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Written by Dani S.
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A fun example of the movie musical in its heyday.
One of my favorite Judy Garland movies is The Harvey Girls.
It also starred other familiar names such as Ray Bolger and Angela
Lansbury. I've seen it at least five times and it never gets old for
me. It is a perfect example of what I love in movie musicals.
The
story is a fictionalized account of the opening of a new Harvey House
restaurant in a frontier town, and the lives of the waitresses (Harvey
Girls) that worked in it. Harvey Houses really existed; they were the
first restaurant chain and in a way, an early version of fast food. The
chain was started by Fred Harvey to provide quick and tasty food to
railroad travelers during the short water stops that trains would take.
Back in those days, the trains didn't have restaurant cars. People had
to pack their own food or eat in dirty roadhouses that had rancid meat
and stale coffee. Harvey Houses improved tourism in the western US by
providing fresh food in a clean atmosphere, all served in time for you
to eat before the train left. They employed young single girls and
dressed them in black uniforms with starched white aprons to drive home
the image of cleanliness and civility.
In the movie, Judy
Garland plays a woman who goes west to the frontier town of Sandrock to
marry someone she met in a lonely hearts ad. When that doesn't work
out, she joins up with the Harvey Girls to earn some money. The Harvey
Girls are setting up a brand-new Harvey House in this town, but it
doesn't go smoothly. That's because the saloon girls, headed up by
Angela Lansbury's character, see the Harvey House as competition.
Matters are complicated further when the saloon owner, who seems to be
Angela Lansbury's guy, falls for Judy Garland.
This movie combines so many elements that make it re-watchable for me.
--It was filmed in that glorious Technicolor that has fallen out of favor these days. The YouTube clip above doesn't do the cinematography justice.
--Along with the saturated colors, the costumes and hairstyles definitely satisfy me when I am in the mood for eye candy.
--Ray Bolger and Cyd Charisse both have wonderful dance numbers.
--Angela Lansbury is known to most of today's generation as sweet Jessica Fletcher from Murder, She Wrote. It is fun to go back and see her in a not-so-gentle role.
Best
of all, the movie is clean and has a happy ending. It is a movie that I
can watch with my daughters without cringing. It is also an escape from
the all-too-realistic movies of today. That's what makes me go back to The Harvey Girls again and again.
This article was originally published in my blog, Straddling the Century Line , where it includes a YouTube video with scenes from the movie.
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