, New York In 1937, at the
9th Academy Awards, the
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film,
The Great Ziegfeld produced the previous year won the
Best Picture (called "Outstanding Production"), Featuring numbers by
Ray Bolger,
Dennis Morgan,
Virginia Bruce, and
Harriet Hoctor, the film gave wider audiences a glimpse into the Follies; the show-stopper was the
Irving Berlin-composed "
A Pretty Girl Is Like a Melody", which, by itself, cost more to produce than one of Ziegfeld's entire stage shows. In 1941, MGM released
Ziegfeld Girl, starring
Judy Garland,
Lana Turner,
Hedy Lamarr,
James Stewart and
Tony Martin. The film was set in the 1920s. Celebrated numbers from Ziegfeld Revues were recreated, including the famed "Wedding Cake" set which had been used for Metro's earlier film,
The Great Ziegfeld. Judy Garland was filmed on the top of the cake.
Charles Winninger, who had performed in the Follies of 1920, appeared as "
Ed Gallagher" According to modern sources, Turner's character was modeled after Ziegfeld Girl
Lillian Lorraine, who suffered a drunken fall into the orchestra pit during an extravagant number. In 1946, MGM released a third feature film based on Ziegfeld's shows titled
Ziegfeld Follies with
Fred Astaire,
Judy Garland,
Lena Horne,
William Powell (as Ziegfeld),
Gene Kelly,
Fanny Brice,
Red Skelton,
Esther Williams,
Cyd Charisse,
Lucille Ball,
Kathryn Grayson, and others performing songs and sketches similar to those from the original Follies. In 1947,
Ziegfeld Follies was awarded the "Grand Prix de la Comedie Musicale" at the
Cannes Film Festival and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration (black and white). The stage musical
Funny Girl, which premiered on Broadway in 1964, depicts Fanny Brice's success with the Follies. In 1964, the musical debuted on Broadway, with
Barbra Streisand playing Brice, Roger DeKoven as Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. and Brice's son-in-law
Ray Stark producing. The 1968 Columbia Pictures
film adaptation featuring Streisand reprising her role as Brice and
Walter Pidgeon as Ziegfeld was the year's top-grossing movie. A subsequent Broadway revival in 2022 and 2023 featured
Beanie Feldstein and later
Lea Michele as Brice and
Peter Francis James as Ziegfeld. ==The
Follies==