is considered one of the greatest movies of all time.
1930–1950: The first classical sound era or First Musical Era The 1930s through the early 1950s are considered to be the golden age of the musical film, when the genre's popularity was at its highest in the
Western world.
Disney's
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the earliest Disney animated feature film, was a musical which won an honorary Oscar for
Walt Disney at the
11th Academy Awards.
The first musicals Musical short films were made by
Lee de Forest in 1923–24. Beginning in 1926, thousands of
Vitaphone shorts were made, many featuring bands, vocalists, and dancers. The earliest feature-length films with synchronized sound had only a soundtrack of music and occasional sound effects that played while the actors portrayed their characters just as they did in silent films: without audible dialogue.
The Jazz Singer, released in 1927 by
Warner Bros. Pictures, was the first to include an audio track including non-
diegetic music and diegetic music, but it had only a short sequence of spoken dialogue. This feature-length film was also a musical, featuring
Al Jolson singing "Dirty Hands, Dirty Face", "Toot, Toot, Tootsie", "
Blue Skies", and "
My Mammy". Historian
Scott Eyman wrote, "As the film ended and applause grew with the houselights,
Sam Goldwyn's wife Frances looked around at the celebrities in the crowd. She saw 'terror in all their faces', she said, as if they knew that 'the game they had been playing for years was finally over'." Still, only isolated sequences featured "live" sound; most of the film had only a synchronous musical score. The first all-talking feature,
Lights of New York, included a musical sequence in a night club. The enthusiasm of audiences was so great that in less than a year all the major studios were making sound pictures exclusively.
The Broadway Melody (1929) had a show-biz plot about two sisters competing for a charming song-and-dance man. Advertised by
MGM as the first "All-Talking, All-Singing, All-Dancing" feature film, it was a hit and won the
Academy Award for Best Picture for 1929. There was a rush by the studios to hire talent from the stage to star in lavishly filmed versions of Broadway hits.
The Love Parade (Paramount 1929) starred
Maurice Chevalier and newcomer
Jeanette MacDonald, written by Broadway veteran
Guy Bolton. By late 1930, audiences had been oversaturated with musicals and studios were forced to cut the music from films that were then being released. For example,
Life of the Party (1930) was originally produced as an all-color, all-talking musical comedy. Before it was released, however, the songs were cut out. The same thing happened to
Fifty Million Frenchmen (1931) and
Manhattan Parade (1932) both of which had been filmed entirely in
Technicolor.
Marlene Dietrich sang songs successfully in her films, and
Rodgers and Hart wrote a few well-received films, but even their popularity waned by 1932.
Musical stars Musical stars such as
Fred Astaire and
Ginger Rogers were among the most popular and highly respected personalities in Hollywood during the classical era; the Fred and Ginger pairing was particularly successful, resulting in a number of classic films such as
Top Hat (1935),
Swing Time (1936), and
Shall We Dance (1937). Many dramatic actors gladly participated in musicals as a way to break away from their typecasting. For instance, the multi-talented
James Cagney had originally risen to fame as a stage singer and dancer, but his repeated casting in "tough guy" roles and
mob films gave him few chances to display these talents. Cagney's
Oscar-winning role in
Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) allowed him to sing and dance, and he considered it to be one of his finest moments. Many comedies (and a few dramas) included their own musical numbers. The
Marx Brothers' films included a musical number in nearly every film, allowing the Brothers to highlight their musical talents. Their final film, entitled
Love Happy (1949), featured
Vera-Ellen, considered to be the best dancer among her colleagues and professionals in the half century. Similarly, the
vaudevillian comedian
W. C. Fields joined forces with the comic actress
Martha Raye and the young comedian
Bob Hope in
Paramount Pictures musical anthology
The Big Broadcast of 1938. The film also showcased the talents of several internationally recognized musical artists including:
Kirsten Flagstad (Norwegian operatic soprano),
Wilfred Pelletier (Canadian conductor of the
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra),
Tito Guizar (Mexican tenor),
Shep Fields conducting his Rippling Rhythm Jazz Orchestra and
John Serry Sr. (Italian-American concert accordionist). In addition to the
Academy Award for Best Original Song (1938), the film earned an
ASCAP Film and Television Award (1989) for Bob Hope's signature song "
Thanks for the Memory".
The Freed Unit , a musical movie from 1956During the late 1940s and into the early 1950s, a production unit at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer headed by Arthur Freed made the transition from old-fashioned musical films, whose formula had become repetitive, to something new. (However, they also produced technicolor remakes of such musicals as Show Boat, which had previously been filmed in the 1930s.) In 1939, Freed was hired as associate producer for the film Babes in Arms. Starting in 1944 with Meet Me in St. Louis, the Freed Unit worked somewhat independently of its own studio to produce some of the most popular and well-known examples of the genre. The products of this unit include Easter Parade (1948), On the Town (1949), An American in Paris (1951), Singin' in the Rain (1952), The Band Wagon (1953) and Gigi (1958). Non-Freed musicals from the studio included Seven Brides for Seven Brothers in 1954 and High Society'' in 1956, and the studio distributed
Samuel Goldwyn's
Guys and Dolls in 1955. This era saw musical stars become household names, including
Judy Garland,
Gene Kelly,
Ann Miller,
Donald O'Connor,
Cyd Charisse,
Mickey Rooney,
Vera-Ellen,
Jane Powell,
Howard Keel, and
Kathryn Grayson. Fred Astaire was also coaxed out of retirement for
Easter Parade and made a permanent comeback.
Outside MGM The other Hollywood studios proved themselves equally adept at tackling the genre at this time, particularly in the 1950s. Four adaptations of
Rodgers and Hammerstein shows -
Oklahoma!,
The King and I,
Carousel, and
South Pacific - were all successes, while
Paramount Pictures released
White Christmas and
Funny Face, two films which used previously written music by Irving Berlin and the Gershwins, respectively.
Warner Bros. Pictures produced
Calamity Jane and
A Star Is Born; the former film was a vehicle for
Doris Day, while the latter provided a big-screen comeback for Judy Garland, who had been out of the spotlight since 1950. Meanwhile, director
Otto Preminger, better known for "message pictures", made
Carmen Jones and
Porgy and Bess, both starring
Dorothy Dandridge, who is considered the first African American A-list film star. Celebrated director
Howard Hawks also ventured into the genre with
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. In the 1960s, 1970s, and continuing up to today, the musical film became less of a bankable genre that could be relied upon for sure-fire hits. Audiences for them lessened and fewer musical films were produced as the genre became less mainstream and more unique.
The 1960s musical In the 1960s, the critical and box-office success of the films
West Side Story,
Gypsy,
The Music Man,
Bye Bye Birdie,
My Fair Lady,
Mary Poppins,
The Sound of Music,
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum,
The Jungle Book,
Thoroughly Modern Millie,
Oliver!, and
Funny Girl suggested that the traditional musical was in good health, while French filmmaker
Jacques Demy's
jazz musicals
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg and
The Young Girls of Rochefort were popular with international critics. However popular musical tastes were being heavily affected by
rock and roll and the freedom and youth associated with it, and indeed
Elvis Presley made a few films that have been equated with the old musicals in terms of form. ''
A Hard Day's Night and Help!, starring the Beatles, were audacious. Most of the musical films of the 1950s and 1960s such as Oklahoma! and The Sound of Music
were straightforward adaptations or restagings of successful stage productions. The most successful musicals of the 1960s created specifically for film were Mary Poppins
and The Jungle Book'', two of Disney's biggest hits of all time. The phenomenal box-office performance of
The Sound of Music gave the major Hollywood studios more confidence to produce lengthy, large-budget musicals. Despite the resounding success of some of these films, Hollywood also produced a large number of musical flops in the late 1960s and early 1970s which appeared to seriously misjudge public taste. The commercially and/or critically unsuccessful films included
Camelot, ''
Finian's Rainbow, Hello Dolly!, Sweet Charity, Doctor Dolittle, Half a Sixpence, The Happiest Millionaire, Star!, Darling Lili, Goodbye, Mr. Chips, Paint Your Wagon, Song of Norway, On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, 1776, Man of La Mancha, Lost Horizon, and Mame''. Collectively and individually these failures affected the financial viability of several major studios.
1970s In the 1970s, film culture and the changing demographics of filmgoers placed greater emphasis on gritty realism, while the pure entertainment and theatricality of classical-era Hollywood musicals was seen as old-fashioned. Despite this,
Fiddler on the Roof and
Cabaret were more traditional musicals closely adapted from stage shows and were strong successes with critics and audiences.
Changing cultural mores and the abandonment of the
Hays Code in 1968 also contributed to changing tastes in film audiences. The 1973 film of
Andrew Lloyd Webber and
Tim Rice's
Jesus Christ Superstar was met with some criticism by religious groups but was well received. By the mid-1970s, filmmakers avoided the genre in favor of using music by popular rock or pop bands as background music, partly in hope of selling a
soundtrack album to fans.
The Rocky Horror Picture Show was originally released in 1975 and was a critical failure until it started
midnight screenings in the 1980s where it achieved cult status. That same year also saw the premiere of the R&B band
Bloodstone's movie
Train Ride to Hollywood, but problems in distribution rendered it barely getting token theatrical release. The year 1976 saw the release of the low-budget comic musical,
The First Nudie Musical, released by Paramount. The 1978 film version of
Grease was a smash hit; its songs were original compositions done in a 1950s pop style. However, the sequel
Grease 2 (released in 1982) bombed at the box-office. Films about performers which incorporated gritty drama and musical numbers interwoven as a
diegetic part of the storyline were produced, such as
Lady Sings the Blues,
All That Jazz, and
New York, New York. Some musicals made in Britain experimented with the form, such as
Richard Attenborough's
Oh! What a Lovely War (released in 1969),
Alan Parker's
Bugsy Malone and
Ken Russell's
Tommy and
Lisztomania. A number of film musicals were still being made that were financially and/or critically less successful than in the musical's heyday. They include
1776,
The Wiz,
At Long Last Love,
Mame,
Man of La Mancha,
Lost Horizon,
Godspell,
Phantom of the Paradise,
Funny Lady (
Barbra Streisand's sequel to
Funny Girl),
A Little Night Music, and
Hair amongst others. The critical wrath against
At Long Last Love, in particular, was so strong that it was never released on home video. Fantasy musical films
Scrooge,
The Blue Bird,
The Little Prince,
Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, ''
Pete's Dragon'', and Disney's
Bedknobs and Broomsticks were also released in the 1970s, the latter winning the
Academy Award for Best Visual Effects.
1980s to 1990s By the 1980s, financiers grew increasingly confident in the musical genre, partly buoyed by the relative health of the musical on
Broadway and
London's West End. Productions of the 1980s and 1990s included
The Apple,
Xanadu,
The Blues Brothers,
Annie, ''
Monty Python's The Meaning of Life, The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, Victor/Victoria, Footloose, Fast Forward, A Chorus Line, Little Shop of Horrors, Forbidden Zone, Absolute Beginners, Labyrinth, Newsies, Evita, and Everyone Says I Love You. However, Can't Stop the Music, starring the Village People, was a calamitous attempt to resurrect the old-style musical and was released to audience indifference in 1980. Little Shop of Horrors was based on an off-Broadway musical adaptation of a 1960 Roger Corman film, a precursor of later film-to-stage-to-film adaptations, including The Producers''. Many
animated films of the period – predominately from
Disney – included traditional musical numbers.
Howard Ashman,
Alan Menken, and
Stephen Schwartz had previous musical theater experience and wrote songs for animated films during this time, supplanting Disney workhorses the
Sherman Brothers. Starting with 1989's
The Little Mermaid, the
Disney Renaissance gave new life to the musical film. Other successful animated musicals included
Aladdin,
The Hunchback of Notre Dame, and
Pocahontas from Disney proper,
The Nightmare Before Christmas from Disney division Touchstone Pictures,
The Prince of Egypt from DreamWorks,
Anastasia from Fox and Don Bluth,
Eight Crazy Nights from Columbia, and
South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut from Paramount and Warner Bros.
Beauty and the Beast,
The Lion King, and others were adapted for the stage after their blockbuster successes.
2000–present: The second-classical era or New Musical Era 21st-century musicals or New Age In the 21st century, movie musicals were reborn with darker musicals, musical biopics, epic drama musicals and comedy drama musicals such as
O Brother, Where Art Thou?,
Moulin Rouge!,
Chicago,
Walk the Line,
Dreamgirls,
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street,
Les Misérables,
La La Land, and
West Side Story; all of which won the
Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy in their respective years, while such films as
The Phantom of the Opera,
Hairspray,
Mamma Mia!,
Nine,
Into the Woods,
The Greatest Showman,
Mary Poppins Returns,
Rocketman,
The Prom,
Cyrano,
Tick, Tick... Boom!,
Elvis,
The Color Purple, and
Wicked were only nominated.
Chicago was also the first musical since
Oliver! to win Best Picture at the Academy Awards.
Joshua Oppenheimer's Academy Award-nominated documentary
The Act of Killing may be considered a nonfiction musical. One specific musical trend was the rising number of
jukebox musicals based on music from various pop/rock artists on the big screen, some of which based on Broadway shows. Examples of Broadway-based jukebox musical films included
Mamma Mia! (
ABBA),
Rock of Ages, and
Sunshine on Leith (
The Proclaimers). Original ones included
Across the Universe (
The Beatles),
Moulin Rouge! (various pop hits),
Idlewild (
Outkast) and
Yesterday (
The Beatles). Disney also returned to musicals with
High School Musical,
Enchanted,
The Princess and the Frog,
Tangled,
Winnie the Pooh,
The Muppets,
Frozen,
Muppets Most Wanted,
Into the Woods,
Moana,
Mary Poppins Returns,
Frozen 2,
Stargirl,
Encanto,
Better Nate Than Ever,
Hollywood Stargirl,
Disenchanted,
Wish,
Moana 2 and
Mufasa: The Lion King. Following a string of successes with
live action fantasy adaptations of several of their
animated features, Disney produced a live action version of
Beauty and the Beast, the first of this live action fantasy adaptation pack to be an all-out musical, and features new songs as well as new lyrics to both the
Gaston number and the reprise of the title song.
Bill Condon, who directed
Dreamgirls, directed
Beauty and the Beast. The second film of this live action fantasy adaptation pack to be an all-out musical was
Aladdin and features new songs. The third film of this live action fantasy adaptation pack to be an all-out musical was
The Lion King and features new songs. The fourth film of this live action fantasy adaptation pack to be an all-out musical was
The Little Mermaid and features new songs with lyrics by
Lin-Manuel Miranda, replacing Ashman.
Pixar also produced
Coco, the first
computer-animated musical film by the company. Other animated musical films include
Happy Feet,
Rio,
Happy Feet Two, ''
Dr. Seuss' The Lorax, Rio 2, The Book of Life, Trolls, Sing, My Little Pony: The Movie, Smallfoot, UglyDolls, Trolls World Tour, Over the Moon, Vivo, Sing 2, The Bob's Burgers Movie, Under the Boardwalk, Trolls Band Together, Leo, Thelma the Unicorn, Spellbound, KPop Demon Hunters, Smurfs and The Twits''. Biopics about music artists and showmen were also big in the 21st century. Examples include
8 Mile (
Eminem),
Ray (
Ray Charles),
Walk the Line (
Johnny Cash and
June Carter), (
Édith Piaf),
Notorious (
Biggie Smalls),
Jersey Boys (
The Four Seasons)
Love & Mercy (
Brian Wilson),
CrazySexyCool: The TLC Story (
TLC),
Aaliyah: The Princess of R&B (
Aaliyah),
Get on Up (
James Brown),
Whitney and
I Wanna Dance With Somebody (
Whitney Houston),
Straight Outta Compton (
N.W.A),
The Greatest Showman (
P. T. Barnum),
Bohemian Rhapsody (
Freddie Mercury),
The Dirt (
Mötley Crüe),
Judy (
Judy Garland),
Rocketman (
Elton John),
Respect (
Aretha Franklin),
Elvis (
Elvis Presley),
A Complete Unknown (
Bob Dylan) and
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere (
Bruce Springsteen). Grossing over $900 million at the box office
Bohemian Rhapsody is the most commercially successful musical biopic. Director
Damien Chazelle created a musical film called
La La Land, starring
Ryan Gosling and
Emma Stone. It was meant to reintroduce the traditional jazz style of song numbers with influences from the Golden Age of Hollywood and
Jacques Demy's French musicals while incorporating a contemporary/modern take on the story and characters with balances in fantasy numbers and grounded reality. It received 14 nominations at the
89th Academy Awards, tying the record for most nominations with
All About Eve (1950) and
Titanic (1997), and won the awards for
Best Director,
Best Actress,
Best Cinematography,
Best Original Score,
Best Original Song, and
Best Production Design.
Live! television events In 2013,
NBC produced
The Sound of Music Live! as part of their effort for expanded live entertainment events, which became an annual tradition of adaptations of stage musicals, created specifically as live television events. The following years featured
Peter Pan Live!,
The Wiz Live!,
Hairspray Live!,
Jesus Christ Superstar Live!, ''
Dr. Seuss' The Grinch Musical Live!, and Annie Live!. ABC and Fox also produced similar events, including Grease Live!, A Christmas Story Live!, Rent: Live, and The Little Mermaid Live!''. ==Indian musical films==