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In the film Cotton Club, the Richard Gere character, Dixie Dwyer, was loosely based on George Raft.
Always been a fan of Raft. I didn't know he was a dancer!
Mind you, in those days, everybody who wanted to act in Hollywood had to be able to at least tap dance
And yes, he did wears spats a lot. Sadly these days he's probably most remembered for turning down the role of Rick in Casablanca
Interesting article
Always been a fan of Raft. I didn't know he was a dancer!
Mind you, in those days, everybody who wanted to act in Hollywood had to be able to at least tap dance
And yes, he did wears spats a lot. Sadly these days he's probably most remembered for turning down the role of Rick in Casablanca
Interesting article
Casablanca was not the only one he turned down. He also turned down High Sierra (1941), The Maltese Falcon (1941), and Double Indemnity (1944). Do not know if he got bad advice or made bad decisions.
Kirk H.
And if memory serves from reading his biography aeons ago he was taxi dancing alongside Valentino and also earning a good living hoofing...
Great link, HadleyH! Like I said - smokin'!!!
In the film Cotton Club, the Richard Gere character, Dixie Dwyer, was loosely based on George Raft.
I just wanted his wardrobe from "Outpost in Morocco"! Everytime he turned around he had on a different uniform!
Do any of you remember the "Alka-Seltzer" TV commercial from back in the 60's that was a parody on the one prison movie near-riot scene in the mess hall????? Raft as well as several other character actor icons were in it!!!!! It was like a who's who of "Bad Guys" from the oldies......
The all chanted "Alka-Seltzer! Alka-Seltzer! Alk-Seltzer!!!!"
Renault
Well, I could perhaps see him in Casablanca, but not as good as Bogart. As far as the Maltese Falcon goes, probably. High Sierra? I think he could have done a good job. But Double Indemnity? I don't think so...Just my opinions.
"Interestingly, while the placement on the armholes of the suit jacket seem rather high and altogether the suit jacket exhibits a rather tapered fit,, the pants retain that distinct "baggy" look of the 1930s."
Why? Because arm holes were high back then (and as you hang around the Lounge a bit longer, you'll find that it's a feature most here consider very desirable in vintage clothing, because it allowed for much greater freedom of movement with OUT the jacket pulling up every time one moves one's arms). And though there's always a certain range in clothing features in any era, jackets tended to have a tapered fit then. That "skirt" effect, where the bottom of the jacket almost blouses out because of the tarpering, one can see in virtually every movie from the 1930s, certainly the first half of the decade.
But there are others here who knows MUCH more than I do about the specifics of a given decade in men's fashions. They'll correct me, I hope, if I've gotten anything wrong.
Bogart was pretty good in all of these films. Basically, for films like Dead End and High Sierra (gangster parts), I can see why Raft was the first choice. I read somewhere that he did not read particularly well, so perhaps reading the scripts was a problem. But someone could have read them for him. I really think he just was not into parts that he thought would make him look "bad" on screen. His mother was known to watch his films at the local theatre and yell to her son on screen when the cops were getting closer to him during a chase - so who knows, maybe he just didnt want his mother to get confused if she saw him in Double Indemnity plotting to kill someone's husband for insurance money.
Based on Raft's strict attention to details both big and small, it seems more likely that he turned down (a) Dead End because he didnt think it was realistic for a gangster on the run to return to his old neighborhood to see his mother, (b) Casablanca because he thought it was silly for a grown man to sit in his bar alone after-hours crying over "some skinny swedish broad," as he put it; (c) Double Indemnity for the aforementioned reasons.
I'm not saying these are good reasons to turn down any of those parts, but it certainly does speak to his desire for authenticity on screen as well as what he may have perceived to be limitations in his own acting ability.
I recall seeing some writing on the influence that King George (the one that abdicated) had on the fashion of the time and it seemed like he was a fan of the look if I remember right.
King George never abdicated. You're thinking of his brother, King Edward the Eighth, who married a yank and gave up the throne.
Bogart was pretty good in all of these films.
Based on Raft's strict attention to details both big and small, it seems more likely that he turned down (a) Dead End because he didnt think it was realistic for a gangster on the run to return to his old neighborhood to see his mother, (b) Casablanca because he thought it was silly for a grown man to sit in his bar alone after-hours crying over "some skinny swedish broad," as he put it; (c) Double Indemnity for the aforementioned reasons.
By his own admission, Raft seemed to look for parts that he considered "realistic," a term which seemed to have a different, more limited definition in his own mind - i.e. Would George Raft do this in a similar situation?