Saturday, April 10, 2010

Mae West: Cinematic Censorship

If an article is about cinematic censorship, can MAE WEST be far behind?
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• • Susan Daly writes: Will Hays at the Motion Pictures Producers and Distributors Association (MPPDA) came up with a list of 'Don'ts and Be Carefuls' for movie-makers in 1927. No excessive (over 3 seconds) and lustful kissing
— — and if it happened anywhere in the vicinity of a bed, at least one of the parties had to have a foot on the ground.
• • Hollywood studios, heading into the Depression of the 1930s and desperate to attract audiences, pretty much ignored the cautions. The response of the censors was to introduce an expanded Hays Code in 1930. Sex was for married people only, and where affairs had to be mentioned, they should not be "presented attractively."
• • Sex was not "the proper subject for comedy" (no Carry On . . . movies, then). Dance moves that encouraged "movement of the breasts" were regarded as pure filth. The new, iron-cast code was formulated by a Jesuit, Fr Daniel Lord.
• • The Hollywood Reporter asked in 1931: "Does any producer pay attention to the 'Hays Code'?", knowing no one did. At this time, Jean Harlow was still getting away with asking, "Would you be shocked if I put on something more comfortable?" in Hell's Angel (1930), while Maureen O'Sullivan's Jane went skinny-dipping with Tarzan in the 1932 and 1934 loincloth-and-vine films.
• • Resistance to the censorious overlords was futile, however. By 1933, the powerful Catholic League of Decency had launched a 'down with this sort of thing' crusade on the movies. In 1939, Gone With The Wind producer David O Selznick was fined $5,000 for leaving the final word intact in what is now cinema's most quotable lines: "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn."
• • Not everyone could afford to do a Selznick but, this being an industry of wheeler-dealers, creative ways were found to circumvent the code. Mae West films were jam-packed with double entendres, the brazen blonde firing off lines like "I feel like a million tonight
— — but one at a time."
• • And where would Bogie and Bacall be without word play? "You know how to whistle, don't you, Steve? You just put your lips together — — and blow." (To Have and Have Not, 1944).
• • Mae West was particularly crafty. She used to write outrageous "decoy" scenes into risqué movies like I'm No Angel (1933) so that the moral guardians would focus on cutting those and let other, more subtly raunchy, material slip through. ...
— — Excerpt: — —
• • Article: "Red hot in black & white"
• • Byline: Susan Daly
• • Published in: Irish Independent — — Independent.ie
• • Published on: 10 April 2010

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• • Come up and see Mae every day online: http://MaeWest.blogspot.com/
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