FILM-FORWARD.COMReviews of Recent Independent, Foreign, & Documentary Films in Theaters and DVD/Home Video![]()
Directed & Produced by Heather Lyn MacDonald. Director of Photography: MacDonald & Jon Miller. Edited by: BB Jorissen & MacDonald. Music by: Pete Whitman. Released by: First Run Features. USA. 80 min. Not Rated.
Very beautiful and from all parts of America, the young women were the backbone of shows. However, the male artists of the era, the Nicholas Brothers, Cab Calloway, Jimmie Lunceford, and Louis Armstrong received all the publicity. Director Heather Lyn MacDonald’s loving portrayal of these women corrects the oversight and tells the story of the unsung chorus girls who worked 15 hour days, and rehearsed and performed a new show each week for $22.50. In fact, these chorus girls led the historic strike that established the American Guild of Variety Artists for black and white performers nationwide. The film beautifully captures the camaraderie that developed between the women. They rib each other but clearly love each other deeply. Dancing brought them together and their love of dance, the discipline of the art form and the chance to share it again with audiences and students became a guiding force in their lives. (As I dancer, I loved watching the excerpts of the women performing. Even in their 80’s they have more rhythm, style and understanding of dance’s power to communicate than performers more than half their age.)
Their determination to keep dancing is particularly moving. One dancer, Cleo Hayes, fell down a flight of subway steps, was in a cast for months and, after rehabilitation, got back on stage to perform. Another battled breast cancer, another has a pacemaker, but none are deterred from getting back onstage. This is not just a story for dancers. Like last year’s inspiring documentary tribute Ballets Russes, MacDonald’s film is a sterling example of living life to the fullest.
Haila Strauss, associate
professor of theatre and dance, Marymount Manhattan College, and choreographer of over 100 musical theatre productions
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