For millions of moviegoers unable to see the original stage version
of "West Side Story, " director Robert Wise's adaptation was a
cinematic gift that brought a Broadway hit to a mass audience.
Ernesto Acevedo-Munoz argues that Wise's film was not only
hugely popular, but that it was also an artistic triumph that
marked an important departure in the history of American movie
making.
With a score by Leonard Bernstein and choreography by Jerome
Robbins, this update of the Romeo and Juliet story remains one of
the most revered and highly popular American movie musicals, with
only "Singin' in the Rain" ranking higher in the AFI's list of the
best of the genre. Acevedo-Munoz draws on previously unreleased
production documents--from interoffice memos to annotations on the
director's script--to go beyond publicity accounts and provide an
inside look at this critically acclaimed film classic, offering
details of its filming that have never before been published.
From location scouting to scripting to casting to filming,
Acevedo-Munoz focuses on little-known details of the actual
production. He provides close analyses of dramatic sequences and
musical numbers, emphasizing the film's technical innovations and
its visual and aural coding as a means for defining character and
theme. He carefully explains the differences between Broadway and
film versions, exposing censorship and creative issues that the
filmmakers were forced to confront. And taking readers behind the
cameras, he highlights the creative differences and financial
difficulties that led to the departure of Robbins--who had
conceived and directed the stage version--long before filming was
complete.
Acevedo-Munoz makes a strong case for the film's daring vision
in combining music, dance, dialogue, and visual
elements--especially color--in highly creative ways, while also
addressing the social, racial, and class tensions of American
society. Drawing on his own Puerto Rican heritage, he provides a
Hispanic perspective on the cultural aspects of the story and
explores the ways in which the film's portrayal of Puerto Rican
identity is neither as transparent nor as negative as some critics
have charged.
Bursting with facts, insights, and inside stories, this book
boasts a wealth of material that has never been explored before in
print. Both history and homage, it is a must for scholar and buff
alike."
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