Dorothy Arzner Double Feature: DANCE, GIRL, DANCE (1940): Block Museum - Northwestern University
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Dorothy Arzner Double Feature: DANCE, GIRL, DANCE (1940)

A man and woman dance while three other women in sparkly dresses and top hats look on in a black-and-white image.
DANCE, GIRL, DANCE (1940)
Cinema
September
28
3:00 PM

Event Details

Date & Time:

Sat September 28, 2024
3:00 PM

Location:

The Block Museum of Art
40 Arts Circle Drive
Evanston, IL 60208

Audience:

Open to the public

Details:

DANCE, GIRL, DANCE

(Dorothy Arzner, 1940, 90 min, 16mm)

RSVP

Running throughout Films by Women/Chicago ‘74 was the first-ever retrospective of the films of Dorothy Arzner, a maverick who challenged stifling gender norms to be the only female studio filmmaker working throughout the 1930s and 40s. Working up from typist to editor to screenwriter to director, Arzner mastered the vocabulary of Classical cinema across more than a dozen features that spanned—and often married—comedy, melodrama, morality and immorality tales.

High among Arzner’s most celebrated works is DANCE, GIRL, DANCE (1940), a vivid melodrama about two ambitious women striving to succeed as dancers on the burlesque circuit. Drawing sharp contrasts between her two magnetic leads, the boisterous showgirl Bubbles (Lucille Ball) and demure aspiring ballerina Judy (Maureen O’Hara), Arzner crafts a rigorous, yet wildly entertaining study of friendship and rivalry that explicitly interrogates the ways that women must adapt and conform themselves to get ahead in the male-dominated world of show business. Poorly received upon release—perhaps its daring implication of lewd male audiences may have soured touchy critics and exhibitors?—but the years have proven DANCE, GIRL, DANCE to be one of the most significant and enduring feminist statements in American cinema.

For this presentation, Block Cinema will reproduce one of the 1974 festival’s most trenchant pairings, preceding DANCE, GIRL, DANCE with experimental filmmaker Gunvor Nelson’s classic TAKE-OFF (1972, 10 min, 16mm), a witty and irreverent feminist deconstruction of striptease.

DANCE, GIRL, DANCE print courtesy of the MCM Archive at Brown University; TAKE-OFF courtesy of Canyon Cinema.

 

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About FILMS BY WOMEN/CHICAGO '74:

In September 1974, at the height of the feminist movement, the Film Center hosted Films By Women/Chicago ’74, a series of screenings, workshops, and discussions, drawing 10,000 patrons to over 70 short and feature films by women filmmakers. Organized by an all-woman collective with support from the Chicago Tribune, the festival offered a global survey of cinema from across its 60-year history. From mainstream Hollywood to activist documentary, arthouse to animation, it was the most diverse and expansive American survey of women’s cinema to date. It was also a watershed moment in Chicago cinema culture: according to committee member B. Ruby Rich, “women, for years after, would come up to me in the street to credit [us]—for jumpstarting their careers, ending their marriages, shaping their friendship.” 

This fall, the Gene Siskel Film Center and Northwestern University’s Block Cinema will celebrate the fifty-year anniversary of Films by Women/Chicago ’74. Screening series at both venues. will revisit some of the festival’s most original and daring films and filmmakers, while reflecting on the event’s enduring legacies.

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Contact The Block Museum of Art for more information: (847) 491-4000 or email us at block-museum@northwestern.edu