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Sunday, June 26, 2022

Jennifer Grey's Autobiography -- Part 14

Out of the Corner, by Jennifer Grey


Continued from Part 1,  Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7, Part 8,  Part 9Part 10Part 11Part 12 and Part 13

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Chapter 13, titled "The Time of My Life" tells about events in 1986, when the movie Dirty Dancing was produced and filmed. This is the fourth in a series of my blog articles about that chapter.

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On one night, toward the end of the filming, Grey got sick (she thinks the cause was food poisoning).

The following morning I'd planned to sleep in because I had a late call .... But at the crack of dawn, I got a call from the choreographer, Kenny [Ortega], asking if I'd be willing to come in before I was called on set because he was shooting some montage footage for second unit. (The second unit director is responsible for shooting supplemental footage, often action sequences or stunts, and usually not with the lead actors.)

All I wanted was to say yes, because I knew this an opportunity for Kenny to show his directing skills, and I would have done anything for this man. Unfortunately, I was super sick, and I told him so. Which didn't sway him. He wanted to grab some footage of Baby practicing her dance moves on the outdoor stairs. He promised it wouldn't take long. With the last ounce of chi in my body arrived on the second unit set and threw on my costume. The entire time we shot that sequence ... all I was trying to do was not throw up, Kenny shot me practicing my dance moves over and over.

"Go back up to the top of the stairs. Let's go again. Still rolling!" It wasn't choreographed, I was just winging it. This beat in the montage sequence was never scripted as "Baby loses her mind and has a tantrum"; it was simply "Baby practices dance steps on her own." But I was weak and exhausted, and the frustration I was experiencing was real.

The Playhouse had ingrained in me to use whatever was happening in the moment, so I just let the line out, as Kenny kept rolling, "Do it again."

My struggle (to not be sick) became Baby's struggle (to learn to dance).


In a previous blog article, I reported another story, according to which screenwriter Eleanor Bergstein reportedly persuaded sick Jennifer to film that delightful scene:

Those quick scenes when Jennifer would come down and she was practicing by herself on the little bridge, and then she put her lipstick on -- that was an afterthought.

They had finished. They had wrapped. ...

It was a Saturday morning. ... Jennifer didn't feel good at all. She was really sick.

Eleanor said, "I will give you anything you want if you can pull yourself together and do these fast scenes."

And she [Eleanor] said they had the clothes and everything right there, and they would change into the costumes quickly.

That is such a memorable part of the movie .... That was an afterthought done after they had supposedly wrapped the movie.

I would like to know more about Bergstein's participation in the filming.

======

In her book, Grey complains that Swayze always showed up quite late for filming schedules. On the other hand, she admits that she refused to practice the lift move with him:

One area, though, where my problem almost identically aligned with Baby's was in my abject terror of practicing "the lift" .... I knew I wasn't going to be able to get out of that one. Postponing it was all I could do. I wouldn't rehearse it. I refused to. ... My fear made me feel like a total baby, but still I couldn't move past it.

From the very first day of rehearsal right on through the whole shoot, Patrick wanted us to rehearse the lift and I just wouldn't do it. He would say, "C'mon now! I've been doing this forever. I've never dropped anyone yet. And you're tiny."

I knew he was telling me the truth. He'd been lifting ballerinas into the air since he was a kid. But I took no comfort in that fact. I wanted to let go of the fear, but the fear wouldn't let go of me. Hating myself and feeling shame wasn't enough to get my body to take the leap.

Meanwhile, all I wanted was to get along with Patrick. Every morning I would have a new resolve and a new approach. I would focus on all his great qualities, and they were plentiful. He was handsome and a great dancer, had a great body and was strong. But something would happen to throw a spanner in the works every day. Whatever progress I'd made internally. to shape my desire by accenting the positive would be undone. Patrick was chronically late, and the crew and I would have to wait for him. Every day, all day, for every scene.

By the time he got to set, my hopeful emotional preparation for that scene would be spoiled. It's hard to fake it when the whole screen is your face.

Looking back on it now; so what? I should have simply accepted him for who he was, had a sense of humor, and expected him to be exactly who he was. Instead, my efforts to stay upbeat by having unrealistic expectations set me up to be freshly disappointed every day.

So, Grey and Swayze each behaved unprofessionally on many occasions. 

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Continued in Part 15

Weirdos Wasting Our Time - 55






Miscellaneous Videos - 294




Miscellaneous Videos - 293




Saturday, June 25, 2022

Miscellaneous Videos - 292



Dirty Dancing in Concert -- Tour Schedule


Tickets On Sale Now As DIRTY DANCING IN CONCERT Comes To 36 Cities Across North America

Halifax, NS
Rebecca Cohn Auditorium
October 23, 2022

Saint John, NB
Imperial Theatre
October 24, 2022

Charlottetown, PEI
Confederation Centre
October 25, 2022

Portland, ME
Merrill Auditorium
October 27, 2022

Boston
Shubert Theatre
October 28, 2022

Philadelphia
Kimmel Cultural Campus
October 29, 2022

Schenectady, NY
Proctors Theatre
October 30, 2022

London, ON
Budweiser Gardens
November 1, 2022

Hamilton, ON
First Ontario Centre
November 2, 2022

Brantford, ON
Sanderson Centre
November 3, 2022

Detroit
Fisher Theatre
November 4, 2022

Columbus, OH
Palace Theatre
November 5, 2022

South Bend, IN
Morris Performing Arts Center
November 6, 2022

Indianapolis, IN
Clowes Memorial Hall
November 7, 2022

Louisville, KY
Kentucky Center - Whitney Hall
November 9, 2022

Akron, OH
EJ Thomas Performing Arts Hall
November 10, 2022

Rosemont, IL
Rosemont Theatre
November 11, 2022

Milwaukee, WI
Riverside Theater
November 12, 2022

Rockford, IL
Coronado Performing Arts Center
November 13, 2022

Atlanta
Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre
November 15, 2022

Birmingham, AL

BJCC Concert Hall
November 16, 2022

Pensacola, FL
Saenger Theatre
November 17, 2022

Jacksonville, FL
Moran Theater
November 18, 2022

Tampa, FL
Starz Center
November 19, 2022

Fort Lauderdale, FL
The Parker - Wells Hall
November 20, 2022

Sarasota, FL
Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall
November 22, 2022

West Palm Beach, FL
Dreyfoos Hall
November 23, 2022

Raleigh, NC
Duke Energy Center
November 25, 2022

Charlotte, NC
Ovens Auditorium
November 26, 2022

Greensboro, NC
Tanger Center
November 27, 2022

Tysons, VA
Capital One Hall
November 29, 2022

Norfolk, VA
Chrysler Hall
November 30, 2022

Richmond, VA
Altria Theater
December 1, 2022

Augusta, GA
Bell Auditorium
December 2, 2022

Charleston, SC
North Charleston Performing Arts Center
December 3, 2022

Savannah, GA
Johnny Mercer Theatre
December 4, 2022

Miscellaneous Videos - 291



The Donna Drake Show Welcomes "Dirty Dancing" Songwriters

 Donna Drake interviews Franke Previte, John DeNicola and Stacy Widelitz.

Previte and DeNicola composed the songs "Hungry Eyes" and "Time of My Life"

Widelitz helped Patrick Swayze write the song "She's Like the Wind".


Kenny Ortega -- and Derek and Julianne Hough


Current Opinions About Abortion

On December 5, 2021, I published a blog article titled The 1987 Movie and Opinions About Abortion. I focused on women's opinions, because they are the main fans of the 1987 movie Dirty Dancing, which essentially advocated for the legalization of abortion.

The Gallup company has collected opinions about abortion since 1973, when the US Supreme Court issued its Roe v Wade ruling, which struck down all the states' abortion laws.

Here are women's opinions before and after 1987 (click on the graphs to enlarge it):

Women's opinions about abortion

From 1973 to the present, about 20% of women have opposed abortion in all cases (the low, dotted line). The other 80% think that abortion should be legal at least some cases (the middle, green line) or in all cases (the upper, blue line).  

In the years following 1987, the percentage of women who thought that abortion should be legal in all cases fell from 58% to about 43%, while the percent who thought it should be legal only in some cases rose steeply from about 23% to 33%. 

In other words, support for abortion fell after the 1987 movie. Fewer women thought abortion should be legal in all cases. However, perhaps that happened because the movie caused women to think and discuss more about the issue and to become more nuanced in their opinions.

After about 1995, the 80% reverted largely to its pre-1987 ratio. By 1997, about 63% of women thought that abortion should be legal in all cases. That year, 1997, was the peak of support for abortion legality. 

Since 1997, the always-legal opinion has gradually declined. In 2021, only about 45% of women thought that abortion always should be legal (about 50% of men thought so).

In recent years, the controversy has been more about abortions in late pregnancy. Rather than arguing about first-trimester abortions, people have been arguing about third-trimester abortions. As the fetus looks more and more like a baby, women feel more and more that abortions should be legally restricted.

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In the movie, Penny Johnson was about two-months pregnant when she got her abortion. Her fetus looked about like this:

Two-month fetus

Below is an eight-month fetus:

Eight-month fetus

In 1987, when Dirty Dancing opened in the movie theaters, the public controversy was largely about two-month fetuses. Now in 2022, the controversy is largely about eight-month fetuses. 

======

A recent opinion poll has been summarized as follows (click on the image to enlarge it):

Rich Baris Poll, June 2022

The chart's top part shows that 45.8% of the population considers itself to be pro-choice, and 43.6% considers itself to be pro-life. Among Republicans, 25.2% is pro-choice, and 68.1% is pro-life. You can see the percentages for the Democrats and Independents.

The chart's fourth blue-color section shows the percentages related to the final three months (seventh, eight and ninth) of pregnancy. Only 16.7% of the population supports the legalization of abortion in the final three months, and 70.7% oppose such legalization. Democrats, too, oppose such legalization overwhelmingly (see the red box).

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The chart's final section indicates that only 7.5% of the population thinks that abortion is the most important political issue.

I myself think that abortion is an interesting political issue, but I never would base my vote for a political candidate on his or her opinion about the legalization of abortion. Many other political issues are much more important to me. 

What concerns me most about the abortion issue is that I think abortion laws should be made by the state legislatures, not by the nine old justices on the US Supreme Court. What happened in 1987 was that a majority of the Supreme Court justices felt strongly that abortion should be legal in the first three months, and so they replaced all the states' abortion laws with their own personal opinions about what the laws should be. Those justices' legal justification -- about a supposed privacy principle in the US Constitution's "emanations and penumbras" -- was bogus, concocted and arrogant. 

Plenty of people share my opinion about that 1987 Supreme Court ruling. We are happy that that ruling now is revoked. From now on, abortion laws again will be made by the states' legislatures, not by the nine old members of the US Supreme Court. Also, the Federal Government -- in particular, the US Congress -- should stay out of it. 

I expect that every state will legalize abortion through the first three months of pregnancy. I myself would support the general legalization through the first four-and-a-half months. At some point, though, abortion becomes outrageous to most of society. As a fetus approaches birth, an abortion decision becomes more and more society's decision. An abortion looks more and more like the murder of a baby.

Friday, June 24, 2022

Jennifer Grey's Autobiography -- Part 13

Out of the Corner, by Jennifer Grey


Continued from Part 1,  Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7, Part 8,  Part 9Part 10Part 11 and Part 12

==========

Chapter 13, titled "The Time of My Life" tells about events in 1986, when the movie Dirty Dancing was produced and filmed. This is the third in a series of my blog articles about that chapter.

==========

The filming of Dirty Dancing lasted 43 days. Those days were preceded by two weeks when director Emile Ardolino, Jennifer Grey and Patrick Swayze studied and revised the script. During those two weeks (as I understand the book), Grey studied and revised her wardrobe. 

When you have your initial costume fitting, the designer lays out the road map for your character's arc, as told through the clothes you will be wearing. In this instance, Baby's entire wardrobe would be limited to whatever items she'd fit into her suitcase for her family vacation. Her look was 'bookish daddy's girl," with a dash of "Peace Corps" for flavor. ...

Unfortunately, the reveal of the costumes the designer had assembled for Baby freaked me the fuck out. ... I could see that the outfits required for Baby to make this pivotal transformation just weren't there. All I had to amend the situation were the contents from my own suitcase. ... Trying to mask my distress, I knew it was on me to step in and collaborate to make Baby's look work. ... The only way to change this costume situation was to hustle.

Just a few weeks before, while vacationing on Martha's Vineyard with my friend Tracy, I'd made a mental note about a pair of shorts Tracy had worn. She had bought some jeans from the vintage store in Oak Bluffs, and cut them off just below the knee and cuffed them up to hit right above the kneecap. I asked the designer if she wouldn't mind getting some high-waisted jeans that we could turn into long shorts. ... On Baby's clothes rack of vintage pieces, I saw your basic, white button-down that could easily be turned into a midriff-baring top if I knotted it above the waist.

The jeans long shorts and the midriff-baring top
that Jennifer Grey selected for the movie Dirty Dancing

One of the tops I'd brought along with me was my L. L. Bean red-striped sailor shirt. I loved Jean Seberg's look in Godards Breathless, which I figured Baby could've easily been enamored of.

Jean Seberg in the 1960 movie Breathless

The striped shirt that Jennifer Grey selected
for the movie Dirty Dancing

And nothing said sixties to me like tight, high-waisted white Levi's cropped to just above the ankle. I asked the designer if we could get some of those and some of the old-school white lace-up Keds we all used to wear.

The designer and her assistant made a trip to the nearest big city, returning with boxes of the classic sneakers and a pile of jeans. She was such a good sport, and I was very grateful.

I believed that Baby could have owned and packed these pieces, and that as she became more comfortable in her own skin, she could gradually modify them to reveal more, and the more Baby risked exposing, the more willing she became to be seen, the more vulnerable and attractive she would become. Wardrobe solved.

The white Levi's and Keds that Jennifer Grey
selected for the movie Dirty Dancing

So, Grey deserves the praise for a few of the most adorable outfits in the movie!

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From my blog article My 1,500th Post in This Blog -- Part 3:

Hilary Rosenfeld

Costume Designer Hilary Rosenfeld

Hilary Rosenfeld's Costume for the 1981 Movie Eyewitness

Hilary Rosenfeld's Costumes for the 1986 Movie Desert Bloom

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Particular Clothing

A Style Dissection of Dirty Dancing

Penny's Wonderfully Swishy Red Dress

Penny Johnson's Gingham Halter Dress With a Gold Belt



The Symbolism of Moe Pressman's Pirate Hat

The Symbolism of Moe Pressman's Turban

Baby's blossoming depicted by clothing and hairstyle

Bias Against Clean-Cut, Ivy-Type Guys

The Worst Costume Mistake in Dirty Dancing

Johnny Castle's Two Dance Tuxedos


------

Miscellaneous

Dirty Dancing ushered in memorable style trends

Dirty Dancing inspired the hair trend of 2017

Dirty Dancing Halloween Costumes for a Pregnant Couple

A Family's Halloween Costumes

Dirty Dancing Style Has Never Felt More Relevant

Peter Alexander's "Dirty Dancing Collection"

The Baby-Pink-Dress Halloween Costume

Videos Showing Fashions Around 1963

Dirty Dancing offers an array of outfits from the stylish sixties

Video Tutorials on Looking Like Baby Houseman

More Video Tutorials on Looking Like Baby Houseman

Beauty News About the Dirty Dancing Eye-Shadow Palette

The 30th Anniversary Dirty Dancing Makeup Palette

Dopey French girls compare Dirty Dancing and Grease makeup palettes.

Fashions of Girls in Their Late Teens Around 1963

Videos Showing Fashions Around 1963

Advice for Looking Prettier in the Early 1960s -- 1

Advice for Looking Prettier in the Early 1960s -- 2

Advice for Looking Prettier in the Early 1960s -- 3

Advice for Looking Prettier in the Early 1960s -- 4

Advice for Looking Prettier in the Early 1960s -- 5

Advice for Looking Prettier in the Early 1960s -- 6

Advice for Looking Prettier in the Early 1960s -- 7

Skin-Care Recommendations for the Women of Dirty Dancing

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Continued in Part 14

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

Two Photographs of Young Eleanor Bergstein

Eleanor Bergstein, many years
before she wrote Dirty Dancing 


Eleanor Bergstein, many years
before she wrote Dirty Dancing

Jennifer Grey's Autobiography -- Part 12

Out of the Corner, by Jennifer Grey


Continued from Part 1,  Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7, Part 8,  Part 9Part 10 and Part 11

==========

Chapter 13, titled "The Time of My Life" tells about events in 1986, when the movie Dirty Dancing was produced and filmed. This is the second in a series of my blog articles about that chapter.

==========


Emile Ardolino, Director of the movie Dirty Dancing

During the two weeks before the filming began at Mountain Lake Lodge in Pembroke, Virginia, the director Emile Ardolino revised the movie's script separately with Jennifer Grey and Patrick Swayze. Ardolino changed some -- but not all -- of the dialogue that the two actors did not like. Ardolino even changed some of the story.

....while the premise of the movie was appealing, the script was not exactly ready to go. The melodramatic, fairy-tale structure was also riddled with plotlines that didn't track and dialogue that didn't exactly roll off the tongue. The story and language initially read a bit like a bodice ripper.

For two weeks before the start of principal photography, in a cavernous studio in the Mountain Lake Lodge in Pembroke, Virginia, Patrick and I learned the building blocks of mambo for the better part of every day, and in the afternoons we rehearsed key scenes with Emile.

Over lunch when we were alone, Emile and I combed through the script, scene by scene, line by line, trying to make it sound a bit more natural. There were passages of pitch-perfect dialogue in the original script, but there was enough off-pitch stuff to scare me as an actor, afraid I might not be up to the task of selling the melodrama. Lines like, "Me? I'm scared of everything. I'm scared of what I saw, I'm scared of what I did, of who I am, and most of all I'm scared of walking out of this room and never feeling the rest of my whole life, the way I feel when I'm with you."

Patrick had similar issues with his dialogue, and strenuously resisted saying the now-famous line, "Nobody puts Baby in a corner."

Emile took full responsibility for the script changes that we had arrived at together; he never threw me or Patrick under the bus. Each evening, the cast and crew would receive revised script pages.

There was also a long-running contest on set to see who could come up with the movie's new title, because surely Dirty Dancing was never going to last. In the eighties, it sounded too scandalous to be able to reach its mainstream target audience. Censorship officer assumed it was a porn film.

Unfortunately, Grey does not specify what changes Ardolino made in the script -- in particular, what changes Ardolino made at the suggestions of herself or of Swayze.

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My previous articles about the revision of the script:

General Articles

Eleanor Bergstein's Letter About Her Script

Eleanor Bergstein's Research for Dirty Dancing

My Speculations About Eleanor Bergstein's Original Script

My Speculations About Script Changes Made by the Swayzes and by Rhodes

The Re-Writing of Eleanor Bergstein's Script

My Speculation About the Construction of the Story

My Speculations About the Talent Show in the Original Script

The Undertones to Dirty Dancing

Dirty Dancing is the first in a series of Bergstein stories

The 1983 Movie Baby, It's You

Tropes in Dirty Dancing

Previous Scripts

The July 1986 Script -- 1

The July 1986 Script -- 2

The July 1986 Script -- 3

The July 1986 Script -- 4

The July 1986 Script -- 5

The July 1986 Script -- 6

The July 1986 Script -- 7

The July 1986 Script -- 8

The July 1986 Script -- 9

The July 1986 Script -- 10

The July 1986 Script -- 11

The July 1986 Script -- 12

The July 1986 Script -- 13

The July 1986 Script -- 14

The July 1986 Script -- 15

The July 1986 Script -- 16

The July 1986 Script vs. The Movie -- The Songs (1)

The September 1985 Script

See my comprehensive list of my first 1,500 blog articles.

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Continued in Part 13

Sunday, June 19, 2022

Jennifer Grey's Autobiography -- Part 11

Out of the Corner, by Jennifer Grey


Continued from Part 1,  Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7, Part 8,  Part 9 and Part 10

==========

Chapter 13, titled "The Time of My Life" tells about events in 1986, when the movie Dirty Dancing was produced and filmed. This is the first in a series of my blog articles about that chapter.

==========

After Grey was selected to play the movie's female lead, she participated in the selection of the male lead. 

The choreographer, Kenny Ortega, had just flown in from LA and brought along his collection of old 45s for us to dance to. Kenny, who happened to have worked on a bunch of John Hughes movies, including Ferris Bueller's Day Off, would demonstrate basic Latin combinations for the potential Johnny Castles, while the rest of the creative team, sitting in a row of folding chairs, checked out what level of dance game these guys had. 

Grey recalls that actors Billy Zane and Scott Plank auditioned unsuccessfully. Eventually Patrick Swayze appeared, and Grey was dismayed. Grey tells in amusing detail how she pleaded against his selection. A few excerpts:

"Anybody else. Please!" I begged. ....

"I've worked with Patrick. We did Red Dawn together. I spent every day for two months with him. Trust me, it's not right."

It didn't matter what I said. They were bringing him in for this part.

When Swayze showed up, he apparently knew that Grey had argued against his selection.

After the initial hugs and greetings from the lathered-up welcoming committee, including yours truly, putting on my most convincing friendly face, the hunky actor asked if he and I could step outside so he could have a moment alone with me. He took my hand and led me down the hall a little ways. Once out of earshot, we turned to face each other, each perfectly mirroring the other, leaning against the wall. ...

[He said:] "This is a great part for you. Congratulations."

"I know, right? It's crazy."

This was softening me up. It felt good to be able to share my news with someone I knew.

"I know, you're probably thinkin', 'Aw, no, not this idiot again.'"

Then his eyes started to well up. Real tears.

And with the most earnest delivery imaginable, he said, "You know I've always loved you." He stared into my eyes.

"And I've been really workin' on gettin' my shit together. So, if I get the chance, I swear I'm gonna make it up to you. You will not be sorry."

I said, "Uh-huh."

He smiled and was working hard on getting me to smile back.

[He said:] "C'mon, you know if we did this together, we'd kill it."

I started crying, too ....

This was my first leading role, and I knew how crucial the casting of this part was to the movie's success. The sexual chemistry between Baby and Johnny was everything, and I was not feeling it. How was I supposed to trust this guy? Next thing I knew Patrick was hugging me super tight. I could feel his heart beating against my chest.

We went back into the rehearsal space.

... Patrick was far and away the best dancer who'd come in. He was strong, manly, and confident. Having never danced with him before, I had never experienced him in this way. There was no question that our bodies liked each other, in spite of what my head was saying. There has never been anyone with Patrick's combination of grace, brawn, sensitivity; and fearless, reckless gusto.


And so Swayze was selected to play the movie's male lead.

=======

Continued in Part 12

Thursday, June 16, 2022

"Dirty Dancing" Sequel Scheduled for February 2024

Dirty Dancing Sequel Sets 2024 Release, an article by Anthony D'Alessandro, published by Deadline.com 

Lionsgate announced this afternoon [June 15] that their Dirty Dancing sequel starring Jennifer Grey will hit theaters on Feb. 9, 2024 [twenty-four]. That weekend is the pre-Valentine’s Day weekend.

... Jonathan Levine is directing off a screenplay by Elizabeth Chomko, Jonathan Levine, Mikki Daughtry, Tobias Iaconis. In part 2, Baby (Grey) takes us back to Kellerman’s Resort for a story of summer, young romance, and dancing. 

The 1988 Television Series -- Episodes 8 and 9

Following up my earlier posts The 1988 Television Series -- First Episodes and The 1988 Television Series -- Episodes 3 - 7. Don't delay watching these videos; YouTube might remove them soon.

Episode 8

Episode 9

The 1988 Television Series -- Episodes 3 - 7

Following up my earlier post The 1988 Television Series -- First Episodes, Don't delay watching these videos; YouTube might remove them soon.

Episode 3

Episode 4

Episode 5

Episode 6

Episode 7

Miscellaneous Videos - 290




Jennifer Grey's Autobiography -- Part 10

Out of the Corner, by Jennifer Grey


Continued from Part 1,  Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7, Part 8 and Part 9

==========

Chapter 12, titled "Reasons to Be Cheerful" tells Grey's life from the beginning of her acting career in 1980 until 1986, when she auditioned for Dirty Dancing. I am summarizing this one chapter in a series of four blog articles. This is the fourth.

==========

Grey does not specify when she auditioned for Dirty Dancing, but I figure it was in the spring of 1986. When she happened to bring some photographs to the office of her her agent Philip Carlson, he told her he had just received a "casting breakdown for a very low-budget movie, with a part I could be 'really right for.'"

The "casting breakdown" was a two-page summary of the storyline and of the cast of characters. Grey read it and recognized immediately that the description of the female lead seemed to be "written for exactly me". The one discrepancy was that the character was 17 years old, whereas Grey was 26.

(Not in the book: Since Grey turned 26 on March 26, 1986, she must have read that casting breakdown after that date. The movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off opened in the theaters on June 11, 1986. In that movie Grey played the younger sister of a high-school senior, and she looked young enough for that role.)

Both Baby (aka Frances Houseman) and I were raised in upper-middle-class, Jewish New York families. Both of us were born-and-bred daddy's girls. father was a successful family doctor, mine a revered actor. And like Baby's, my parents were liberals, passionate about social justice, pillars of their community. I was trained to be just like them, and to make sure to never embarrass them. ....

Like Baby, I, for a long time, didn't feel compelled to rebel, or even question my parents' authority, which was easy for the better part of my childhood, as they were pretty much perfect in my eyes..

My dad was my hero and he, in turn, idealized me, which was easy for me, good as I was at playing by the rules. But when I got older and would do something he didn't approve of, it didn't go so well. His tsunami of adoration would vanish. It was frightening and confusing to feel the balmy atmosphere suddenly frost over. Baby experiences that same big chill when she finds herself having to make the choice between her allegiance to her father and his polar opposite ...

The character of Frances "Baby ' Houseman was decidedly more "interesting-looking" than traditionally pretty. It was actually a plot point. Not only was Baby Jewish, but she had to look Jewish. ...

Grey writes at length about her dance training, which she had begun at the age of five. 

I took tap, jazz, modern, and ballet from some of the greatest teachers in New York — the Alvin Ailey School, Broadway Dance Center, Finis Jhung, Maggie Black, and David Howard — and though I could never keep up with the "real dancers," I loved class just the same. I guess I had enough natural talent, or something, to blend in and not completely stick out.

Like Baby — mesmerized by the otherworldly grace of the dance pros Johnny and Penny doing their show-stopping dance routine — I understood firsthand this deep longing, an almost animal hunger to be inside the experience of a great dancer, to live and breathe that rarified air.

Grey's audition took place in Minskoff studio, in a skyscraper at Times Square. That studio was the audition location for many Broadway shows. Grey had taken dance classes in the same building. 

I had worked on the couple of scenes, and if the reading went well, I was told to bring along some music I liked and be prepared to dance.

I don't remember much about the scenes or who I read with, except that it was for a handful of people, I assume the usual suspects: Emile Ardolino, the director; Eleanor Bergstein, the writer; Linda Gottlieb, the producer; and Bonnie Timmermann, the casting director. They seemed very pleased with my reading and asked me to dance.

I was thrilled that I could pick my own music and that there would be no choreography to learn. I'd brought along my boom box [and] ... my cassette of Jackson 5 Greatest Hits. My song was "I Want You Back."

I knew I had to have a song I could depend on to take me where I needed to go, to that place I was very familiar with, that place where I'd just go off into my own dance trance.

Something about that song, even today, involuntarily plugs me into my body and ... transports me to my wildest, unchained happy place. ...

I remember turning my back on the group, and the awkward silence as they waited for me to pick up my boom box, position it in the middle of the immense rehearsal hall, and bend down to press play. I can't tell you what happened after that, because the next thing I knew it was over. I had no idea what I'd done. I'd had no plan or choreography, no moves I was particularly fond of or knew to be crowd-pleasers. I just went there.

And when the song was over, my heart felt like it might explode from the intensity of exertion. I stood there sweating and shaking, and I pretty much knew without even looking at anyone that I had the part.

I'm not sure if it was the next day or a few days later after my audition for Dirty Dancing when I got the call from my agent saying that they loved me, that I basically had the part, as I was the only one that would be screen-testing with their top choices for the guy's part.


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Continued in Part 11

Tuesday, June 14, 2022

Jennifer Grey's Autobiography -- Part 09

Out of the Corner, by Jennifer Grey


Continued from Part 1,  Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7 and Part 8

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Chapter 12, titled "Reasons to Be Cheerful" tells Grey's life from the beginning of her acting career in 1980 until 1986, when she auditioned for Dirty Dancing. I am summarizing this one chapter in a series of four blog articles. This is the third.

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Just before The Cotton Club opened in the movie theaters in 1984, Grey and her father, Joel Grey, attended a special screening for the cast and crew. There she was delighted when she was complimented by Richard Gere, who had played a starring role. 

Standing toward the back of the small, packed screening room, Richard Gere told me that he thought I was talented, and he hoped for me to have enough opportunity to explore and experiment as an actress before becoming a star. I was stunned and encouraged that he thought I might possibly go on to have a career. Not lost on me was also a wistfulness, perhaps his own feelings of being creatively thwarted on the other side of stardom. This bona fide movie star seemed to see something in me, even if he was just making polite conversation.

However, Jennifer was dismayed that much of her part had been removed from the finished movie.

The lights dimmed, and I sat down next to my dad, feeling anticipation and immense pride about being a part of this movie, in such spectacular company. No one had any idea what to expect, because Francis [Ford Coppola, the director,] had shot enough footage to make four films.

As I watched the movie, my high hopes, held at bay for a year, began to deflate one scene at a time. Sequences that had taken a whole week to shoot now passed through the frame in a flash. Whole storylines were gone, as if they had never happened....

Was I cut out because I wasn't any good? I felt embarrassed, like I had lied to my loved ones about the extent of my involvement. Even I couldn't understand how I could have been on a movie for that many months, most every day, and not have much to show for it.

Joel Grey did not like the movie much, and he could not say much about Jennifer's acting.

His overall assessment was, "Well, it's all over the place. And verrrry long. Ultimately, not really satisfying. ... They really didn't give you much to do."

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In 1985, Grey was selected to play a big role in the movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off, which was released in 1986. She played the role of Jeannie Bueller, the bratty sister of Ferris Bueller, who was played by the actor Matthew Broderick. I described Grey's role in that movie in a previous article, titled The 1986 Movie "Ferris Bueller's Day Off".

The movie was directed by John Hughes. Grey adored him, and he praised her acting. 

John Hughes, Director of the 1986 movie
Ferris Bueller's Day Off

When it was my turn to go in to read [for my audition] ... John Hughes was there. He stood up when we were introduced, and he was over six feet tall. He dressed like a big overgrown kid, but a well-outfitted one in Air Jordans, jeans, and fancy leather jacket. He wore glasses, frosted round plastic frames, his thick blond mane styled in a mullet, and he chain-smoked Carltons. ....

I was cool as a cucumber. My default mode has always been pretty sunny, ebullient, trending perhaps toward annoyingly friendly, but because Ferris's sour sister called for a more prickly vibe, my poor attitude on this occasion worked in my favor. I gave off the kind of shitty energy that would befit a Jeanie Bueller. I got the part.

What I wasn't prepared for was that I would become creatively besotted with John. And while he was nowhere near being my type, I couldn't deny being "a little in love" with him. Was it his brain, or was it that I felt seen by him, appreciated?

The more hilarious he thought I was, the freer I became. The freer I became, the more I was this new version of myself. John praised me for inhabiting everything that had been strictly verboten in my family — exploring and playing in the more shadowy side of my psyche. It was a relief to be given utter permission to let my darker freak flag fly. It was sheer bliss.

The majority of Jeanie's scenes were of her alone — ruminating, burning up with frustration, and seething with jealous rage, so John, from behind the camera, was in essence my scene partner. When I was shooting my scenes, he was right there, either calling out impromptu lines for me to parrot back as they occurred to him, or enthusiastically yelling out "pieces of business" for me to do. I never knew what was going to happen, nor did he. There was no room or time to be self-conscious or insecure because it was all happening so fast and in the moment. Afterward I'd have no clue what had just happened, it was like being in an improv blackout.

Grey and Broderick began a real-life romantic relationship during the filming.

Matthew Broderick (left) and Jennifer Grey acting in the
1986 movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off

Matthew and I hardly had any scenes' together until the very end of the shooting schedule, and I don't remember how or when we first got to know each other. But I was as surprised as anyone when our relationship morphed from on-screen sibling rivalry to off-screen illicit romance.

She soon suspected that he had another girlfriend, and so she decided to break up with him soon after the filing ended.

... It was Thanksgiving, and I went home to my West Village apartment ... I realized I was in love with Matthew and told him I couldn't see him anymore. He promptly broke up with his "close family friend" and we were together.

Matthew just felt like my guy. We were both Jewish, New Yorkers, actors, with actor parents. We loved the same theater, Chinese food on Sunday nights, and he made me laugh. I loved his humor, his brains, his talent. Being with a crowned prince of Broadway also felt familiar. He felt like home.

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Another reason why "Matthew just felt like my guy" was that he was playing homosexual roles in various movies. Since Jennifer Grey knew that her father was homosexual, she might have appreciated that Matthew apparently felt comfortable being around homosexuals and even acting like one. However, her autobiography does not discuss that aspect of her relationship with Matthew.

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The book's Chapter 12 ends with her audition for the movie Dirty Dancing. I will not discuss that audition here in this blog article, except to remark about Broderick's discouraging behavior at that time. He predicted to her that she would not be selected for the Baby Houseman role. 

There's no way you're gonna get it. I'm sure they're seeing everybody for this part.

She wanted him to go out dancing with her on the night before her audition. She thought the dancing might get in a good mood for the audition. Matthew did not want to go. She had to beg him until he agreed, reluctantly. She writes: He could easily slip into the persona of a cranky old guy.

Trouble ahead.

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Continued in Part 10