Roseland is a 1977 Merchant Ivory Productions' anthology film with a screenplay by Ruth Prawer Jhabvala. It was directed by James Ivory and produced by Ismail Merchant.
Plot
At Roseland, an older lady, May (Wright), with a light step, looks for the memory of her husband in the ballroom's mirrors. Stan (Jacobi), a cheerful older man steers May to brandy alexanders and away from her past. Pauline (Copeland) is a middle-aged widow with the means to pay for the services of a younger gigolo, Russell (Walken) and share champagne with her Roseland friends, the dance teacher Cleo (Helen Gallagher) and the shy divorcee, Marilyn (Chaplin). Both Marilyn and Cleo fail to break Russell's attachment to the lifestyle that Pauline provides. Rosa (Skala), a former Schrafft's cook and aspiring dance superstar makes it her mission to win the peabody prize with her older partner, Arthur (Thomas) who is desperate to marry her. ==Cast==
Cast
===The Waltz=== • Teresa Wright (May) • Lou Jacobi (Stan) • Don De Natale (Master of Ceremonies) • Louise Kirkland (Ruby) • Hetty Galen (Red-Haired Lady) • Carol Culver (Young May) • Denny Shearer (Eddie) ===The Hustle=== • Geraldine Chaplin (Marilyn) • Helen Gallagher (Cleo) • Joan Copeland (Pauline) • Christopher Walken (Russell) • Conrad Janis (George) • Jayne Heller (Bella) • Annette Rivera and Floyd Chisolm (Hustle Couple) • Jeanmarie Evans (Cloakroom Attendant) ===The Peabody=== • Lilia Skala (Rosa) • David Thomas (Arthur) • Edward Kogan (Bartender) • Madeline Lee (Camille) • Stan Rubin (Bert) • Dortha Duckworth (Ladies' Room Attendant) ==Crew==
FilmingRoseland was filmed in an almost pseudo-documentary style as an exploration of the lives of Roseland's customers. The vignettes are also purportedly based on true stories. Filming took place almost entirely in the Roseland Ballroom. ==Reception==
Reception
The Washington Post explained that the film shows what "is mostly the sadness and faded dreams of dancers who look like they were around the day the doors first opened". The review praised how Ivory "effectively uses three romantic vignettes" as well as the "realistic" dialogue. ==References==