The Extras - Warner Archive's Second 4K Triumph: George Feltenstein on "High Society"
Episode Date: July 28, 2025Send us a textWarner Archive's George Feltenstein discusses the stunning new 4K UHD and Blu-ray restoration of MGM's 1956 musical "High Society" starring Bing Crosby, Grace Kelly, ...and Frank Sinatra with Louis Armstrong.Purchase links:HIGH SOCIETY (1956) 4K&Blu-ray Combo PackHIGH SOCIETY (1956) Blu-rayEPISODE DETAILS:• VistaVision's horizontal filming process presented unique challenges for scanning and restoration• Original film negatives were scanned using specialized Director scanners adapted specifically for horizontal use• Audio restoration utilized original six-track pre-recordings to create authentic multi-channel sound• Finding and preserving the original stereophonic music recordings was crucial to the restoration process• "High Society" was MGM's highest-grossing film of 1956 despite strong competition• Louis Armstrong functions as a Greek chorus throughout the film, with Bing Crosby having roots in jazz• Grace Kelly's final Hollywood film before becoming Princess of Monaco shows her comedic talents• Director Charles Walters moved from Broadway dancer to MGM choreographer to successful director• Special features include behind-the-scenes material, audio promos, and the appropriate "Millionaire Droopy" cartoon• Warner Archive's commitment to high-quality 4K releases continues with more titles plannedCheck out Warner Archive's Facebook page for more information and updates on upcoming releases. The Extras Facebook pageThe Extras Twitter Warner Archive & Warner Bros Catalog Group As an Amazon Affiliate, The Extras may receive a commission for purchases through our purchase links. There is no additional cost to you, and every little bit helps us in the production of the podcast. Thanks in advance. Otaku Media produces podcasts, behind-the-scenes extras, and media that connect creatives with their fans and businesses with their consumers. Contact us today to see how we can work together to achieve your goals. tim@theextras.tv
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, I'm Gregory Orr, grandson of Jack L. Warner and producer of the documentary Jack L. Warner
the Last Mogul, and you are listening to The Extras.
Hello, Sam.
I would like to talk to you privately.
Well now I consider that right neighborhood.
You lost a little weight, haven't you, Sam?
Oh no, you're slipping.
That used to scare me.
The withering glance of the goddess.
I just want to know what you are doing here the day before my wedding.
Business. I've become a distinguished composer since we broke up.
Oh, distinct.
They needed a little help here, so I heeded the call of duty.
Don't pretend with me, Dexter.
You deliberately planned this festival to conflict with my wedding.
It's a shabby, vindictive gesture.
Oh, harsh words. Well, let's be honest. I'll admit it, I'm still in love with you.
I don't want you to get married again because I still think you can become a wonderful woman.
Thank you. I haven't the same high hopes for you.
Well, I don't want to become a wonderful woman.
Oh, isn't it enough you almost spoiled my life without spoiling my wedding?
I didn't try to spoil your life, Sam.
Oh, and stop calling me Sam. I'm sure you didn't try to spoil your life, Sam. Oh, and stop calling me Sam.
I'm sure you didn't try to spoil mine, but you were calling on the shots.
You were dictating the sort of a fellow you wanted me to be.
With your background and taste and intelligence,
you could have become a serious composer or a diplomat
or or anything you wanted to be.
And what have you become?
A jukebox hero.
Well, is that bad?
Oh, Dexter, be satisfied and let me alone. Go away. Go away and stay away.
I tried to. I even wanted to, but I guess I'm just a weak character. I'm still in love with you.
Hello and welcome to The Extras. I'm Tim Millar, your host, and joining me is
George Feltenstein to discuss the recent High Society 4k and Blu-ray release from
the Warner Archive. Hi George.
Hi Tim, great to be back with you.
I'm very excited to talk about this stunning restoration of High Society.
And I have to say, I was absolutely blown away by how wonderful it looks, how wonderful
it sounds.
And we'll get into that restoration story because it's so interesting.
But before we did that, I did want to ask you about the fact that this is your second
4k release from the Warner Archive.
And how did you kind of go about selecting this as the second one?
Well, this has been something people have wanted on Blu-ray for, I would say, pretty
much as long as the format's been around.
So I think we're looking at 19 years.
We had a DVD release in 2003.
As films of this prominence from the catalog started making their appearances,
everybody was starting to go is where is high society.
And we knew that the master that had been done in 2003.
I was not very good and the fact that.
Being in high definition would just shown the warts even more.
That HD master was made for DVD and is what has been churning around between television and
streaming and transactional digital for 15 years, whatever.
It's got color breathing and grain issues
and just a lot of flaws that are
inherent in a film that was made at that time,
1956, where film stock would have a collapsed yellow layer fading.
So we knew that we would have to go back
and create a new master.
And that was going to be expensive.
What we also did not have the ability to do at that time, company policy was pretty much,
you can't touch the original negative. Now, that wasn't necessarily a bad policy to have at that because the negative could get damaged. What happens now is we have scanners
that the sprockets never touch
through the scanning process.
The film is, thankfully we also have people
that do our scanning in-house
at Warner Brothers Motion Picture Imaging
who are artisans as much as our colorists are.
So they really know how to take care of film.
They're masterful in their talent.
Just like so many people who contribute to these releases,
I wish all of them could take a bow because what they contribute,
you can't oversell how much they
contribute and how much it means. But we finally got to the point where we
adapted a scanner, a director scanner, the best scanner made in my opinion specifically for horizontal use and
VistaVision being a horizontal process, this scanner can handle both horizontal VistaVision
and Technorama. So with that in hand, the first we did was The Searchers. The second we did was High Society.
And I have a long history with this film
in terms of going back to the laserdisc days.
It was a big deal when we put out
a left right stereo laserdisc in the early 90s,
because this is one of those strange
films because VistaVision films were not released with the stereophonic
soundtrack. Everybody experienced high society in mono and we knew the music
had been recorded in stereo and someone,
a veteran from the MGM Sound Department,
his name was Scott Perry.
We lost him many, many years ago,
but I had the good fortune to meet him and knowing when I was starting out in the industry.
Scott brought out the tracks and made it possible for us to do a laserdisc.
And that track then got adapted with some mistakes put in it for a 5-1 that was on the
DVD.
But this meant a total going back to original for everything. And the benefit we have here with this film
where music is so important is that when production,
or I should say maybe pre-production,
but it's early production, the first thing
when they're making a musical they would do
was pre-record all the musical numbers.
That would be the very, very first thing.
And for this film, they pre-recorded all the musical numbers in left center right orchestra,
left center right vocals, basically six tracks. Those magnetic tracks
were also protected and copied before they could succumb to vinegar syndrome. So we did
have good audio to go back to. And so it was possible to create a robust, beautiful, authentic,
multi-track audio to go along with the beautiful images
that one can get from VistaVision.
Because of its depth of field and clarity,
the combination of all that allowed for us to create something that
I think is pretty remarkable. That last along, feeling far above power.
Oh, how lucky we are!
While I give to you and you give to me
True love, true love
So on and on it'll always be true love, true love.
The colorist on this film, Sherry Eisenberg, is one of our senior colorists at Warner Bros. Motion Picture Imaging. Sherry is incredibly gifted and talented
and she worked very hard with this film
because again, the film stock used in 19,
really from mid-54 up through 1960
was the 5248 Eastman stock that the yellow layer succumbs to collapse and failure.
So we did have to use the blue separation to bring back and rebuild the color and make
sure that the image was as colorful as intended.
There are three really awful shots in the movie. There's an overhead stock footage shot
as they're flying over Newport that has always looked awful. There's nothing we can do about that.
And then there's two quick second unit shots on the street that also look awful,
that I assume were blown up from traditional 35-millimeter sources.
The overhead shot, I can figure,
okay, they had to get stock footage or be up in a helicopter, what have you.
But I'm baffled by why they obviously went to a location.
Was it too much problem to bring this division cameras?
Maybe, I don't know.
But overall, it's just gorgeous.
I had worked on what was supposed to be
a 5.1 DVD audio soundtrack album
for our joint venture with Rhino Records, which lasted from 1995 to 2011.
And that never got released due to some legal issues that I'm not able to go into here.
But I was pretty crestfallen that we had created
this wonderful album and that no one would get to hear it.
It's still in paralysis.
But the music in this film is so integral,
it's so important, it's so beautifully done.
And while I was doing research on the production, I found a memo from Douglas Shearer, who had been the head of the MGM Sound Department since the Broadway Melodies in 1929. It was Norma Shearer's brother. And he was questioning to senior MGM management,
if you choose to use VistaVision, do you realize you will not be able to release this film with a
magnetic stereophonic soundtrack and you've got Bing Crosby and Louis Armstrong and Frank Sinatra
and you're not going to have a stereophonic soundtrack? This is insanity.
Everybody was not really paying attention to that fact.
But now we have the technology to make the image look fantastic.
I think the Blu-ray looks wonderful.
The 4K is actually a knock your socks off presentation that
takes advantage of the HDR and the Dolby Vision.
We wanted this release to be as the searchers was.
We wanted it to be where there is a Blu-ray and a DVD in the combo pack,
that there would be Dolby
Vision, that there would be a robust bitrate, that there would be encoding of
the compression and authoring by the great David McKenzie at Fidelity in
Motion. All those ingredients put together to make sure that this would be a release worthy of such an
entertaining film. And I always liked this film a great deal,
but something about the way the new disc has turned out
really
it warrants
revisiting a lot. So when I got my final disc, usually by the time we
finished working on a project, I've seen the film so many times that I'm kind of
like after the first final watch and checking off the approval that that's it
for a while. When I got my 4k High Society disc from, you know, all packaged and ready to go,
I watched it and listened to it, you know, four times over weekend because I was just so blown
away by it. We're very proud of it and those who have reviewed it so far seem to be in accord with my perception of it.
And I'm hoping it paves the way for another very special release.
Yeah, and I'll go back to a couple of the things you mentioned just to kind of highlight them.
One is the audio. And I know you personally spent an awful lot of time
overseeing that. And maybe you can tell us a little bit more about that. But I also wanted
to mention this authoring and dis-compression by Fidelity in Motion. You did that with the
searchers. It seems like you have a formula here that's helping you make sure that these
are outstanding releases.
Well, if it's a Warner Archive 4K release, it will be done by David McKenzie at Fidelity
in Motion.
I think he's the best in the industry.
What he does is he is a great talent.
Just as we have talented people here at Warner Brothers Motion Picture Imaging, that needs
to be carried through to the final product.
And if I have anything to say about it, I want to make sure that that happens.
Well, I love that fact, George, that you're putting a stamp on this is how we're doing
it.
That makes it, I think, easier for the consumer to know
as soon as they see one archive, 4K, that this is what Georgia said.
This is the quality we're looking at.
And that's a wonderful thing from just like when you're going to purchase something.
And as I've said many times, economics and various other factors necessitate that we will have maybe three
or four 4K releases per year.
But those that do get that treatment will get the full best treatment that we can give
it. And I'm very proud of the release
and I really am heartened by how many people
have told me how much they've enjoyed it
and been impressed by it.
And a great deal of work from many, many people
went into it.
And so it was the biggest grossing film of its year
for MGM. And that was a very impressive year for high grossing movies. King and I and Giant
and the Ten Commandments, you know, these huge movies. 56 was a really good year.
But not only was it number one for MGM, but it was also,
I think, one of the top overall for the industry, like among the top
10 or 15 releases from that year.
And it was very, very financially successful
and always continued to be that.
Cole?
And what little mission of mischief
brings you out of the bushes?
Petting presents.
Wouldn't it have been simpler to have it sent over?
Oh, no.
Whoever brought it could never say what I want to say. Wouldn't it have been simpler to have it sent over? Oh, no.
Whoever brought it could never say what I want to say.
Well?
Lovely, unrelated, huh?
You said you had something to say. Yes, I hoped you'd change it.
Little Tracy may be softened some.
Well, not for my sake entirely, but for yours.
You stand a better chance for happiness.
Thank you. I'll manage.
Oh, yeah. That you will. You'll manage all right.
You'll manage George, too, but heaven help him...
if he shows any signs of weakness or rebellion.
I see where you haven't changed any either, Dexter.
You know, I tried hard to figure it out.
I finally decided that your father hurt you deeply when he hurt your mother.
Please.
So you started demanding perfection.
Nobody was gonna hurt you.
You felt I tricked you.
Gee, I didn't know that you wanted a husband who would be kind of a high priest
or a virgin goddess.
Oh, stop using those foul words. It's a real pity, too, Tracy, because you know know you wanted a husband who would be kind of a high priest to a virgin goddess. Oh, stop using those foul words.
It's a real pity too, Tracy, because you know you'd be a wonderful woman if you'd just let your tiara slip a little.
You'll never be a wonderful woman or even a wonderful human being until you learn to have some regard for human frailty.
There's a lot more you goddesses around than people realize. Is that all you have to say?
No.
I wanted to say that those first weeks we spent together were the most wonderful I've
ever known.
I want to thank you for them.
Good luck, Sam.
Good sailing.
You know, a lot of people kind of turn their nose down to this film because it's a remake of the Philadelphia
Story with Music. And we got a very nice review in the Wall Street Journal last week that
really didn't speak as much about the disc itself except to say what high quality it was in a presentation,
which we appreciated.
But it really focused on the movie,
not looking at it as a remake of the Philadelphia story,
but a reinterpretation of a lot of the same
basic story structure.
The films are very, very different in that sense. And I'm someone who loves both
films very much, but I think of them in different ways. And I think I just said, I always liked
this film a great deal. But now I feel just like, so much more passionate about it. Yeah, and to that point, every time the Blu-rays come out
with the new scans, they make the films more accessible.
With this 4K, you go up another notch,
but I think that the thing about the searchers
and this one that I've really, really enjoyed,
and I'll be interested to see how that compares to a non-VistaVision in the future, is just how
good the VistaVision makes these films look and that depth of field that you mentioned.
I'm, you know, I'm like many people becoming a huge VistaVision fan seeing them like this
with these restorations.
I always have been, you know, and that was
something that we didn't really get the ability to appreciate
in full the way we can now.
It's kind of like 4K UHD, HDR, Dolby Vision, Vistavision, put them all together, fantastic. And now we've seen new films actually being made using the process. And the process
didn't really go away because from a pre-production standpoint, a lot of special effects movies and so forth and so on,
they were always using this division
because of its clarity and depth of field.
And I know that the folks at Paramount,
because it was their process,
Paramount has done a lot of this division restoration work, which is great for everybody
who likes the format.
But I will say that I never saw the Ten Commandments look so amazing until their new 4K came out.
That's a movie that I saw on
re-release when I was five years old with my mom.
Even the way that the logo comes out,
the big V and everything, it's tremendous.
It just happens to be that we have only two VistaVision
movies in the searchers. Well, actually a new one is being made in VistaVision at Warner Brothers
right now, but with North by Northwest and High Society. And then of course, for Warner Brothers itself, we have the searchers.
That's three.
So now within a space of a year, all three have been done.
So can Tecno Rama be next?
That's the big question.
Oh, okay.
I want to play for my former pal.
He runs the local jazz festival.
His name is Dexter and he's the best. I want to play for my former pal. He runs the local jazz festival.
His name is Dexter and he's good news.
But something kind of tells me that boy is nice in the blues.
And high, highs, high society, high society.
High, highs, high society, high society.
Well one thing we haven't really talked about is the film itself, George.
And I'm thinking back to when I put the disc in and you see the shot of Louis Armstrong
and his group there in the bus.
And they're on their way. From the very beginning, of course,
it's great to see Louis and he's not even the biggest star of the film,
but he is one of the big musical stars.
He functions as the Greek chorus.
He's charming in every movie that he ever did.
He and Bing had worked together in the 30s,
and they were really good friends.
Bing's roots as a vocalist,
a lot of people don't know this,
but when he was part of a singing group called the Rhythm Boys, 1929, 1928, 2930, around
that period, the Rhythm Boys sang with the Paul Whiteman Orchestra, and there were two
other guys that sang with Bing in the Rhythm Boys. Bing was really, I would say, one of the first crooners, if you will, that adapted a jazz
style and a jazz feel.
As he became more popular and more broadly known, which happened primarily through radio.
At one point, his radio show was listened to by 50 million people every week, if you
can imagine that.
Bing's musical style kind of got a little bit more middle of the road as opposed to
jazz, but if you listen to the early recordings,
you can hear that influence.
Putting him together with Satchmo in this movie was a wonderful reunion.
Then they went on to make at least one,
if not two, popular albums together. They were just a great combination. And they even did
the number that they do together, they would do a few numbers sort of together in the movie,
but the one big one now you has jazz. There was a big television spectacular a year after High Society came out. It was the first,
I believe the first black and white videotape network broadcast when videotape was very much
formative. And it was the Edsel Show. The Edsel was a Ford Motor Company line of cars
that didn't last very long, I think maybe two years.
Famously, right.
Somebody said it looked like an Osmobile sucking a lemon.
Well, the Edsel Show was Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby,
Louis Armstrong, and Rosemary Clooney.
And on the show, Bing and Satchmo did Now You Has Jazz,
because it was so popular.
But what's interesting is if you look at that,
thankfully it survives,
and I think it's all around very easily to see.
They had nailed down that performance so perfectly that it was a symbiosis that was just
as wonderful. But as jazz is always supposed to be, never should be the same thing twice.
It was a great jazz musician. I don't know who it was, but his quote was, jazz is the sound of surprise.
I was, I know you're a big jazz.
I'm a big jazz fan. Yes, absolutely.
And jazz on film has not always been a great thing.
It hasn't been treated, you know, our great, our great jazz artists were not captured on film the way one would wish. But
there are these little snippets. It's like Ella Fitzgerald's two songs and Pete Kelly's blues.
To me, that and Peggy Lee make it worth the price of admission and the gorgeous sound. It's a one-archive
blu-ray if anybody's interested, but there needs to be more... I would love to
see more jazz film unearthed. And I know there are specific people here, not just in this country but also overseas who collect and
Try to
Gather people around rare jazz performances
But the beautiful thing here is that you not only had jazz performances captured, but with sonic quality
It's a lot different than 35 millimeter optical, you know, I mean, it's a lot different than 35 millimeter optical. I mean, it's heavenly to
listen to the music in this film. And no one really considered Frank Sinatra a jazz artist,
but he was influenced by Crosby, and Crosby was influenced, was Billie Holiday by Satchmo. So it all kind of fits together
and to see of course that was the big big big news of this film was Sinatra and Crosby together
because there was this faked rivalry between the two of them. They actually were great friends and Sinatra idolized Crosby as he was growing
up.
You know, so to talk about the film itself, it is representative of an era at MGM where
people were considering what properties they owned that could be updated.
Some were done musically,
some were done non-musically.
But the idea of a remake of the Philadelphia story with
music was popping around the studio for a while.
According to the files,
they were considering Elizabeth Taylor for the leading lady role.
Big Crosby wasn't even in the picture until like the last minute.
He had been under contract at Paramount since 1932 and cut himself loose.
And he ended up at MGM and had a very integral role
in the creation of the film.
If you've got really good eyesight,
if you look at the copyright,
you'll see that it's Lowes Incorporated
and Bing Crosby Productions.
And that's because Bing had basically a non-credited producer role in this film.
He was very invested in it, not just emotionally, but financially.
So it was really a coming together of all the right parts.
I think we discussed this when we announced it.
So I don't want to be repetitive for extras,
listeners who've already heard me talk about the production.
But it represents all of
the MGM departments at the top of their craft.
The film continues to entertain 70
years later.
How do you do? I'm Tracy Lord. You must be... Oh, of course you are. I adore strangers. Oh, do sit down, please.
That sister of yours...
Isn't she a dear? And so talented.
But we're afraid she has a homicidal streak.
Did you get lost finding her?
No, not at all. We had good directions.
Good.
I do hope you don't mind our being here for your wedding.
Oh, but I'm delighted. We have so much cake.
What is your name, dear?
No, thank you. I'm delighted. We have so much cake. What is your name, dear? Uh, no, thank you.
I'm so sensitive to names.
My name is Elizabeth Embry.
Elizabeth Embry.
Oh, it sounds like a medieval saint who was burned to death.
And you?
Uh, I'm Mike Connor.
Oh, Michael, what a lovely musical name.
Now, you mustn't be ashamed of it.
Oh, but I'm not. Mike is for Macaulay.
And what's the Macaulay for?
My father taught English history in high school.
My friends call me Mike.
Oh, of whom you have many, I'm sure.
Oh, English history has always fascinated me.
Cromwell and Robin Hood and Jack the Ripper.
Where did he teach?
Your father, I mean.
South Bend, Indiana.
Oh, South Bend.
It sounds like dancing, doesn't it?
Oh, you must have had a most happy childhood there.
Oh, it was screams.
Oh, I'm so glad.
I didn't mean it that way.
Oh, I'm so sorry.
It's all right.
It's a natural mistake.
Are you the photographer or the... I take pictures. Oh, It's a natural mistake. Are you the photographer or the, um...
I take pictures.
Oh, it's a great art. Did you bring your brownie?
Oh, then you must be the one who's sort of a writer, Mr. Connor.
Yeah, sort of, yeah.
Have I read any of your novels?
I doubt it.
Oh.
I've written any.
Oh, but you must.
My Mozart composed at 13.
You must be at least 30.
Time is flying.
Where were you born, Miss Embry?
Duluth.
Duluth. That's west of here, isn't it?
Sort of, but we occasionally get the eastern breezes.
Are you two going together?
I love Miss Lourdes.
It's an odd question, I must say.
Oh, I don't see why. I think it's fascinating.
Why birds in spring.
But it's sort of the intimate little detail that you like to write about, isn't it, Mr. Conner?
Oh, but if you'd rather not have your privacy invaded, I will certainly respect your wishes.
Oh, please. If you'll excuse me, I'll see what's keeping Mama.
Mama is so eager to see you. Mama!
Well, we've got all this time and we haven't said one very important person's name and
I think she's so charming.
Grace Kelly.
I can't imagine many other actresses in that role being so charming and witty and wonderful
and lovely. But she is just perfect, I think.
And the chemistry, I think, between the banter, the chemistry between her and Bing Crosby,
who plays her ex-husband in this, and Frank Sinatra.
I mean, it's very good and she is very good.
And this is like, this is her final film.
Right.
Yes.
So by the time the film was released and you can see this in the premier
footage that we have on the desk.
By the time the film was released, she was the princess of Monaco.
By the time the film was released, she was the princess of Monaco. And MGM was not happy to see her go, believe me.
She was supposed to do Designing Woman, which ended up being Gregory Peck and Lauren Bacall,
but they had her set for that to play opposite Jimmy Stewart. Given that they had been together in
Red Window, that would have been a nice reunion.
Not to take anything away from Gregory Bec and Lauren Bacall,
Designing Woman is a delightful movie.
But during her very brief film career,
I think it was 1951-56,
she made quite an amazing amount of movies in such a short period of time.
And of course, the fact that she worked with Hitchcock, you know, in Dial M and Rerwindo.
She was in The Country Girl with Bing Crosby and William Holden.
She was always under contract to MGM
and was lent out more than she was making films at MGM.
So MGM finally got in a little bit more with her
toward the end with Green Fire and The Swan and High Society. And then, of course, she was in Magombo, the remake of Red Dust,
with Clark Gable and Ava Gardner.
I mean, she was terrific in all the films that she made.
She did a lot of low-network at Paramount.
And she's legendary. Her early death was a tragedy
on multiple levels. But all the things that I've heard about her is that she
was a great person and had a great sense of humor. and one of the things I know for a fact was this was a very happy production.
Everybody got along really well. There were no overruns on budget. There were no conflicts on the screen. There were no production snags.
Everything went smooth as could be.
They started doing the pre-recordings,
I believe in November or December of 1955.
And the picture was in theaters
by end of July, beginning of August, 1956.
So hard to imagine everything coming together on that
quicker basis when you look at how long it takes to get films made today. But I'm glad that we
finally have this... Just thinking about the poor Blu-ray people who are waiting and waiting.
When is there going to be a high society blu-ray?
Some people out there like to really complain that
their favorite movie is not available and they occasionally will be vocal about it.
You may not know this, but it's true.
Oh, really?
I just am not.
But in all seriousness,
that's why we have the standalone Blu-ray,
which stands on its own as a very fine release,
and takes full advantage of the Atmos audio.
I do want to mention that for the purist,
we have the original mono audio on the disc, which is how the film was seen originally.
I think giving people that option is the right thing to do. We will see more of that,
both from Warner Archive and from what I call the mothership, there seems to be a
general acceptance here at the studio to retain original soundtracks as well as what we've
been able to do with new technologies.
And when they're authentic, I'm very supportive of them.
And here it was authentic in the sense that we were working only from original production sources.
Elegant junk.
It's shiny.
Would I trade places with miss Tracy Lord for all her
wealth and beauty hmm just ask me all right I will
when you trade places with miss Tracy Lord for all of her wealth and her
beauty well you know I can't help thinking about it
shit who wants to be a millionaire?
I don't.
Have flashy flunkies everywhere?
I don't.
Who wants the bother of a country estate?
A country estate?
Is something I'd hate.
Who wants to wallow in champagne?
I don't.
Who wants a supersonic mentioned and I don't want to move on without mentioning Celeste
Holm, who along with Frank Sinatra, they've got a great pairing.
I guess there's the two pairings really, and there's a mix of those pairings, but
they're terrific as the scandal sheet reporter and photographer.
Well, and they had just worked together under the same director the year before
in a really delightful comedy that is available on blu-ray from the Warner Archive
the tender trap with Debbie Reynolds and
Celeste home is
one of the several young ladies
who are in Frank Sinatra bachelor's life in that movie and
They had a really terrific chemist chemistry
So in casting the role of Elizabeth Embry the photographer for spy magazine
She seemed a really obvious choice
When we were getting the DVD ready for production
she was the only we were getting the DVD ready for production.
She was the only major cast member still alive
and a production company that we were engaged with went to New York and interviewed her.
And that little, it's under 10 minutes,
that little feature that we have on there, True Love,
which we put through our samurai process to upgrade it from standard definition to
high definition and it came out quite well. I usually don't like anything to be
I usually don't like anything to be tampered with in that fashion, but this looked organic.
And it was developed by one of our staff people here at Motion Picture Imaging. And so
her little mini documentary, if you will, summarizes the whole production and the process in a very, very efficient use of time. And we had some really nice behind-the-scenes photographs that we
were able to put in there. And I'm so grateful that we have these pieces,
especially when the people involved in them are no longer with us, it carries a great deal of weight and
means more. And Celeste Holm first became famous by being the original 8-0 Annie
in Oklahoma on Broadway in 1943. And she won a supporting actress Oscar for Gentlemen's Agreement at Fox in 1947.
But she's also amazing in All About Eve as Karen Richards,
the playwright's wife.
She just had a really terrific career,
a long career, and she was very,
very appreciated both in Hollywood and on Broadway.
Well, this makes it really easy to talk about a few of the other extras because you just mentioned
True Love, the cult horror in Hollywood featurette. And then previously you mentioned,
George, that there was this newsreel, I think, also next on here. And then you added on a MGM Cinemascope cartoon.
Millionaire Droopy.
Who wants to be a millionaire droopy?
Very appropriate.
I mean, it fit very well.
I had put that on the DVD back in 2003.
So the difference is it's now in high definition and it is one of those, it's a remake of the
droopy cartoon Wags to Riches that was done after Tex Avery had left the MGM cartoon department,
but it's basically an Avery cartoon with his minions carrying on what he had done in the
4x3 frame.
Then what's really cool is we also put on these radio promos.
All but one of them existed in really good audio quality.
A lot of them being recorded.
I think this is where his function of having a piece of the play came in through
Bing Crosby Productions, but he did all these different audio promos. And then we have one
that has Frank Sinatra and then one that, I don't know if she was Grace Kelly or Princess Grace of Monaco when it was
recorded given that it was after production but having those on there I
just thought was kind of cool you know and we had used some of them on the DVD
as well but they're a little more here so it's it's a nice package all the way
around and we want to give credit to the director here, Charles
Walters. In watching it multiple times, like you have, you do
pick up on just how good the direction is, the movement across
the screen left to right, the keeping the the kind of energy
up high, and then of course, just the work with the actors.
of energy up high and then of course just the work with the actors. Well, Charles Walters is not a name that flows off the tongue among people talking about
great directors.
And yet if you look at his filmography, it's very, very impressive and it wasn't just musicals
that he did.
He also did comedies. And it wasn't just musicals that he did.
He also did comedies.
I mentioned The Tender Trap.
He later did Please Don't Eat the Daisies.
He was under contract to MGM for quite a great deal of time.
I think his last film was done in Columbia with Cary Grant, Cary Grant's last film, Walk
Don't Run, but he started his career as an actor
on Broadway and the irony of it is the one song in High Society that wasn't written for
the film was Well Did Ya Ever. Cole Porter was trying to come up with a number for Sinatra and Crosby and no one was really happy with
what he was coming up with. And I believe it was Saul Chaplin, the musical supervisor,
that came up with the idea of using this song, Well Did Ya Ever, Eva, I have to say
it properly, that was written for the 1939 Broadway musical
Dew Barry Was a Lady, the film of which we put out through Warner Archive, but
that song was only in the underscoring of that movie. On stage it was sung by
Charles Walters and Betty Grable right before Betty Grable became a big movie star at Twain & City Fox.
She had gone to Broadway.
So they thought that song would be a perfect duet for the two of them,
which it was, but Charles Walters felt this, you know,
unique journey of a song he introduced as a stage performer on Broadway.
And then, you know, 17 years later,
he's directing a multi-million dollar movie
with big stars and that song is in it.
Now, that ain't the way I get it.
What's that?
I have heard among this clan,
you are called the forgotten man.
Is that what they're saying?
Well, did you ever?
What a swell party this is.
And have you heard the story of a boy, a girl unrequited love?
Sounds like pure soap opera.
I may cry.
Tune in tomorrow.
What a swell party this is.
He also did what we would call, I guess, musical staging.
There are no real dances in this movie,
but how Grace Kelly, when she's drunk,
is gliding across the floor, that came from Walters.
Walters came to MGM as a choreographer initially and as they did
with various other people like Jacques Tourneur, the famous auteur, they let
people take a stab at making a short subject or two before they got to do the
feature. So he did a little musical short called, I think it's called
Spreading the Jam, if my memory is serving me correctly. And that was impressive enough
for Arthur Fried to give him an opportunity to direct a feature, which was Good News,
another beautiful technicolor Blu-ray we're proud to have released. And Good News was one of the most efficiently made MGM musicals of its time.
And that kind of cemented him in for an opportunity that came right after Easter Parade,
which he directed, was a last-minute assignment. Easter Parade was supposed
to star Gene Kelly and Judy Garland. And I think a week before they were starting shooting,
Gene Kelly was having a fit over a volleyball game and slammed his foot down on the doorstep outside his house.
He's very competitive about volleyball. This is in the documentary that we had on Gene,
and I knew Gene. So I knew that this was very tenable. And in stamping his foot down, he
broke his ankle. So he called Fred Astaire and said, I'm in trouble.
They need to start this picture in a week and I can't do it.
Fred Astaire came out of retirement.
Right before that happened, the film was supposed to be directed by Vincent Minnelli.
It was supposed to be Vincent Minnelli directing Gene Kelly and Judy Garland. Things weren't going well in the marriage
between Judy and Vincent.
And it was decided at the studio,
this is before Gene pulled out,
that they needed somebody else to direct the movie.
There wasn't a good idea for Judy and Vincent
to be working together all the time.
So Charles Walters got that job. And with
Charles Walters, Fred Astaire came out of retirement to do Easter Parade and thankfully never retired
after that. We have the Towering Inferno to prove it. And, you know, he was a very, very well-liked, well-respected gentleman.
He died of mesothelioma in his mid-60s, which was a terrible sadness because he did not
live long enough to see the enormous...
He lived to see the release of the first two That's Entertainment movies, but the appreciation of the MGM musical
really just snowballed over ensuing years with all the things that we did on home video and then what
happened with the popularity of Turner Classic movies that has spread kind of the gospel of the MGM musical. He didn't live
to experience any of that. But there's a wonderful biography out on Charles
Walters and I highly recommend it. Go to Amazon, order a copy. People need to learn
more about him. He was a very, very well respected, very popular person and member of the MGM family.
Yeah.
What a filmography he has.
It's a great lesson in there.
You don't always have to be the first choice to have a fabulous career in life.
No, it's very, very true.
But one of the tenets of success, you know, is availability.
And he was available and he had proven that he could be counted on.
So that's fantastic.
And the fact that he made that transition is the musicals were winding down.
He slid right into comedy and.
Turned out Box Office Hits hits for the studio and that's
really what it was all about. Yeah well that's fantastic. I have to say that
this follow-up that your second 4k release and The Searchers being the
first one very different films. I love them both. Obviously one's a Western, one's a musical, urban, high society obviously type setting.
But if you're a film lover, you can't help but appreciate both of these releases and
how wonderful these new 4Ks are from the Warner Archive.
So George, with that, are there more coming soon? You said there's more, but
coming soon?
There's more.
Okay.
That's what I'm going to say for now. But again, I wanted temporary expectations. There will
only be a few each year.
Well. There will only be a few each year. Well, we had a huge budget of the year,
but I'm making my pitch for a couple.
I think there'll be some surprises along the way,
but I also stand behind our Blu-rays because those are mostly older films,
and there are not 4,000 pixels in the negative, sorry.
When there is an opportunity, when a film is just right,
we're going to look for that opportunity.
And meanwhile, between all of our efforts
and all of our partners, there's going to be a lot of 4K
coming from the Warner Library to your shelves for physical
media.
That's the important part.
Because we do have the mothership, as I've referred to in the main Warner Brothers Home
Entertainment catalog team, and I have a voice at that table.
And we have partnerships with certain other
companies, all of whom are helping us get more of our library out into the world of physical media.
And that's what we're excited about.
And I appreciate for the consumer the fact that you have that 4K plus Blu-ray combo pack so that those folks who are
still in the Blu-ray world see that 4K is becoming more and more and more prominent,
can kind of future-proof, you know, they can buy the combo. But if they're just in that Blu-ray
world, I watch the Blu-ray and I have to say it looks fantastic. So if you're just in that Blu-ray world, they can also just get that, uh, as
you just mentioned for their collection of Blu-rays, but you give people both
options, which I really like.
The combo is, is really very important because I know for myself as a consumer,
I remember buying the first Deadpool. It was a 4k Blu-ray combo. I didn't have a 4k
setup at home yet, but I knew to think about, God, that was like nine years ago. But I knew that I
would eventually have it and I did, but it was nice to know that it was there and it's great to give
people the chance, also the choice. You may not have 4k in every room and in another room you have
a blu-ray player and this way you can take full advantage of that. So the combos are the only way that we're gonna go. We're never
going to deprive people of the Blu-ray. And in the case of the searchers, you
know, it was terribly important that we have the Blu-ray option because there
already had been a Blu-ray of the searchers where the blue sky was yellow
and people's faces were wrong colors and we had to make up for other people's sins of
the past.
And I guess in this instance, George, it was also important because there was not a blu-ray.
You're sure you used right. And there are many people and rightfully so if that's where
their mind of is they're like, you know, I had VHS, I had laser disc, I had DVD, I'm
not buying a film for a fifth time. So or another piece of machinery. I personally recommend that everybody
should have everything, but some people may not have the means to do so. And if
they only have a Blu-ray player, I don't want to dismiss the fact that the Blu-ray
is of enormous quality, and I am still holding up a quality standard for all of our blu-rays.
They have to be pristine. You're not going to find any stray speckles on our
discs. We're very committed to that and there's a lot of great stuff to look
forward to. Yeah, well we recently talked about Rhapsody in Blue which I think
fans of high society
probably would also enjoy.
And that's only a Blu-ray release, but the Restoration story there is fantastic.
And it does look amazing as a Blu-ray only release.
So that's a great example of what you just said and the quality that the Warner Archive
is doing across all of your releases on Blu-ray and now 4K.
So always fun, George George to hear the story
about the restoration. What went into it? The care, all of the things for the picture and audio
and now authoring and just everything that went into this release and what it provides for the
fans. So fantastic as always to hear from you, George. Thanks for coming on the
extras. Oh, it's my pleasure, Tim. And thanks to everybody who's supporting our efforts. We
deeply appreciate it. For those who would like more information about the High Society 4K
and Blu-ray release, be sure to check out our Facebook page and our Warner Archive Facebook group.
You can find the links to those
and all of our social media sites in the podcast show notes,
as well as links for purchasing
of this beautiful 4K and Blu-ray release.
If you aren't yet subscribed or following the show
at your favorite podcast provider,
you may wanna do that so that you don't miss anything
that we have
coming up with George and the Warner Archive. Until next time, you've been listening to Tim Millard.
Stay slightly obsessed. Hi, this is Tim Millard, host of the Extras Podcast, and I wanted to let
you know that we have a new private Facebook group for fans of the Warner Archive and Warner Bros. catalog physical media releases.
So if that interests you, you can find the link on our Facebook page or look for the
link in the podcast show notes.