1980: The Annus Horribilis of the Movie Musical
Stephen Arnell
Broadcast/VoD Consultant for TV & Film, Writer/Producer (inc Bob Fosse, Alex Cox, Prince, Sinatra), Media/Culture Commentator & Author (novel The Great One published November 2022)
With the recent success of Bohemian Rhapsody, A Star Is Born, Mary Poppins Returns and Mama Mia! Here We Go Again, movie musicals are big box office again.
With of course Cats the big exception.
But 40 years ago we witnessed a remarkable year, which surely must be regarded as nadir of the film musical - 1980.
Twelve short months which saw the release of Xanadu, Can't Stop The Music, The Apple (rated one of the worst films of all time) and the lousy Neil Diamond remake of The Jazz Singer - notable for Larry Olivier's completely cornball Cantor Rabinovich - of 'I Hef no Son!' fame.
If you don't believe me, m'lud, I present the following evidence:
Larry O, making Topol (Fiddler on the Roof) look restrained:
Olivier was given a sports car or some such for a brief cameo appearance in a movie; a fellow actor said to him (I paraphrase):
"You got that for just 10 minutes work?'
Olivier replied
"That was for 40 years work dear boy"
Well said Larry.
Will we see the likes of 1980 again?
We can only hope not - although 1975 was a foreshadowing, with the late Stanley Donen's awful Lucky Lady and Bogdanovich's At Long Last Love - Burt Reynolds and John Hillerman having the unfortunate distinction of appearing in both these stinkers:
And...lest we forget, 1973's Lost Horizon remake, a disaster so profound that it sundered the hugely successful songwriting partnership of Burt Bacharach and Hal David.
If you doubt me: