page to Stage
White Christmas: A Look Back with Rosemary Clooney
Photo galleries, theatrical trailers.
Deaf and Hearing-impaired Friendly? YES; Subtitles: English (feature only)
Packaging: One 4K Ultra HD disc + one Blu-ray and digital code in Keep case
Reviewed: November 11, 2024
(7222whit)
* The format persisted for about ten years, and graced some of the best-looking films of the era: Artists and Models, The Desperate Hours, The Searchers, The Ten Commandments, Gunfight at the OK Corral, Funny Face, Battle of the River Plate, King Creole, One-Eyed Jacks, and a string of Alfred Hitchcock masterpieces: To Catch a Thief, The Man who Knew Too Much, Vertigo, and North by Northwest.
Visit CineSavant’s Main Column Page
Glenn Erickson answers most reader mail: cinesavant@gmail.com
Text © Copyright 2024 Glenn Erickson
The best way to describe this film as a beautifully wrapped box of bon-bons: delicious and satisfying to the sweet tooth but pretty much empty calories. I have always wondered about the deux-ex-machina of splitting up Crosby and Clooney pretty much extending the run time to two hours (one of the best examples of the “end of Act II breakups” ever: Wickes has never eavesdropped on calls before but this one time with Bing she does and she immediately misconstrues it AND runs to Betty about it instead of confronting Crosby where she would get the truth in confidence. Plus, Clooney is able to get a booking in a posh Manhattan night club at the last minute during the holidays THEN, when she realizes that she has done a stupid, rash thing, she walks out and back to Vermont-good luck getting any other bookings in NYC, lady-you will probably have your cabaret card revoked and have to work Hoboken from now on.
That likability is what makes this, in my apparently minority opinion, superior to HOLIDAY INN. In that picture, Bing and Fred are both, frankly, a-holes, and this keeps the film at arms’ distance. No such problem here. And I’d love to see some imaginative repertory cinema booking a “Percy Helton Christmas” bill of this and MIRACLE ON 34th STREET.
I love revisiting Vistavision films. There are three to see on 4k this season. What a forward thinking technology. We used in for a few years in vfx. Lazy eight.
Is it important to mention the race demo of the Lawrence Welk cast?
Yea, it wasn’t necessary, it’s just that Lawrence Welk, harmless as he was, really represents the 1950 status quo to me. I know he eventually ‘integrated’ in the way that the rest of TV did. Thanks Richard.
Bing and Dean Jagger (The OLD General) were both born in 1903.
The arc of stardom: “Who is Cary Grant?” “Get me Cary Grant.” “Get me a young Cary Grant.” “Who is Cary Grant?”
Only a moron doesn’t know. We are loaded with these people but they are not the standard for anything other than dull.
[…] register as good enough to be a romantic partner for Meg. The sentimental favorites Mary Wicks ( White Christmas; in her last movie) and John Neville ( The Adventures of Baron Munchausen) are barely more than […]