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Click here to Register Online HomeSo, the next time the sky opens up and you’re stuck without an umbrella, don't run for cover. Look at the puddle. Smile. And just sing.
Originally conceived as a "jukebox musical" to showcase a back-catalog of songs from the 1920s and 30s, the film features some of the most famous sequences in history:
Kathy watched from the curb, her heart swelling. This wasn’t Don Lockwood, the polished star. This was Don, the man.
If you’ve never seen it (and if you haven’t, please close this tab and rectify that immediately), the setting is Hollywood, 1927. Don Lockwood (Gene Kelly) and Lina Lamont (Jean Hagen) are the silent film era’s ultimate power couple. They’re handsome, popular, and completely fake. Don despises Lina’s vanity, and Lina has the speaking voice of a chalkboard being scratched by a dying seagull.
We are currently living through our own "Talkie Revolution."
However, the genius of the plot lies in its backdrop: 1927. Don and Lina’s latest epic, The Royal Rascal , is a smash hit—until a little film called The Jazz Singer arrives. Suddenly, the world wants sound. The studio scrambles to turn The Royal Rascal into a musical, only to discover that Lina’s speaking voice is a high-pitched, nasal screech, and her microphone technique is nonexistent.
Released on April 10, 1952, Singin' in the Rain is widely considered the greatest Hollywood musical ever made. Directed by Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen, it serves as a joyous satire of Hollywood’s awkward transition from silent films to "talkies" in the late 1920s. Google Books Essential Plot & Characters The story follows movie star Don Lockwood (Gene Kelly) and his comedic partner Cosmo Brown
So, the next time the sky opens up and you’re stuck without an umbrella, don't run for cover. Look at the puddle. Smile. And just sing.
Originally conceived as a "jukebox musical" to showcase a back-catalog of songs from the 1920s and 30s, the film features some of the most famous sequences in history: Singin- in the Rain
Kathy watched from the curb, her heart swelling. This wasn’t Don Lockwood, the polished star. This was Don, the man. So, the next time the sky opens up
If you’ve never seen it (and if you haven’t, please close this tab and rectify that immediately), the setting is Hollywood, 1927. Don Lockwood (Gene Kelly) and Lina Lamont (Jean Hagen) are the silent film era’s ultimate power couple. They’re handsome, popular, and completely fake. Don despises Lina’s vanity, and Lina has the speaking voice of a chalkboard being scratched by a dying seagull. And just sing
We are currently living through our own "Talkie Revolution."
However, the genius of the plot lies in its backdrop: 1927. Don and Lina’s latest epic, The Royal Rascal , is a smash hit—until a little film called The Jazz Singer arrives. Suddenly, the world wants sound. The studio scrambles to turn The Royal Rascal into a musical, only to discover that Lina’s speaking voice is a high-pitched, nasal screech, and her microphone technique is nonexistent.
Released on April 10, 1952, Singin' in the Rain is widely considered the greatest Hollywood musical ever made. Directed by Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen, it serves as a joyous satire of Hollywood’s awkward transition from silent films to "talkies" in the late 1920s. Google Books Essential Plot & Characters The story follows movie star Don Lockwood (Gene Kelly) and his comedic partner Cosmo Brown