A Night at the Opera (1935) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Background
A Night at the Opera (1935), a musical comedy, is the sixth of thirteen Marx Brothers feature films. A Night at the Opera is universally considered to be the Marx Brothers' best and most popular film, and it received critical acclaim when released. By bringing their comedy sequences, musical numbers, and plot line (a love story) up to higher standards, the film also proved to be a tremendous financial success. In homage to this film, the mid-70s raunchy, mock opera rock band Queen, with lead singer Freddie Mercury, named its fourth album after this film. [Note: They also named their next album after another Marx Bros. film, A Day at the Races.] The less anarchic, solidly-believable plot and slapstick comedy of this Marx Brothers film (the first one without straight-man Zeppo) was derived from a well-developed screenplay written specifically for them by two of their best writers ever, playwrights George S. Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind (who had previously worked with them on The Cocoanuts (1929) and Animal Crackers (1930)). Of course, this film again featured the three major members of the comedy team:
The material was, in part, auditioned and pre-tested before live audiences during a road-show tour. As a result, the revised film script was more than just a number of improvised sketches patched together. Rather, it consisted of many well-refined, polished scenes of classic romantic comedy and dialogue, flowing together smoothly with the story and the characters of the brothers, and timed to take into account reaction time for laughs. It was designed to appeal to female audiences, with less zany, surrealistic, and uninhibited behavior exhibited by the brothers. The most famous of the comedy team's routines are included here - the crowded shipboard stateroom scene, the contract-tearing scene between Groucho and Chico, the rearranged furniture and bed-switching sequence to elude a private detective, the operatic finale (a lavish production number) with Harpo swinging Tarzan ape-like on stage flyropes in tune to Verdi's music, and sprinkled throughout - Groucho's zippy one-line insults and flirtations with his perennial nemesis - Margaret Dumont. It was their first film for MGM Studios - under Irving Thalberg's production. This music-oriented film, by director Sam Wood (known later for Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939), Our Town (1940), Kitty Foyle (1940), The Pride of the Yankees (1942), Kings Row (1942), and For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943)), followed the commercially and critically unsuccessful at the time Duck Soup (1933), the fifth and last film they completed for Paramount. The brothers had left behind brother Zeppo, and the more rampant, absurdist, and surreal antics that were characteristic of their first five films.
Plot Synopsis In the opening, the wealthy dowager Mrs. Claypool (Margaret Dumont) is seen dining by herself at a classy Milan restaurant. She complains to the waiter that her expected gentleman hasn't arrived and it is too late to dine. When she has Otis B. Driftwood (Groucho Marx) paged, thinking she has been stood up, Driftwood turns around from the table behind her and puts down the boy for calling out his name so loudly throughout the restaurant:
The seedy entrepreneur and swindler has just finished a meal with a beautiful blonde, with his back facing toward his dignified benefactress. She protests being stood up: "I've been sitting right here since 7 o'clock." The shifty con-man turns the tables on her, berating her for sitting with her back to him all evening:
Turning back to his own table, he gets the inflated dinner bill and exclaims: "$9.40? This is an outrage!" and hands the bill to the blonde floozy: "If I were you I wouldn't pay it!" After totally alienating Mrs. Claypool, he joins her at her table. Now that it is too late for dinner, he asks the waiter for a breakfast meal:
Driftwood has been hired to bring her into society, but she complains that in the past, he's done nothing to help her. Driftwood attempts to flatter her and wriggle free of his predicament, explaining that he was dining with the blonde at the next table because of her likeness to Mrs. Claypool:
Driftwood promises to promote Mrs. Claypool's entry into high society if she invests $200,000 of her money in the New York Opera Company. He both woos her and insults her in his 'promotion':
Driftwood introduces her to the head of the New York Opera Company, the dignified Herman Gottlieb (Siegfried Rumann). They bow repeatedly to each other in an extended introduction. When Gottlieb kisses her hand, Driftwood immediately suspects that Gottlieb has dishonestly stolen her rings - he checks her fingers. Gottlieb flatters her by calling her charming and beautiful. Driftwood flares up and objects to Gottlieb's indecent behavior:
But Driftwood also allows Gottlieb to romance Mrs. Claypool European-style: "All right, Gottlieb, it's your turn. You take a whack at it, but keep it clean." Gottlieb is pleased to accept Mrs. Claypool's financing so that he can hire the celebrated, but self-centered Italian tenor Rodolpho Lassparri (Walter Wolf King) - "the greatest tenor since Caruso." Gottlieb promises that she will receive all the credit for being a patron of the arts and sponsoring Lassparri to sing with the New York Opera Company:
When Driftwood declines to accompany them, Gottlieb leads Mrs. Claypool to his opera box to hear the Italian tenor in a performance. As they leave, Driftwood reminds Gottlieb that he saw her first: "Nix on the love-making because I saw Mrs. Claypool first. Of course, her mother really saw her first but there's no point in bringing the Civil War into this." In his dressing room in the Milan Opera House, the egotistical and mean-spirited Lassparri berates his valet and dresser Tomasso (Harpo Marx), who he has found trying on one of his clown costumes. The put-upon Tomasso rips off the clown costume and is seen wearing another costume underneath - a naval outfit; beneath that is a third costume - a dress with a close-fitting bodice, full skirt and short full sleeves; his fourth and final outfit is his natural clothing underneath everything else. Lassparri orders his dresser out of the dressing room and fires him, beating and whipping him out the door. But then, the two-faced Lassparri acts sweetly toward Tomasso when he finds young soprano singer Rosa Castaldi (Kitty Carlisle, best known as a regular panelist on the original 50s TV quiz show I've Got a Secret) comforting the cast-out, brutally banished dresser on the floor. The famed opera tenor has a romantic interest in Rosa, but she is in love with another lesser-known tenor Riccardo "Ricky" Baroni (Allan Jones), a singer consigned to the chorus. Backstage, old friends Riccardo and Fiorello (Chico Marx) renew acquaintances - Fiorello proposes to be the agent/manager of the struggling singer Ricky. During the performance in the Italian city, Driftwood rides around the park in an open carriage, yelling at the driver: "Hey you. I told you to slow that nag down. On account of you, I nearly heard the opera." When Driftwood finally arrives at the opera box to join Gottlieb and Mrs. Claypool for the performance, he cheers "Bravo, bravo..." but it is too late - the curtain has just come down. Gottlieb has connived to have Mrs. Claypool sponsor his New York Opera Company so that Lassparri can be signed to a $1,000/night contract. Driftwood complains to Gottlieb:
Because he represents Mrs. Claypool, Driftwood wishes to take a cut in the deal. He thinks to himself: "There must be some way I can get a piece of this" - but he must get to the singer before Gottlieb does. Backstage after the performance, the despicable Lassparri desires Rosa's love interest through blackmail, but she departs, leaving him empty-handed:
Driftwood runs into Lassparri (dressed like a clown from the opera just concluded) who is beating and threatening Tomasso once again:
Suddenly, a vengeful Tomasso whacks Lassparri on the head with a large gavel. Smelling salts are applied to Lassparri's nose. Driftwood urges a confession:
But then, Tomasso hits Lassparri again just as he begins to sit up and regain consciousness. This time, Driftwood takes credit for the knockout, putting his foot on the victim's chest, adding: "Get fresh with me - eh?" He boasts to Fiorello, Riccardo's new manager: "We had an argument and he pulled a knife on me, so I shot him." Fiorello joins him by putting his foot up on the victim's chest too. They treat the body like a bar-rail:
Driftwood cannot remember Lassparri's name, but he knows that he is looking for "the greatest tenor in the world." That phrase matches the description of Fiorello's little-known client - "the fellow that sings in the opera here." So Driftwood negotiates a contract with Fiorello, but for the wrong singer (for Riccardo instead of for Lassparri). Without questioning who he is actually signing up to sing for the New York Opera Company, Driftwood agrees to a lucrative contractual deal for himself:
The terms are agreed upon: the singer will be paid $10 a night, but as managers, each of them plan to deduct 10% of the fee. That leaves the singer only $8. However, he will have to send $5 home to his mother, leaving him with only $3. Out of the remaining $3, allowances must also be made for additional income taxes:
|