Joe: "Where will I meet you?"
Alice: "Under the clock at the Astor at seven."
Released in May 1945, The Clock was filmed entirely in California, but set in New York City, with scenes taking place in sets standing in for Central Park, the Subway, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Astor Hotel, Pennsylvania Station, and various other locations.Alice: "Under the clock at the Astor at seven."
Vincente Minnelli directed the film for MGM on the heels of his success the previous year, Meet Me In St. Louis, and once again he directed his future wife: Judy Garland (the couple married a month after the release of The Clock). Minnelli was the third director on the film and he took charge, re-writing the script substantially and bringing his characteristic actor-centered touch to the film. Actor Robert Walker played Garland's romantic interest, Joe, a soldier on 48 hour leave in New York City, his first visit to the city. He meets Alice (Garland) and what follows is a kind of mythic love story whose twists and turns are determined by the city itself.
Robert Walker in a New York hotel; the city unfolds behind him |
All this is magically set in the city; the scenery that appears behind them in many scenes looks quite fake to the modern eye--the jittery black and white shots played out in the background are never evenly matched to the action filmed on the California sets, but there is something so magical about them and they heighten the fairy tale quality of the film.
First meeting in Pennsylvania Station |
At the Zoo |
.....And off the two go on their whirlwind Manhattan romance.....
Hotel Astor was built in what was then called "Longacre Square," now Times Square. |
After all, this was a city, and a country, on the very tail end of four years of war. Frivolity and entertainment were not dead, but they had been muted by the war. And so, Alice and Joe are, in a sense, "the future." Their dreams and plans, set against the "electrifying" city, are given new life in a new era.
That poignant mixture of hope and fear that so pervaded the post World War II era was palpable in a city on the verge of its own future. The original Pennsylvania Station built in 1910 and designed by McKim Mead and White was demolished in 1963; just four years later the Hotel Astor would be demolished.
The city was changing to be sure. Couples may have had to find other spots to meet; But the city still provided an electrifying backdrop for the lives played out within it.
~Jenny Thompson
2 comments:
Interesting story indeed. Thanks for sharing it!
Thank you, Soho!
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