Kiss Me Kate

US (1953): Musical/Comedy/Dance

Cole Porter, Shakespeare, and 3-D: Not the usual recipe for an MGM musical, but hey -- it works. Although it runs hot and cold, this 1953 take on Porter's delightful Broadway smash lets a chewy cast gorge on some terrific songs and show-biz in-jokes. Think of the plot as His Girl Friday (1940) in greasepaint: vain star Howard Keel wants to lure ex-wife Kathryn Grayson back to the boards with a musical version of The Taming of the Shrew. The movie's weakness is too much Shakespeare, not enough backstage backbiting (and why are two of the best numbers, "So in Love" and Ann Miller's zippy "Too Darn Hot," confined to a prologue?). Then there's the tendency to throw things at the camera -- 3-D, what hath you wrought? The candy-store color design is great fun, and Tommy Rall and future dance titan Bob Fosse are turned loose for some sensational leaps. Now that's "Wunderbar." George Sidney directs. (Robert Horton, Amazon.com)

 Use this link to view the original theatrical trailer for Kiss Me Kate on TCM.com.


· Music Scoring Awards (Scoring of a Musical Picture) 1953: Andre Previn, Saul Chaplin

1 nomination