Sunday, January 19, 2014

Mary Poppins --- A few days late

Mary Poppins
Released 1964
Directed By Robert Stevenson
Music By Richard and Robert Sherman

Hello fellow Disney Fans!!  As I promised last month and in honor of the release of Saving Mr. Banks by Disney Studios, I give you this month’s film: Mary Poppins!!  I am giddy to be reviewing this movie as the character of Mary Poppins holds a very special place in my heart (as I will tell you later on in the post).  But first … a little history:

Mary Poppins is a film of many firsts: For Julie Andrews it was a first foray into film; for Richard and Robert Sherman it was the first time they were under contract with Disney Studios; for Disney Studios the first Disney film with live action to be inducted into the National Film Registry; for me it was one of the first films I can recall watching (yes on Beta tape) at the tender age of three.  As with other Disney films, Disney spared no expense with casting of all the characters, from the major players such as Mary Poppins, Bert, Mr. and Mrs. Banks, all the way down to characters with only a few seconds of airtime and may have even been nameless.  Here are just a few of the actors and actresses that contributed to the film:

·         Mary Poppins was played by the amazing Julie Andrews.  This role followed soon after her success in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Camelot and the birth of her first child (though it was also considered to have Mary Martin, Bette Davis, and Angela Lansbury in the lead).
·         The jack-of-all-trades Bert was played by Dick Van Dyke.  Dick Van Dyke also made another appearance in the film as the elderly Mr. Dawes Sr. (under the name Navckic Keyd)
·         Mr. Banks was played by the British actor David Tomlinson, who would make several appearances in other Disney films such as Bedknobs and Broomsticks and The Love Bug
·         The suffragette Mrs. Banks played by Glynis Johns, who’s career spanned stage, screen and television.
·         The children Jane and Michael were played by Karen Dotrice and Matthew Garber.  These two often appeared together on film sometimes as siblings (The Gnome Mobile) or just friends (The Three Lives of Thomasina released the same year as Mary Poppins).
·         Other names of the time included Hermione Baddeley and Reta Shaw (who played cook and Ellen), Elsa Lanchester (Katie Nanna), Arthur Treacher (The Constable), Jane Darwell (The Bird Woman), and Ed Wynn (Uncle Albert).

The music of Mary Poppins shows a timeless quality and really showcased the talent of the Sherman Brothers.  This would be the music that would eventually lead them to being under contract with Disney Studios.  Richard and Robert Sherman wrote around 30 songs for the film.  All in all 18 were used and many of the songs that didn’t make the final cut were used in later films (such as The Beautiful Briny in Bedknobs and Broomstick).  Each of the film’s songs are memorable and showcase the full range of music the Sherman Brothers could write, from ballads to waltzes to folk dance music.  In later interviews, Richard would mention Walt would say “Play it” or just get a certain look in his eye and he knew it meant playing “Feed the Birds” which is my personal favorite of the entire soundtrack.  In watching the movie with informational pop ups, each character had a theme (a technique used by the German composer Richard Wagner called leitmotif where each character in his operas had a specific passage of music that played when they were present or identified in the scene); the Disney studios have used this approach all the way back since Pinocchio

I don’t know where to begin with this film.  Mary Poppins holds such a special place in my heart and now is on the verge of turning 50!!  I mentioned reviewing this film in honor of the release of Saving Mr. Banks that shows the interaction of the author P.L. Travers and Walt Disney that led to the film.  But I find myself asking how Mary Poppins, made when my parents were kids, has captured audiences across all generations to become one of Disney’s most beloved films.  Is it the masterful music written by the Sherman Brothers?  Or the way the all-star cast gave life to the characters, including the incomparable Julie Andrews in the title role?  Or perhaps the brand of Disney magic that not only created London in the Disney Studios in Burbank, California but also melded cartoon and live actors on one screen and still made it believable?  Films like this are certainly not uncommon for Walt Disney Studios; it is however almost as if this movie was made by a stroke of serendipity; had the role of Eliza Doolittle gone to Julie Andrews (My Fair Lady was also in production and released in the same year) and the role gone to another actress under consideration (such as Mary Martin) would Mary Poppins have been memorable? 

What I find remarkable is Disney’s attention to every detail and character; even the more minor roles were played by established actors from both Britain and America (for example, Jane Darwell in the role of the Bird Woman, who had over 200 movies to her credit).  Disney’s ability to find the right person for the right job is spot on in his pictures.  Perhaps that is the enduring quality of Mary Poppins lies in this quality of the film: the right person in the right role at the right point in their lives.  This detail can be found in the music (I recommend listening to the interview done with the Sherman Brothers and how they arrived at the music of Mary Poppins to ensure it sounded British enough) and even its performers (Julie Andrews did several takes of Stay Awake to get the right sound out of her voice). 

Admittedly watching the film made me want to have a magical nanny of my very own … When not pretending to be the singing nanny herself (I admit it … I even had my own umbrella).  In watching the movie almost 30 years later, the music still gives me a tear.  As a child Mary Poppins showed me that life is about magic in everything; as an adult it’s about that little bit of kindness that can be shown to everyone and still believing magic exists, maybe not in popping in and out of chalk paintings or having tea parties on the ceiling, but in showing what a simple smile or wave or act of kindness can do for another person’s day.  On top of starting a lifelong love of music and falling in love with the voice of Julie Andrews, Mary Poppins also started my journey of becoming a Disney-phile.  And this is why Mary Poppins will forever hold a special place in my heart.

Mary Poppins: An incredible family movie with a little something for everyone.  Pulling from stories of P.L. Travers and Julie Andrews giving us her best performance that is “practically perfect in every way” augmented by Dick Van Dyke, David Tomlinson, Glynis Johns and the others in the all-star cast,
Perfect For: Really the ENTIRE family

Most Likely Character You’ll See In the Parks:  The title character herself, Mary Poppins, escorted by the gentlemanly sweep Bert, both dressed for a Jolly ‘Oliday.


Make it a Magical Day – Pat A