Films.
More specifically, films about New York. It is not that surprising, considering that this most cinematic of cities has inspired filmmakers since film was a one reel wonder. After all, motion pictures were born here -- or just across the Hudson River at the Edison Laboratory in New Jersey. The earliest productions were shot on these very streets, and the first American motion picture studios, such as Vitagraph, Biograph, and Kalem were founded here. This is where D.W. Griffith, Mary Pickford, Lillian Gish, Blanche Sweet, and Douglas Fairbanks all began their careers in cinema.
Even though the center of production eventually moved three thousand miles away to a little hamlet called Hollywood, movies never forgot where they started. The silent era saw many films utilize the Great Gotham, including two of my favorites from 1928, The Crowd and Harold Lloyd's last silent feature, Speedy. Movies have always had a love affair with Manhattan, but the advent of sound made location filming prohibitive, and what was once a film maker's playground was relegated to replicated sets on studio back lots. Thus, "naughty, bawdy, gaudy" 42nd Street was in reality a sound stage in the San Fernando Valley, and the "lights of Fourteenth Street" were florescent bulbs strung on an outdoor set in Century City, California.
With rare exception (such as 1945's The Lost Weekend) New York filming was limited to quick background shots to establish location, and then production quickly headed back to the controlled atmosphere of the sound stage.
Hollywood's love affair with New York hit its zenith in 1961 with the release of what is considered by many
But, as in all fairy tales, the hero arrives in the nick of time to save his damsel in distress. In this instance, Manhattan's Prince Charming was the ultimate New Yorker himself, Woody Allen. Beginning with Annie Hall (1977), and especially the lyrical Manhattan (1979), Allen began creating cinematic valentines that reflected his romantic vision of his battered but beautiful lady. Set to the strains of Gershwin and Rogers and Hart, it was impossible not to be moved by the cinematic splendor of the tarnished cityscape, and Manhattan began a cinematic renaissance. This renewed passion for the magnificence of the city dovetailed with its economic resurgence, and throughout the next two decades films such as Arthur (1981), Tootsie (1983), Moonstruck (1987), When Harry Met Sally (1989), The Prince of Tides (1991), Sleepless in Seattle (1993), As Good As it Gets (1997) and You've Got Mail (1998) depicted a veritable wonderland. With the sudden influx of millions of dollars into the urban renewal of the 1990s, the city rose to even greater heights. By the end of the twentieth century, New York was second only to Paris as the most romantic city in the world.
So, this summer, I will be taking a trip to classic Hollywood in New York, and highlighting some of my favorite New York stories. I hope you'll come on along, and we'll take a look at how filmmakers from Griffith to Ephron have turned Manhattan into a cinematic isle of joy.

1 comment:
Wonderful! I am excited to begin this journey of cinematic New York with such a delightful and knowledgeable guide. I will be sure to share this blog site in hopes of adding more bright eyes on this tour of the city that never sleeps.
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