Chad and Abby Begin Again Fan Forum

1961 moving picture

Blueish Hawaii
Blue hawaii poster.jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed past Norman Taurog
Screenplay by Hal Kanter
Story by Allan Weiss
Produced by Hal B. Wallis
Starring
  • Elvis Presley
  • Joan Blackman
  • Angela Lansbury
Cinematography Charles Lang Jr.
Edited by Terry O. Morse
Music by Joseph J. Lilley

Product
company

Hal Wallis Productions

Distributed by Paramount Pictures

Release date

  • Nov 22, 1961 (1961-11-22) (Usa)

Running fourth dimension

102 minutes
Land United States
Linguistic communication English
Box office $4.2 million (Usa/ Canada rentals) [ane] [2]

Blue Hawaii is a 1961 American musical romantic comedy film directed by Norman Taurog and starring Elvis Presley. The screenplay by Hal Kanter was nominated past the Writers Gild of America in 1962 in the category of Best Written American Musical.[three] The film opened at number 2 in box function receipts for that week and, despite mixed reviews from critics, finished as the 10th top-grossing film of 1961 and 14th for 1962 on the Multifariousness national box function survey, earning $v million.[4] The moving-picture show won a fourth place prize Laurel Award in the category of Top Musical of 1961.[5]

Plot [edit]

Having been released from the Army, Chadwick "Chad" Gates (Presley) is eager to return to Hawaii with his surfboard, his embankment friends, and his girlfriend Maile Duval (Joan Blackman). His female parent, Sarah Lee (Angela Lansbury), wants him to follow in his male parent'southward footsteps and take over direction at the Bang-up Southern Hawaiian Fruit Company, the family business, but Republic of chad is reluctant and goes to work every bit a tour guide at his girlfriend'south agency. His slightly scatter-brained dominate is Mr. Chapman (Howard McNear).

The offset clients Chad has are an attractive schoolhouse teacher (Abigail Prentice) and four teenage girls in her charge. One girl, Ellie, is bratty, cocky-centered, and does not go forth with the other 3 in her group, but still becomes smitten with Republic of chad. Chad'south girlfriend, Maile, becomes jealous of the teacher who is quite fond of Republic of chad. Afterward Ellie's flirtatious ways with another tourist cause a wild fight to erupt in a restaurant, Republic of chad is fired from his position as tour guide by Mr. Chapman. Maile quits her job in protest. Maile and Chad independently continue providing tourist activities to Abigail and the four girls.

One dark Ellie attempts to seduce Chad, merely he refuses her advances. Ellie despondently flees in a jeep with the intent to commit suicide. Before Ellie can drown herself, Republic of chad saves her and administers an overdue spanking. Meanwhile, Abigail has found romance with Jack Kelman, a long-time business concern partner in Republic of chad's father's pineapple company. With Jack's aid, Chad and his father resolve their differences well-nigh Chad's future.

Chad and Maile form their own tourism business—Gates of Hawaii—and begin arrangements to provide tourist services for his father's big network of fruit salesmen in the continental Usa and Canada. The film ends with Chad and Maile's lavish outdoor Hawaiian wedding ceremony.

Cast [edit]

  • Elvis Presley as Chadwick "Republic of chad" Gates
  • Joan Blackman as Maile Duval
  • Angela Lansbury as Sarah Lee Gates
  • Nancy Walters as Abigail Prentice
  • Roland Winters as Fred Gates
  • John Archer as Jack Kelman
  • Howard McNear every bit Mr. Chapman
  • Steve Brodie every bit Tucker Garvey
  • Darlene Tompkins as Patsy Simon
  • Iris Adrian as Enid Garvey
  • Hilo Hattie as Waihila
  • Jenny Maxwell as Ellie Corbett
  • Pamela Austin as Selena "Sandy" Emerson (as Pamela Kirk)
  • Christian Kay every bit Beverly Martin
  • Lani Kai every bit Carl Tanami
  • Jose De Vega as Ernie Gordon
  • Frank Atienza as Ito O'Hara
  • Tiki Hanalei equally Ping Pong

Production [edit]

Blueish Hawaii was the offset of 3 Elvis films to be shot in Hawaii, followed by Girls! Girls! Girls! in 1962 and Paradise, Hawaiian Mode in 1965. Producer Hal B. Wallis was nifty to put Presley into a flick that showed how the army affected a man.[6] Actress Juliet Prowse, who had starred with Presley in GI Blues, was approached to be his love interest again. However, later on her demands were put forward, Paramount decided to driblet her equally a possible candidate for the role, choosing Joan Blackman instead.[6] Presley was obviously so pale before shooting that Wallis personally recommended a brand of tanning lamp to darken his skin.[half-dozen] The moving picture was announced in the fall of 1960 equally Hawaii Beach Boy.[7] At the fourth dimension, film producer Walter Mirisch had a similar titled film in product, "Hawaii", and he was upset that Wallis had chosen such a similar name.[7]

Presley arrived in Hawaii on March 18, 1961, to set up for a charity concert that he was performing on March 25 to raise funds for the Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor.[viii] He arrived at the recording studio on March 21 to get-go the recording of the picture's soundtrack.[8] Three weeks later, location filming had finished, including scenes at Waikiki Beach, Diamond Head, Mount Tantalus, and Hanauma Bay, a volcanic crater that is open to the body of water, near the bedroom community of Hawaii Kai, a few miles away from Waikiki.[six] [9] Following location filming, the coiffure returned to the Paramount lot to cease other scenes for the picture. Presley would relax during filming by giving karate demonstrations with his friend and employee, Ruby Westward, which resulted in Presley's fingers becoming bruised and bloated. Wallis warned the female stars of the film to avoid parties hosted past Presley because they were turning up for shooting looking tired.[half-dozen]

Producer Hal Wallis would apply the box office returns from Blue Hawaii to finance an upcoming Wallis film, 1964's Becket, starring Richard Burton and Peter O'Toole.

Presley was 26 at the time this motion-picture show was released, and a not all the same 36-twelvemonth-old Angela Lansbury played his character's mother. Nancy Walters, who was cast as the older school teacher was, in reality, only eighteen months older than Presley.

Much of the pic was shot on location at the Coco Palms Resort on the east coast of Kauai. The resort was abandoned after Hurricane Iniki in 1992.

Although it is mentioned in the film that Chad's parents live in Kāhala, 1 of the well-nigh expensive and exclusive areas of Honolulu in 1961, the view from their "lanai" (porch or terrace) shows Diamond Head every bit it appears from Waikiki and downtown Honolulu. In actuality, Kāhala is located on the other side of Diamond Caput from Waikiki.

At that place were several scenes filmed in and around the famous Waikiki Beach, including the opening driving scenes, equally well as the function scene across the street from the "International Market". The scenes where Chad's clients stayed in a hotel and where he picked upward his bout group – equally well equally the embankment he spent time with his girlfriend – were all filmed on the property that is at present known every bit the Hilton Hawaiian Village on Waikiki Embankment.

Reception [edit]

Howard Thompson of The New York Times called the flick "blandly uneventful" with a "nonsensical and harmless" plot, though he wrote that Presley "delivers the songs and rhythmical spasms right on schedule. We counted fourteen tunes, nearly half of them replete with ukulele trimmings and exotic, weaving dancers. One of them, a number chosen 'Embankment Boy Blues,' is nifty, and Presley delivers information technology accordingly. No kidding."[10] Multifariousness wrote, "Hal Kanter's breezy screenplay, from a story by Allan Weiss, is the slim, simply convenient, foundation around which Wallis and staff have erected a handsome, picture-postcard production crammed with typical South Seas musical hulaballoo ... Nether Norman Taurog'due south broad direction, Presley, in essence, is playing himself—a role sure to please his agog fans."[11] Harrison's Reports graded the film as "Fair", calculation, "As is the custom in a Presley production, the crooner-gyrater dominates the running time of the pic. That is why, information technology is more the pity, now that he has so many films under his acting belt that he still continues to deliver such an embarrassingly poor performance."[12] John L. Scott of the Los Angeles Times wrote that the film "does a lot for the 'paradise of the Pacific,' showing its foamy waves, palm trees, luaus and a couple of plush hotels, but non very much for Elvis' fans (what age subclass does he entreatment to now?) ... One of these days Elvis will play a straight role with substance, and nosotros'll definitely find out whether he tin can human action or not."[13]

Accolades [edit]

The motion-picture show is recognized by American Film Constitute in these lists:

  • 2004: AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs:
    • "Blue Hawaii" – Nominated[fourteen]

Soundtrack [edit]

Presley's remake of the championship song introduced it to an audience besides young to recollect Bing Crosby's original striking version.

The soundtrack album was on the Billboard Pop Albums chart for 79 weeks, where it spent 20 weeks at #one. It has been certified past the RIAA for sales of three million copies in the U.Southward.[15]

The soundtrack album was nominated for a Grammy Laurels in 1961 in the category of Best Sound Track Album or Recording of Original Bandage from a Motion Picture or Television.

The soundtrack featured the hit song "Can't Assist Falling in Dear" sung by Elvis, which is certified Platinum past the RIAA, for U.S. sales in excess of ane meg copies. The song peaked at No. ii on the U.S. Billboard Billboard Hot 100[sixteen] and Hit No. ane on the Adult Contemporary chart for six weeks besides equally topping the British Charts in 1962.[17] [18]

Run into likewise [edit]

  • List of American films of 1961

References [edit]

  1. ^ Lisanti, Tom. Hollywood Surf and Beach Movies: The Kickoff Wave, 1959-1969, McFarland, 2005, p. 50.
  2. ^ "Best Pinnacle Grossers" in Variety, 8 January 1964, p. 69.
  3. ^ Writers Social club of America, USA (1962) – IMDb.
  4. ^ Victor, Adam. The Elvis Encyclopedia. Overlook, 2008.
  5. ^ 1962 Laurel Awards – IMDb.
  6. ^ a b c d e Victor, Adam. The Elvis Encyclopaedia (2008), p.44-45.
  7. ^ a b Worth, Fred L. Elvis: His Life from A to Z, Random House, 1992, p.245/246.
  8. ^ a b Guralnick, Peter. Careless Love, p.99.
  9. ^ Blueish Hawaii website.
  10. ^ Thompson, Howard (Feb 22, 1962). "'Blueish Hawaii' Opens". The New York Times: twenty.
  11. ^ "Blueish Hawaii". Multifariousness: 6. November 29, 1961.
  12. ^ "Film Review: Blue Hawaii". Harrison's Reports: 190–191. December two, 1961.
  13. ^ Scott, John L. (Nov 24, 1961). "Elvis Goes Hawaiian in His New Picture". Los Angeles Times: Part Four, p. 15, 17.
  14. ^ "AFI'southward 100 Years...100 Songs Nominees" (PDF) . Retrieved 2016-07-30 .
  15. ^ Whitburn, Joel. Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Albums 1955-1996.
  16. ^ "Music: Top 100 – Billboard Hot 100 Chart", Billboard
  17. ^ "Developed Contemporary Nautical chart – Billboard", Billboard
  18. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2002). Peak Developed Contemporary: 1961–2001. Record Inquiry. p. 196.

External links [edit]

  • Blue Hawaii at IMDb
  • Bluish Hawaii at the TCM Movie Database
  • Blueish Hawaii at AllMovie
  • Blue Hawaii at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Elvis in Hawaii Presley'southward movies in Hawaii
  • Review of the moving picture collection "Lights! Camera! Elvis! Drove" (including Blue Hawaii)

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Hawaii

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