
1946 RITA HAYWORTH FILM TV
He was given a green light by US cable network ABC, which hoped to replicate the success of the director’s small-town mystery serial.ĪBC was unimpressed with the first episode, which they considered slowly paced and drawn out – 37 minutes too long to fit into a conventional TV timeslot.
1946 RITA HAYWORTH FILM SERIES
Under its dream-like veneer, Mulholland Drive is a brilliant commentary on Hollywood’s machinations, at least partly informed by its own woes.īeginning life during the development of Lynch’s cult TV show Twin Peaks, the director eventually pitched an idea for Mulholland Drive as a series in 1998. The film ended up performing poorly at the box office but has since become a cult classic.Mulholland Drive’s own troubled history, and the studio politics and power plays depicted by Lynch in the film itself, hardly feel like coincidences. Jordan.ĭown to Earth is cited as an inspiration for the film Xanadu (1980) starring Olivia Newton-John, Michael Beck and Gene Kelly. The title "Down to Earth" was used for the comedy film Down to Earth (2001) starring Chris Rock, which is a remake of Here Comes Mr. Ethan Laidlaw as Stagehand (uncredited).Adele Jergens as Georgia Evans/New Terpsichore (singing voice dubbed by Kay Starr).Edward Everett Horton as Messenger 7013.Larry Parks as Danny Miller (singing voice dubbed by Hal Derwin).Rita Hayworth as Terpsichore/Kitty Pendleton (singing voice dubbed by Anita Ellis).In Heaven, Jordan assures Kitty that she will see Danny again and grants her a vision of their eventual reunion in the afterlife. He recasts the Terpsichore role to chorus girl Georgia Evans, who hires Corkle as her new agent. Though he cannot see her, Danny discovers her coat that she left behind and becomes devastated at her sudden departure. She manages to convince Corkle to tell the police about the gangsters before finding herself becoming invisible to mortals. When the musical becomes a hit, Kitty learns her time on Earth is up and she must return to Heaven, despite her pleas to stay with Danny. Kitty returns to the musical and performs "Swingin' the Muses" in Danny's original vision.

Murdock, is happily married with two children. Corkle reveals that Joe, now living his life as K.O. Overhearing the exchange, Corkle realizes that Jordan is the same heavenly messenger he had heard about some time ago when his friend Joe Pendleton had died and switched bodies. Despite her argument with Danny, Kitty still loves him and decides to save him at the expense of her and her sisters' reputation. He and Kitty quarrel over this, and Kitty plans to leave when Jordan shows up and explains the situation. Danny, who is in debt to gangsters who will kill him unless the show is a success, is forced to go back to his original concept. The revised play debuts on the road and is a complete flop. Danny, who has fallen madly in love with Kitty, soon agrees with her point of view and alters the play from a musical farce to a high-minded ballet in the style of Martha Graham, scored by Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco. As the play is being rehearsed, Kitty convinces Danny that his depictions of the Muses is wrong.

Terpsichore uses the name Kitty Pendleton and quickly gets an agent, Max Corkle, and a part in the show. Jordan agrees and sends Messenger 7013 to keep an eye on her. Terpsichore, one of the Nine Muses of Olympus, is annoyed that popular Broadway producer Danny Miller is putting on a play which portrays the Muses as man-crazy tarts fighting for the attention of a pair of Air Force pilots who crashed on Mount Parnassus. While Edward Everett Horton and James Gleason reprised their roles from the earlier film, Roland Culver replaced Claude Rains as Mr. The film is a sequel to the 1941 film Here Comes Mr. Down to Earth is a 1947 musical comedy film starring Rita Hayworth, Larry Parks, and Marc Platt, and directed by Alexander Hall.
