Blurt Transaction
Immutability date: 2026/01/29 00:02:00 (UTC)
Transaction Info
| Transaction ID | 462d7c1baad4a3718f6d0642659fe08b0fa30c02 |
| Status | Confirmed |
| Block Number | #57,182,510 |
| Immutability Date | 2026-01-29 00:02:00 |
| Ref Block Num | 35117 |
| Ref Block Prefix | 632779753 |
| Transaction Num | 0 |
| Signatures | 1 sig(s) |
Signatures
[0] 1f61d4883dbebfa8f36de436843d2267623aa5d5211c872b1030b000e34e9fd04f1c3b0a77bb07353ccf98486277e4d13f02989e8a2aba7750d49c9e801d6b8919
2 transaction(s)
2026/01/29 00:02:00462d7c1
2026/01/29 00:02:00
462d7c1
| parent author | |
| parent permlink | movies |
| author | drax |
| permlink | film-review-the-barkleys-of-broadway-1769599116819 |
| title | Film Review: The Barkleys of Broadway (1949) |
| body |  When great duos of cinema get reunited after a long time, the results often leave much to be desired. One exception to this rule was provided by Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, the iconic dance supercouple of 1930s Hollywood, in *The Barkleys of Broadway*, the 1949 musical comedy directed by Charles Walters and their last film together. Astaire and Rogers play Josh and Dinah Barkley, a husband-and-wife musical comedy duo who are enjoying immense popularity on Broadway. Although their career is successful, its demands have put a high strain on their marriage, and things begin to deteriorate when Dinah becomes emotionally insecure over Bert Felsher (played by Clinton Sundberg), the producer of their show, insisting that the less talented but younger actress Shirlene May (played by Gale Robbins) serves as her understudy. The situation gets further complicated when Dinah meets Jacques Pierre Barredout (played by Jacques François), a French playwright and director who claims that she is perfect for the main role in his upcoming biographic play about the famous actress Sarah Bernhardt. Dinah becomes determined to prove herself as a serious dramatic actress and starts to prepare for the role in secret. When Josh finds out about it, he takes great offence, which leads to the couple separating and continuing to work on rival productions. Josh gradually realises that he can’t live without Dinah and decides to sabotage her performance in Barredout’s play, but his efforts have the comically opposite effect. Astaire and Rogers also played a married couple ten years earlier in *[The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle](https://peakd.com/hive-166847/@drax/film-review-the-story-of-0a094e8717c35)*, a biopic that failed at the box office, thus marking a clear signal that they should part ways. Their reunion in *The Barkleys of Broadway*, their first and last film made in colour, wasn’t originally intended. The film was produced by MGM and envisioned for Astaire and Judy Garland, that studio’s greatest star. Garland, however, developed a serious drug addiction problem and became unavailable, forcing MGM to bring in Rogers as a replacement. She, contrary to many urban legends about her and Astaire not standing each other on set, was delighted with the opportunity to again play with an old friend. Despite the years that had passed, the chemistry between the two is palpable, and their performance on screen is flawless. Rogers was further attracted to the film because the character of Dinah in some ways resembled herself in real life. In the 1930s she was also seen almost exclusively as a dancer, singer and comedienne and later tried to prove herself as a serious dramatic actress, an effort that ultimately brought her an Oscar for the role in *Kitty Foyle*. Rogers is quite enthusiastic and effective in her performance. Astaire, although giving a solid performance, is easily overshadowed by her. While *The Barkleys of Broadway* had success at the box office, critics were mixed, and it is, to a degree, reflected in the film’s reputation today. The main argument for criticism can be found in the not particularly inspired script by Betty Comden and Adolph Green that, while serviceable, doesn’t go beyond the most obvious comical observations about the realities of show business. Others often point to the quality of song numbers written by Harry Warren and Ira Gershwin, which looks poor compared to the material used in 1930s musicals starring Astaire and Rogers. Perhaps aware of that, director Walters added classical piano pieces by Aram Khachaturian (“Sabre Dance”) and Tchaikovsky, which are performed by Oscar Levant, who is quite good in the role of composer and the Barkleys’ cynical friend Ezra Millar. Astaire and Rogers perform well, even when the material might look a little bit cringey, like “My One and Only Highland Fling”, in which they perform dressed in kilts and singing with a heavy Scottish brogue. But the pair more than acquits themselves with a brilliant dance rendition of “They Can't Take That Away from Me”, a song first used in the 1937 film *[Shall We Dance](https://peakd.com/hive-166847/@drax/film-review-shall-we-dance-0a34156939e0c)*. Good colour cinematography, excellent performances and the high production values of MGM, a studio at the top of its game, are reasons why this film can be recommended even to audiences that don’t care much about musicals or legendary screen couples. RATING: 7/10 (+++) https://youtu.be/pY3fhwuU4cc?si=i6PDKeR5DYAl1dPu == Blog in Croatian https://draxblog.com Blog in English https://draxreview.wordpress.com/ InLeo blog https://inleo.io/@drax.leo BTC donations: 1EWxiMiP6iiG9rger3NuUSd6HByaxQWafG ETH donations: 0xB305F144323b99e6f8b1d66f5D7DE78B498C32A7 BCH donations: qpvxw0jax79lhmvlgcldkzpqanf03r9cjv8y6gtmk9 |
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| Transaction ID | 462d7c1baad4a3718f6d0642659fe08b0fa30c02 |
VIEW RAW JSON DATA
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"title": "Film Review: The Barkleys of Broadway (1949)",
"body": " \n\n\nWhen great duos of cinema get reunited after a long time, the results often leave much to be desired. One exception to this rule was provided by Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, the iconic dance supercouple of 1930s Hollywood, in *The Barkleys of Broadway*, the 1949 musical comedy directed by Charles Walters and their last film together.\n\nAstaire and Rogers play Josh and Dinah Barkley, a husband-and-wife musical comedy duo who are enjoying immense popularity on Broadway. Although their career is successful, its demands have put a high strain on their marriage, and things begin to deteriorate when Dinah becomes emotionally insecure over Bert Felsher (played by Clinton Sundberg), the producer of their show, insisting that the less talented but younger actress Shirlene May (played by Gale Robbins) serves as her understudy. The situation gets further complicated when Dinah meets Jacques Pierre Barredout (played by Jacques François), a French playwright and director who claims that she is perfect for the main role in his upcoming biographic play about the famous actress Sarah Bernhardt. Dinah becomes determined to prove herself as a serious dramatic actress and starts to prepare for the role in secret. When Josh finds out about it, he takes great offence, which leads to the couple separating and continuing to work on rival productions. Josh gradually realises that he can’t live without Dinah and decides to sabotage her performance in Barredout’s play, but his efforts have the comically opposite effect.\n\nAstaire and Rogers also played a married couple ten years earlier in *[The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle](https://peakd.com/hive-166847/@drax/film-review-the-story-of-0a094e8717c35)*, a biopic that failed at the box office, thus marking a clear signal that they should part ways. Their reunion in *The Barkleys of Broadway*, their first and last film made in colour, wasn’t originally intended. The film was produced by MGM and envisioned for Astaire and Judy Garland, that studio’s greatest star. Garland, however, developed a serious drug addiction problem and became unavailable, forcing MGM to bring in Rogers as a replacement. She, contrary to many urban legends about her and Astaire not standing each other on set, was delighted with the opportunity to again play with an old friend. Despite the years that had passed, the chemistry between the two is palpable, and their performance on screen is flawless.\n\nRogers was further attracted to the film because the character of Dinah in some ways resembled herself in real life. In the 1930s she was also seen almost exclusively as a dancer, singer and comedienne and later tried to prove herself as a serious dramatic actress, an effort that ultimately brought her an Oscar for the role in *Kitty Foyle*. Rogers is quite enthusiastic and effective in her performance. Astaire, although giving a solid performance, is easily overshadowed by her.\n\nWhile *The Barkleys of Broadway* had success at the box office, critics were mixed, and it is, to a degree, reflected in the film’s reputation today. The main argument for criticism can be found in the not particularly inspired script by Betty Comden and Adolph Green that, while serviceable, doesn’t go beyond the most obvious comical observations about the realities of show business. Others often point to the quality of song numbers written by Harry Warren and Ira Gershwin, which looks poor compared to the material used in 1930s musicals starring Astaire and Rogers. Perhaps aware of that, director Walters added classical piano pieces by Aram Khachaturian (“Sabre Dance”) and Tchaikovsky, which are performed by Oscar Levant, who is quite good in the role of composer and the Barkleys’ cynical friend Ezra Millar. Astaire and Rogers perform well, even when the material might look a little bit cringey, like “My One and Only Highland Fling”, in which they perform dressed in kilts and singing with a heavy Scottish brogue. But the pair more than acquits themselves with a brilliant dance rendition of “They Can't Take That Away from Me”, a song first used in the 1937 film *[Shall We Dance](https://peakd.com/hive-166847/@drax/film-review-shall-we-dance-0a34156939e0c)*.\n\nGood colour cinematography, excellent performances and the high production values of MGM, a studio at the top of its game, are reasons why this film can be recommended even to audiences that don’t care much about musicals or legendary screen couples.\n\n\n\nRATING: 7/10 (+++)\n\n\nhttps://youtu.be/pY3fhwuU4cc?si=i6PDKeR5DYAl1dPu\n\n\n==\n\nBlog in Croatian https://draxblog.com \nBlog in English https://draxreview.wordpress.com/\nInLeo blog https://inleo.io/@drax.leo \n\nBTC donations: 1EWxiMiP6iiG9rger3NuUSd6HByaxQWafG\nETH donations: 0xB305F144323b99e6f8b1d66f5D7DE78B498C32A7\nBCH donations: qpvxw0jax79lhmvlgcldkzpqanf03r9cjv8y6gtmk9",
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]draxupdated options for film-review-the-barkleys-of-broadway-17695991168192026/01/29 00:02:00462d7c1
draxupdated options for film-review-the-barkleys-of-broadway-1769599116819
2026/01/29 00:02:00
462d7c1
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| Transaction ID | 462d7c1baad4a3718f6d0642659fe08b0fa30c02 |
VIEW RAW JSON DATA
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