Incongruous Entertainment: Camp, Cultural Value, and the MGM Musical
Author(s): Steven Cohan (Author)
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication Date: October 20, 2005
Edition: Illustrated
Language: English
Print length: 384 pages
ISBN-10: 0822335956
ISBN-13: 9780822335955
Book Description
With their lavish costumes and sets, ebullient song and dance numbers, and iconic movie stars, the musicals that mgm produced in the 1940s seem today to epitomize camp. Yet they were originally made to appeal to broad, mainstream audiences. In this lively, nuanced, and provocative reassessment of the mgm musical, Steven Cohan argues that this seeming incongruity—between the camp value and popular appreciation of these musicals—is not as contradictory as it seems. He demonstrates that the films’ extravagance and queerness were deliberate elements and keys to their popular success.
In addition to examining the spectatorship of the mgm musical, Cohan investigates the genre’s production and marketing, paying particular attention to the studio’s employment of a largely gay workforce of artists and craftspeople. He reflects on the role of the female stars—including Judy Garland, Debbie Reynolds, Esther Williams, and Lena Horne—and he explores the complex relationship between Gene Kelley’s dancing and his masculine persona. Cohan looks at how, in the decades since the 1950s, the marketing and reception of the mgm musical have negotiated the more publicly recognized camp value attached to the films. He considers the status of Singin’ in the Rain as perhaps the first film to be widely embraced as camp; the repackaging of the musicals as nostalgia and camp in the That’s Entertainment! series as well as on home video and cable; and the debates about Garland’s legendary gay appeal among her fans on the Internet. By establishing camp as central to the genre, Incongruous Entertainment provides a new way of looking at the musical.
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Steven Cohan’s Incongruous Entertainment brings together two fascinating subjects–camp and the musical–that are often casually linked but have never been explored as carefully and usefully as they are here.”–Pamela Robertson Wojcik, author of Guilty Pleasures: Feminist Camp from Mae West to Madonna “Steven Cohan’s scholarship is impeccable and his writing elegant and witty. He pulls together all the previous approaches to camp and uses them to explore the mgm musical and its stars from every angle I could think of–and a few I would never have thought of.”–Alexander Doty, author of Flaming Classics: Queering the Film Canon “Cohan meticulously supports his argument with detailed examples while eloquently and often humorously bringing the musicals and their stars to life. Both fans and novices are invited to rethink the political import of the MGM musicals from the studio era through the present… Because of Cohan’s revisionist scholarship, this book is also an essential read for anyone who studies camp and musicals.”–Leah Perry, Journal of Popular Culture
About the Author
Steven Cohan is Professor of English at Syracuse University. He is the author of Masked Men: Masculinity and the Movies in the Fifties; the editor of Hollywood Musicals: The Film Reader; and a coeditor of The Road Movie Book and Screening the Male: Exploring Masculinities in Hollywood Cinema.