That's Entertainment! (1974) Poster

Frank Sinatra: Self - Co-Host

Photos 

Quotes 

  • [last lines] 

    Frank Sinatra : Through the years, MGM has produced over 200 musical films. And if you had to select one number from one film, that would best represent the MGM musicals, I have a feeling that the vote would be unanimous, especially among the people who worked here, and that's why we've saved the best for the last: "An American in Paris," starring Gene Kelly and Leslie Caron. It won an Oscar as the Best Picture of the year over 20 years ago; but the ballet from that film is as timeless as the day you and I first saw it. Produced by Arthur Freed, directed by Vincente Minnelli, and choreographed by Gene Kelly, it can only be described as MGM's masterpiece.

  • Frank Sinatra : All of this lovable nonsense began back in 1929 when the silent film had suddenly become a thing of the past, and sound was the king. "Broadway Melody of 1929" won an Oscar for the Best Picture that year, and MGM was off and running with a new formula for success. Charles King and a line of slightly overweight chorus girls were the beginning of a new motion picture art form that would captivate audiences for years to come.

  • Frank Sinatra : Its been quite some time since I first came to this place and MGM is certainly not the same studio and Hollywood's not the same town. But, the films we made here are still around.

  • Frank Sinatra : Some studios can claim they made the finest gangster films or the greatest horror movies, but when it came to musicals - MGM - they were the champions.

  • Frank Sinatra : You know, you can wait around and hope, but, I'll tell ya, you'll never see the likes of this again.

  • Frank Sinatra : Musicals were fantasy trips for the audiences of their day. For instance, boy meets girl; boy loses girl; boy sings a song and gets girl. The plots were that simple.

  • Frank Sinatra : The musicals of the 1930s and '40s or even the '50s may not have told you where our heads were at, but they certainly would tell you where our hearts were at.

  • [first lines] 

    Frank Sinatra : [narrating]  The year is 1929; the singer, Cliff Edwards, also known as Ukelele Ike. The film: "Hollywood Revue"; it is the first all-talking, all-singing, all-dancing movie ever made. In the years that followed, "Singin' in the Rain" would become a theme song for MGM.

See also

Release Dates | Official Sites | Company Credits | Filming & Production | Technical Specs


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