Here you go
Here you go
I think it is a great song. My older sister had a Flamingos album in the early 60s and my Dad always wanted to hear them "Begin the Beguine".That Begin the Beguine is a nice tune. Is there a bad versuion?
Fosse did several in "All That Jazz" including the spectacular "Air-rotica" featuring Sandahl Bergman. A little adult for some, so I included his leggy vaudeville turn to Peter Allen's "Everything Old is New Again" with Ann Reinking and Erszebet Foldi serenading Roy Scheider.
So far I've figured out how to get the song over but not the video. I'm the guy that had to read the book twice before I wrote the report.At the top of the list of all the threads Nan has links to Boneyard lessons including posting videos. If I was able to figure it out I’m confident you can too.
I think it is a great song. My older sister had a Flamingos album in the early 60s and my Dad always wanted to hear them "Begin the Beguine".
In memory of my recently late UConn fan mother, her favorite knock-knock joke:Vivian Leigh is so beautiful and charming, Robert Taylor is very handsome, they're best match.
Not sure about his not wanting to ever dance with her again but he is on record as saying she was the best. I've watched that so many times and it might be the best "couples" dance scene ever.This was from a 1940 film. Fred never danced with Ms Powell again , and it was because she was too good. Her feet were faster than his, and he did not want his female partner upstaging him. At least that is what I once read in a piece about his dance partners.
Here you go
I'll try it. Tky NWWhy not today? Find your video you want, right click and select "copy link location." Come back over here, right click again and select "paste." That's it.
This was Fosse's first attempt at choreography and his style was evident even then. "Kiss Me Kate" was choreographed by Hermes Pan but he was so taken with Fosse's style that he suggested choreographing his own brief segment with Carol Haney (Gene Kelly's assistant) who was his dance partner in the scene. The brief scene doesn't just suggest greatness to come, it says it was already there.