Category: In Gay Madrid

  • In Gay Madrid

    Numbers

    Let Me Give You Love (?)*Fred E Ahlert, Roy Turk (?)Lottice Howell
    SantiagoHerbert Stothart, Xavier Cugat, Clifford GreyRamon Novarro and chorus
    Smile While We MayFred E Ahlert, Roy TurkRamon Novarro and chorus
    Into My HeartFred E Ahlert, Roy TurkRamon Novarro
    Dark NightHerbert Stothart, Xavier Cugat, Clifford GreyRamon Novarro

    * Edwin M Bradley names the film’s opening song as ‘Let Me Give You Love,’ though nothing in the lyrics suggest this as the title. Bradley would seem to have taken the name from contemporary press reports.

  • In Gay Madrid

    Synopsis

    In a Madrid nightclub, playboy Ricardo watches Goyita sing [Give Me All Your Love (?)] while the women at another table gossip about him. Ricardo rushes backstage and embraces Goyita.

    Meanwhile, Almadar, the self-proclaimed “greatest torero in all Spain”, arrives at the nightclub and demands that Goyita sing for him. Going backstage to fetch her, Almadar finds her in Ricardo’s arms. They quarrel and, back amongst the diners, a fight ensues. 

    Ricardo arrives home the next morning and tells the butler that he has been with the police all night. He gets into bed fully clothed to hide from his father, the Marques de Castelar, but the Marques sees through the ruse. Ricardo claims to have been in a taxi accident, but his father already knows the truth from the newspaper. Tired of his son’s behaviour, the Marques tells him he must leave Madrid and continue his law studies at the university at Santiago de Compostela. He is to board at the best student accommodation, the House of Troy. 

    Later, students arrive at the House of Troy [Santiago]. They see all Ricardo’s luggage and are told it belongs to the Marques of Castelar. They carry it to his room and three of them ransack the contents. Ricardo finds them going through his things, but they are reassured when he tells them he is not the Marques de Castelar. The students find his fur coat, which they decide to pawn, with Ricardo’s encouragement. Octavio comes in to complain about the noise, and says he will have nothing to do with Ricardo because of his bad reputation. 

    Then Ernesto Rivas arrives with an invitation for Ricardo from his father. Ricardo explains to his housemates that the Marques is his father, and assures them that he was amused by what they did. Octavio insults him and leaves. 

    Ricardo objects to having a picture in his room, until he learns it is Antonio, who died bravely in an illegal duel. He learns that the motto of the house is Above All, Honour [Santiago]

    Later, Ricardo is to visit Senor Rivas and his daughter, Carmina, who has been told about his reputation by Octavio. Her aunt, Doña Concha, tells her there is nothing wrong with a few wild oats. Ricardo arrives with Ernesto and hears Carmina playing the harp. She asks him if he will not find Santiago dull compared to Madrid. Later, when they are talking alone, Ricardo wonders why Carmina does not like him. She tells him that standards of conduct are different in Santiago. 

    Octavio arrives and Ricardo learns that he is Carmina’s fiance. Ricardo explains that he is unable to stay for dinner because of a prior engagement at a student dinner. Ernesto has also been invited, but Octavio reveals the dinner is to be held in a wine shop and Rivas tells his son not to go. 

    Later, at the dinner, Ricardo is telling his friends how provincial and self-satisfied Carmina is when Ernesto enters and overhears. Ricardo rushes after him and persuades him that, in fact, he likes Carmina very much, but that she hurt his vanity. They return to the table [Smile While We May]

    In Madrid, Goyita receives a letter from Ricardo, asking her to come to Santiago. 

    Later, at a costume ball, Ricardo helps his friend Corpulento serenade a girl [Into My Heart], but gives away the deception when he is distracted by seeing Carmina. He sings to her and she is pleased, though pretends not to be. Ernesto tells Ricardo that his sister thought the serenade was wonderful. At Ernesto’s insistence, Ricardo dances with Carmina. He takes her into the garden and asks if they can be friends. Carmina agrees, and when Octavio comes to remind her they are to dance, she refuses to go in. 

    Octavio tries to provoke a quarrel with Ricardo, and Carmina decides to go home. Ricardo prevents Octavio from following her and pushes him into a fountain. 

    Ricardo prepares to push Octavio (Herbert Clark) into the fountain

    Back in her room, Carmina turns a picture of Octavio face down. Ricardo sits on the branch of a tree outside her room and serenades her [Dark Night]. On her balcony, he rips off Octavio’s betrothal bracelet, declares his love for Carmina and compels her to say she loves him before he will let her return to her room. 

    Doña Concha, who was chaperoning Carmina, returns from the ball and hears Ricardo singing outside. Carmina refuses to admit she likes Ricardo and says he followed her home, to which Doña Concha replies that that shows how interested he is. She tells Carmina that Octavio is not a suitable husband, but that Ricardo is. Carmina says Ricardo is too sure of himself and her aunt advises her to make him less sure of himself by playing hard to get. 

    Much later, Ricardo complains to Ernesto that all his letters to Carmina are returned unopened, and Ernesto tells him she pretends to be out when he calls at the house. To Ricardo’s surprise, Goyita arrives at the house; he has forgotten he invited her.  Then, the Marques de Castelar’s car pulls up outside. Ricardo hides Goyita in his wardrobe. Ricardo has told his father in a letter that he is really in love with Carmina and the Marques approves. Inside the wardrobe, Goyita does not like what she is hearing. 

    The Marques has brought a betrothal bracelet for Carmina. Ricardo tries to persuade his father to go for a walk and the Marques reveals he has already been to the Rivas house and seen Carmina. He has arranged the marriage with her father, but Ricardo tells him he is no longer sure that Carmina is in love with him. The Marques laughs this off. Ricardo tells Goyita to stay in his room while he goes out with his father.

    Carmina is getting ready to greet Ricardo when he and the Marques arrive. She continues to be off-hand with him. Back in Ricardo’s room, Goyita is spotted by Octavio. 

    Senor Rivas sends Ricardo to meet Carmina in the garden, where she finally acknowledges she loves him; she is wearing his bracelet. Octavio arrives during dinner and tells Rivas about Goyita. Ricardo is called to the library, after which the Marques hears shouting. Octavio states that Ricardo has come straight from the arms of a disreputable woman and says he can prove it. They all go to Ricardo’s room, where Goyita is waiting in her underskirt. She tells the Marques she is there because Ricardo asked her to come. Carmina hears everything and returns Ricardo’s bracelet. The Marques will not listen to any explanation, and leaves. Ernesto slaps Ricardo, meaning there must be a duel. 

    The next morning, Carmina learns about the duel and rushes to stop it, but she is too late. Ricardo fires into the air and is wounded himself. Carmina spurns Ricardo until she sees that he is hurt, when she begs his forgiveness and tells him she loves him. Later, Ricardo and Carmina are married [Santiago].

  • Frances Marion

    With a career that lasted more than thirty years, Marion Benson Owens (1888-1973) was undoubtedly one of the most important writers in American cinema, even though her name is not well known today. She worked with Anita Loos on a film for D W Griffith, then became a writer for pioneer filmmaker Lois Weber, developing into one of the most prolific and skilled screenwriters in Hollywood. 

    Some of the major pictures worked on by Marion include: The Big House (1930), for which she won an Academy Award; Garbo’s first talkie, Anna Christie (1931); The Champ (1931), bringing a second Academy Award; Dinner at Eight (1933); Camille (1936); and The Good Earth (1937), uncredited.

    Marion’s extensive work for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer included eight musicals. She co-wrote The Rogue Song, and immediately followed this with an uncredited contribution to In Gay Madrid. She wrote the screenplay for the 1930 version of Good News, and then worked without credit on Going Hollywood, Maytime, Rosalie, Presenting Lily Mars and, her swan song, The Pirate.

  • Lottice Howell

    Lottice Howell (1897-1982) was a versatile soprano who was happy in both opera and the vaudeville stage.

    Howell signed a contract with MGM in 1929, but only appeared in a handful of films before returning to the stage. Two of these were the musicals Free and Easy and In Gay Madrid.

  • Bess Meredyth

    Screenwriter Helen Elizabeth MacGlashan (1890-1969) began writing scenarios in the early 1910s, but maintained a parallel career as an actor until 1926. A trusted colleague of Irving Thalberg, she was dispatched to Italy to rescue the out-of-control production Ben-Hur (1925).

    Meredyth met her third husband, director Michael Curtiz, at the Warner Bros studio while she was working for First National, and advised him about his pictures even after she returned to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. She reviewed all his scripts and frequently amended the dialogue.Meredyth’s final screen credit was for the screenplay for Curtiz’s The Unsuspected (1947).

    Meredyth contributed to four of MGM’s early musicals. She co-wrote the story from which Chasing Rainbows was adapted and worked on the scenario, and went on to write the adaptation for In Gay Madrid. Some sources show Bess Meredyth and Wells Root as authors of a fictional work called The Southerner, on which the 1930 musical was based. All that seems certain, however, is that they are credited for the film’s dialogue continuity. Finally, Meredyth wrote the screenplay for The Cuban Love Song

  • William S Gray

    William Sylvester Gray (1896-1946) was an editor at MGM whose career-high was an Oscar nomination for The Great Ziegfeld.

    Gray’s other musicals were The Hollywood Revue of 1929, In Gay Madrid and Everybody Sing.

  • Ralph Shugart

    Ralph Shugart (1901-50) worked under Douglas Shearer in the MGM sound department from its inception. 

    Shugart was the (mostly uncredited) recording engineer on Marianne, Devil-May-Care, In Gay Madrid, Love in the Rough, Flying High, The Wizard of Oz (where he worked on sound effects) and Bathing Beauty.

  • Clifford Grey

    Percival Davis (1887-1941) was a prolific lyricist and librettist for the West End and Broadway. His many stage musicals and revues included The Bing Boys are Here and Mr Cinders (1928), from which ‘If You were the Only Girl in the World’ and ‘Spread a Little Happiness’ became standards.

    Like many other songwriters, Grey was invited to Hollywood in 1929, where he worked on the early sound masterpiece, The Love Parade (1929) at Paramount.

    At MGM he wrote regularly with Herbert Stothart in the 1930s, contributing numbers to Devil-May-Care, Montana Moon, The Rogue Song, In Gay Madrid, The Florodora Girl, Call of the Flesh, New Moon and Madam Satan.

    Grey’s lyrics for ‘Like Monday Follows Sunday’ featured in Everything I Have is Yours and Hit the Deck was based on his stage musical from 1927.

    As late as 2010 The Guardian was still perpetuating the myth that Clifford Grey was also an Olympic bobsleigher and winner of a gold medal. This arises from a confusion with athlete Clifford ‘Tippi’ Gray (1892-1968), who also dabbled in songwriting. 

  • Herbert Stothart

    Herbert Pope Stothart (1885-1949) is a composer whose name is less familiar today than, say, Dimitri Tiomkin or Max Steiner, but in Hollywood’s golden age he was ranked alongside them for his work at MGM.

    Stothart had a successful career writing stage musicals, most notably Rose-Marie, but was invited to join Metro in 1929. He signed a contract and stayed there for the rest of his life. 

    Scores by Stothart were prominent in some of the studio’s most important pictures of the 1930s and 40s. These included Queen Christina (1933), Mutiny on the Bounty (1935), Camille (1936), The Good Earth (1937), Pride and Prejudice (1940), Mrs Miniver (1942), They Were Expendable (1945) and The Yearling (1946). In all, Stothart wrote over 100 scores.

    Stothart worked on many of MGM’s musicals. He and Clifford Grey wrote the songs for Devil-May-Care and contributed numbers to Montana Moon, The Rogue Song, In Gay Madrid, The Florodora Girl, Call of the Flesh, New Moon and Madam Satan

    He worked with other lyricists on A Lady’s Morals, The Cuban Love Song, Here Comes the Band, Maytime, The Firefly (composing ‘The Donkey Serenade’), Broadway Serenade, Balalaika, The Chocolate Soldier and I Married an Angel.

    Stothart was the musical director on some of these films and also on The Cat and the Fiddle, Lubitsch’s The Merry Widow, The Night is Young, Naughty Marietta, Reckless, San Francisco, Rosalie, The Girl of the Golden West, Sweethearts, The Wizard of Oz (picking up an Oscar), New Moon, Bitter Sweet, Rio Rita, Thousands Cheer, Ziegfeld Girl, Cairo, Thousands Cheer, Kismet, The Unfinished Dance. Musical direction usually involved writing incidental music.

    And, of course, Metro produced two versions of Stothart’s greatest stage success, Rose-Marie, and he worked on the first version.

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