April 1st marks the 80th birthday of MGM songbird Jane Powell. Groomed by the studio in the mid 1940s to be a teen soprano in the Deanna Durbin mold, Powell scored a big success with A Date with Judy (1948). She was Fred Astaire’s partner in Royal Wedding (1951), confidently holding her own on the dance floor alongside the master. (Despite their 30-year age difference, they were strangely plausible as brother and sister.) But it was Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954) that showed Powell off best, proving that she was a major movie-musical presence. Opposite Howard Keel, also at his best, and given some glorious tunes by Gene de Paul and Johnny Mercer, Powell was marvelous as Milly, the young woman who falls in love (with Keel) on sight. She marries him, only to find out that he was looking for someone to cook and clean for him and his six backwoods brothers. But she is more than a match for all seven of them!
The strength, warmth, and depth in Powell’s performance set her apart from the manufactured emoting of her soprano rivals at MGM, Kathryn Grayson and Ann Blyth. If either of those ladies had played Milly, the character would have been arch and insufferable. The vigorous spunk in Powell’s Milly feels authentic rather than cute. Her rendition of “Wonderful, Wonderful Day” is her vocal highlight, an uncontained expression of pure happiness, comparable to Julie Andrews’ mountain-top outburst in the Alps. Powell’s acting merited an Oscar nomination, to go with the film’s Best Picture nod. Seven Brides is one of the screen’s greatest movie musicals, enhanced by Stanley Donen’s zesty direction, Michael Kidd’s thrilling choreography, the irresistible ensemble of brides and brothers, handsome and rugged Keel, and, perhaps most of all, the gifted and altogether captivating Jane Powell. (You can read much more about Seven Brides and Powell in my book Screen Savers.) Happy Birthday, Milly!











































3 responses so far ↓
1 Mark Kirby // Apr 1, 2009 at 8:28 pm
Yes, happy birthday, dear Jane! SEVEN BRIDES is one of my top-five musicals of all time and has been most of my life. Powell is so good in this. My other favorite Powell performance is in an unjustly forgotten musical, THE GIRL MOST LIKELY (1957), the last movie released by RKO, and not a bad swan song, either. Powell plays a woman who can’t decide between three suitors (the film is a musical remake of the 1941 Ginger Rogers TOM, DICK, AND HARRY) and she’s charming. There are some delightful songs and Kaye Ballard as her wisecracking friend, is great. An actor named Kelly Brown is quite good here, too. (He teams up with Ballard.) Anyway, off subject a bit, but BRIDES and GIRL make a great Jane Powell double feature!
2 John DiLeo // Apr 1, 2009 at 9:18 pm
Both those musicals showed us the womanly Jane Powell, a persona she barely got to explore before the movie musical genre died out when she was 28! At least she got to express herself with a few adult roles and was able to go beyond the teen years of A DATE WITH JUDY.
3 Alex Anisimow // Apr 3, 2009 at 10:52 am
Happy birthday to the amazing Jane Powell.
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