State Fair (1962) - Turner Classic Movies

State Fair


1h 58m 1962

Brief Synopsis

Expectations are high as the Frake family arrives at the annual Texas State Fair.

Film Details

Genre
Adaptation
Musical
Release Date
Jan 1962
Premiere Information
Dallas opening: 4 Apr 1962
Production Company
Twentieth Century--Fox Film Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Dallas, Texas, USA; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel State Fair by Philip Stong (New York, 1932).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 58m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (DeLuxe)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Synopsis

Expectations are high as the Frake family arrives at the annual Texas State Fair: Abel is entering his prize hog, Blue Boy, in the grand championship; Melissa hopes to win the mincemeat competition; young Wayne is planning to enter the sports car racing event; and 17-year-old Margie dreams of romance and adventure. Almost immediately Wayne becomes enamored of Emily Porter, a sexy showgirl, and Margie falls for Jerry Dundee, a brash and cocky television interviewer. Although Blue Boy is triumphant and Melissa's brandy-spiked mincemeat creates a sensation when the judge becomes drunk, the younger Frakes suffer disappointments. Wayne allows another competitor to win the auto race, and Emily, certain the Frakes will think her a tramp, walks out on him; Margie is heartbroken when Jerry suddenly disappears. Once back on the family farm, however, Wayne quickly forgets his first big romantic experience and runs off to visit his old girl friend. Later Margie is radiant when Jerry phones, explains he was called out of town, and asks her to marry him. Songs : "It Might As Well Be Spring" (Margie), "Our State Fair" (Wayne, Abel, Margie, & Melissa), "It's a Grand Night for Singing" (entire cast), "That's for Me" (Wayne), "Isn't It Kind of Fun" (Emily & chorus), "It's the Little Things in Texas" (Abel & Melissa), "More Than Just a Friend" (Abel), "Willing and Eager" (Wayne & Emily), "Never Say 'No'" (Melissa), "This Isn't Heaven" (Jerry).

Film Details

Genre
Adaptation
Musical
Release Date
Jan 1962
Premiere Information
Dallas opening: 4 Apr 1962
Production Company
Twentieth Century--Fox Film Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Dallas, Texas, USA; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel State Fair by Philip Stong (New York, 1932).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 58m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (DeLuxe)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Articles

State Fair (1962)


The third film version of State Fair (1962) boasts a score by Rodgers and Hammerstein, and stars a teen idol who was the second-biggest recording artist of the 1950s; an emerging female sex symbol; and a former 20th Century Fox star of the 1930s and 40s appearing in her first film in 17 years.

Fox's original State Fair (1933), a non-musical comedy that provided the template for all the versions, is the simple story of an Iowa farm family that goes to the state fair. Dad Abel (Will Rogers) shows off his pig Blue Boy; mother Melissa (Louise Dresser) enters her mincemeat in a competition; and daughter Margy (Janet Gaynor) and son Wayne (Norman Foster) both fall in love with strangers they meet. The film was nominated for a Best Picture Academy Award, but lost to Cavalcade (1933).

The 1945 remake added Technicolor and an original musical score by Rodgers and Hammerstein, fresh off their groundbreaking Broadway success Oklahoma! (1943). State Fair was Rodgers and Hammerstein's only musical written directly for the screen, and included future standards such as "It's a Grand Night for Singing" and "It Might as Well be Spring," which won an Oscar® for Best Original Song. This version starred Charles Winninger and Fay Bainter as the parents, Jeanne Crain and singer Dick Haymes as the kids, and Dana Andrews and Vivian Blaine as their love interests.

Everything was bigger in the 1962 version of State Fair, but not necessarily better. Looking for wide vistas for the Cinemascope screen, Fox executives decided to set the film in Texas instead of Iowa, which meant that one song from the original score, "All I Owe Ioway," wouldn't work. Lyricist Oscar Hammerstein had died in 1960, so composer Richard Rodgers wrote both the music and lyrics for a replacement song, "It's the Little Things in Texas," as well as four other new songs. None of them became classics. The film was directed by José Ferrer, a multitalented stage actor-director-musician and Oscar®-winning film actor (for 1950's Cyrano de Bergerac) and director. However, Ferrer had never directed a musical, and most critics found his work on State Fair uninspired. It was the last film he directed.

In 1945, the same year that first musical version of State Fair hit the screen, Alice Faye walked out of her contract at 20th Century Fox, angry that studio executive Darryl Zanuck had cut her best scenes from the drama Fallen Angel. With Zanuck out of power by 1961, Faye agreed to return to the studio to play Melissa Frake in the remake of State Fair. She had hoped to reunite with her Fox co-star Don Ameche from In Old Chicago (1937) and Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938), and director Henry King, who not only had directed those two hits, but the 1933 State Fair as well. Instead, Tom Ewell was cast as Abel, with Ferrer directing. Although she received good reviews, Faye didn't have much to do in the film except complain that family members weren't showing up for dinner, but she did sing a couple of songs. After State Fair, Faye went back into retirement, and only made an occasional cameo appearance thereafter.

Pat Boone was a squeaky-clean pop singer -- the anti-Elvis -- who rose to fame in the mid-1950s singing covers of R&B hits such as Fats Domino's "Ain't that a Shame" and "Blueberry Hill." Fox had signed him to a contract at the height of his fame, and starred him in a series of films aimed at his teenage female fans in which he played variations of his genial, low-key persona. While making his second film, April Love (1957), the devoutly Christian Boone made headlines when he supposedly refused to kiss his co-star Shirley Jones. Boone later said that he only told the director that he wanted to discuss it with his wife before he kissed another woman, and he did kiss his co-stars in most of his films. Still, the trailer for State Fair wasn't lying when it promised "Pat Boone as you're never seen him before!" Boone's torrid onscreen romance with Ann-Margret, who played the been-around singer in State Fair, went beyond the chaste kisses of his earlier films. In one scene, the two share a steamy clinch in her hotel room with a bed prominently featured behind them. The scene discreetly fades out before the inevitable conclusion. The tee-totaling Boone also has a convincing drunk scene. Years later, Boone and director Ferrer became in-laws when Boone's daughter Debby married Ferrer's son Gabriel.

Ann-Margret had just signed a contract with Fox when she appeared in State Fair. She auditioned for the role of Margy, but was cast as Emily because she looked too sexy to play a naïve farm girl. Her sizzling production number in the film not only showed off her musical talent, it earned her instant sex symbol status. State Fair was her first film, although Pocketful of Miracles (1961), made on loanout to Columbia, was released first. In 1962, she won a Golden Globe Award as "New Star of the Year."

In spite of all this talent, State Fair was not the box office hit that Fox hoped it would be. It cost $4.4 million to make, and grossed only $3.5 million. Some critics thought Alice Faye was wasted and found pop star Bobby Darin, who played the reporter, abrasive, with Pamela Tiffin bland and boring as Margy. Boone and Ann-Margret came off the best. New York Times critic Bosley Crowther praised their "bouncy performances," but was not impressed with the film. "One could credit José Ferrer with maintaining a brisk pace in his direction, but he does little to relieve the film's lack of surprise," he wrote. Crowther's critique of the way the Rodgers and Hammerstein songs were used in State Fair summed up what a lot of critics were saying about the overblown musicals of the early 1960s: "In updating the story, the rustic charm of a country fair has been superseded by a neon-lit Dallas, as ultra-modern a site as a missile launching area. This modernization seems to have erased some of that old-time charm for which the boys appear to be striving."

Director: José Ferrer
Producer: Charles Brackett
Screenplay: Richard Breen, adapted from the screenplay by Oscar Hammerstein II, Sonya Levien, Paul Elliot Green, based in the book by Phillip Stong
Cinematography: William C. Mellor
Editor: David Bretherton
Costume Design: Marjorie Best
Art Direction: Jack Martin Smith, Walter M. Simonds
Music: Oscar Hammerstein II and Richard Rodgers
Cast: Pat Boone (Wayne Frake), Bobby Darin (Jerry Dundee), Pamela Tiffin (Margy Frake), Ann-Margret (Emily Porter), Tom Ewell (Abel Frake), Alice Faye (Melissa Frake), Wally Cox (Hipplewaite), David Brandon (Harry), Clem Harvey (Doc Cramer).
C-118m. Letterboxed.

by Margarita Landazuri
State Fair (1962)

State Fair (1962)

The third film version of State Fair (1962) boasts a score by Rodgers and Hammerstein, and stars a teen idol who was the second-biggest recording artist of the 1950s; an emerging female sex symbol; and a former 20th Century Fox star of the 1930s and 40s appearing in her first film in 17 years. Fox's original State Fair (1933), a non-musical comedy that provided the template for all the versions, is the simple story of an Iowa farm family that goes to the state fair. Dad Abel (Will Rogers) shows off his pig Blue Boy; mother Melissa (Louise Dresser) enters her mincemeat in a competition; and daughter Margy (Janet Gaynor) and son Wayne (Norman Foster) both fall in love with strangers they meet. The film was nominated for a Best Picture Academy Award, but lost to Cavalcade (1933). The 1945 remake added Technicolor and an original musical score by Rodgers and Hammerstein, fresh off their groundbreaking Broadway success Oklahoma! (1943). State Fair was Rodgers and Hammerstein's only musical written directly for the screen, and included future standards such as "It's a Grand Night for Singing" and "It Might as Well be Spring," which won an Oscar® for Best Original Song. This version starred Charles Winninger and Fay Bainter as the parents, Jeanne Crain and singer Dick Haymes as the kids, and Dana Andrews and Vivian Blaine as their love interests. Everything was bigger in the 1962 version of State Fair, but not necessarily better. Looking for wide vistas for the Cinemascope screen, Fox executives decided to set the film in Texas instead of Iowa, which meant that one song from the original score, "All I Owe Ioway," wouldn't work. Lyricist Oscar Hammerstein had died in 1960, so composer Richard Rodgers wrote both the music and lyrics for a replacement song, "It's the Little Things in Texas," as well as four other new songs. None of them became classics. The film was directed by José Ferrer, a multitalented stage actor-director-musician and Oscar®-winning film actor (for 1950's Cyrano de Bergerac) and director. However, Ferrer had never directed a musical, and most critics found his work on State Fair uninspired. It was the last film he directed. In 1945, the same year that first musical version of State Fair hit the screen, Alice Faye walked out of her contract at 20th Century Fox, angry that studio executive Darryl Zanuck had cut her best scenes from the drama Fallen Angel. With Zanuck out of power by 1961, Faye agreed to return to the studio to play Melissa Frake in the remake of State Fair. She had hoped to reunite with her Fox co-star Don Ameche from In Old Chicago (1937) and Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938), and director Henry King, who not only had directed those two hits, but the 1933 State Fair as well. Instead, Tom Ewell was cast as Abel, with Ferrer directing. Although she received good reviews, Faye didn't have much to do in the film except complain that family members weren't showing up for dinner, but she did sing a couple of songs. After State Fair, Faye went back into retirement, and only made an occasional cameo appearance thereafter. Pat Boone was a squeaky-clean pop singer -- the anti-Elvis -- who rose to fame in the mid-1950s singing covers of R&B hits such as Fats Domino's "Ain't that a Shame" and "Blueberry Hill." Fox had signed him to a contract at the height of his fame, and starred him in a series of films aimed at his teenage female fans in which he played variations of his genial, low-key persona. While making his second film, April Love (1957), the devoutly Christian Boone made headlines when he supposedly refused to kiss his co-star Shirley Jones. Boone later said that he only told the director that he wanted to discuss it with his wife before he kissed another woman, and he did kiss his co-stars in most of his films. Still, the trailer for State Fair wasn't lying when it promised "Pat Boone as you're never seen him before!" Boone's torrid onscreen romance with Ann-Margret, who played the been-around singer in State Fair, went beyond the chaste kisses of his earlier films. In one scene, the two share a steamy clinch in her hotel room with a bed prominently featured behind them. The scene discreetly fades out before the inevitable conclusion. The tee-totaling Boone also has a convincing drunk scene. Years later, Boone and director Ferrer became in-laws when Boone's daughter Debby married Ferrer's son Gabriel. Ann-Margret had just signed a contract with Fox when she appeared in State Fair. She auditioned for the role of Margy, but was cast as Emily because she looked too sexy to play a naïve farm girl. Her sizzling production number in the film not only showed off her musical talent, it earned her instant sex symbol status. State Fair was her first film, although Pocketful of Miracles (1961), made on loanout to Columbia, was released first. In 1962, she won a Golden Globe Award as "New Star of the Year." In spite of all this talent, State Fair was not the box office hit that Fox hoped it would be. It cost $4.4 million to make, and grossed only $3.5 million. Some critics thought Alice Faye was wasted and found pop star Bobby Darin, who played the reporter, abrasive, with Pamela Tiffin bland and boring as Margy. Boone and Ann-Margret came off the best. New York Times critic Bosley Crowther praised their "bouncy performances," but was not impressed with the film. "One could credit José Ferrer with maintaining a brisk pace in his direction, but he does little to relieve the film's lack of surprise," he wrote. Crowther's critique of the way the Rodgers and Hammerstein songs were used in State Fair summed up what a lot of critics were saying about the overblown musicals of the early 1960s: "In updating the story, the rustic charm of a country fair has been superseded by a neon-lit Dallas, as ultra-modern a site as a missile launching area. This modernization seems to have erased some of that old-time charm for which the boys appear to be striving." Director: José Ferrer Producer: Charles Brackett Screenplay: Richard Breen, adapted from the screenplay by Oscar Hammerstein II, Sonya Levien, Paul Elliot Green, based in the book by Phillip Stong Cinematography: William C. Mellor Editor: David Bretherton Costume Design: Marjorie Best Art Direction: Jack Martin Smith, Walter M. Simonds Music: Oscar Hammerstein II and Richard Rodgers Cast: Pat Boone (Wayne Frake), Bobby Darin (Jerry Dundee), Pamela Tiffin (Margy Frake), Ann-Margret (Emily Porter), Tom Ewell (Abel Frake), Alice Faye (Melissa Frake), Wally Cox (Hipplewaite), David Brandon (Harry), Clem Harvey (Doc Cramer). C-118m. Letterboxed. by Margarita Landazuri

State Fair (60th Anniversary Edition) - State Fair - Two Versions on One DVD


Philip Stong's homespun novel about a farm family and their adventures at the Iowa State fair first made it to the screen in 1933 as a vehicle tailored to the talents of starlet Janet Gaynor and audience favorite Will Rogers. Ten years later, when composer Richard Rodgers and lyricist/writer Oscar Hammerstein made musical theater history with their groundbreaking Oklahoma!, 20th Century Fox honcho Daryl F. Zanuck decided that the team would be the perfect choice to adapt the straight film to a musical. The willing team agreed, with the proviso that they would not be required to come to Hollywood in order to write the film.

State Fair follows the fortunes of the Frake family as they visit the fair along with their pet pig Blue Boy, who father Abel (noted character actor Charles Winninger) is hoping will win the blue ribbon. His wife Melissa (Fay Bainter) entertains similar hopes for her home-made pickles and run-spiked mince sauce. They are accompanied by their son Wayne (pop singer Dick Haymes) and daughter Margy (Jeanne Crain), both of whom are ready for love.

Margy is the first to find romance in the fairgrounds in a chance encounter with slightly-jaded reporter Pat Gilbert (Dana Andrews), who charms Margy while covering the fair for the local weekly, and hoping for a dream job in the big city. At the same time, Wayne finds a possible flame in sultry singer Emily Edwards (Vivian Blaine), the gorgeous cherry blond with a secret past that she keeps hidden from him. Both Margy and Wayne seem destined for romantic disaster when Pat is called away without warning or time to explain to Margy, and when Emily reviews her shattering secret, which opens Wayne's eyes to how different their lives are worlds apart. But of course, in true 40s musical style, somehow everything is able to work out happily for parents and children alike.

State Fair is a pleasant if not particularly distinguished diversion, sparked by splendid performances by a cast of old pros and new stars. Crain is at her loveliest and most appealing. Her singing voice was dubbed by Louanne Hogan, a match that would prove so seamless that Hogan would end up with a contract to provide her singing voice in other films (shades of Singin' in the Rain!). Dana Andrews rounds off his rough edges to give a charming performance as Pat, and both Haymes and Blaine fill their roles beautifully. But the film is nearly stolen by the winning pairing of Winninger and Bainter as the understanding (and understated) parents.

This would be Rogers and Hammerstein's only score written specifically for the screen, and while the music for State Fair doesn't match the emotional depth of their stage work, the team still managed to produce another pair of timeless standards with the lovely It Might as Well Be Spring, and the lilting It's a Grand Night for Singing.

The two-disc 50th Anniversary edition of the film includes the egregious 1962 remake starring Pat Boone as Wayne, Bobby Darin as Pat, and Ann-Margaret as the object of Wayne's affection. Screen musical legend Alice Faye came out of retirement after a sixteen year absence to take on the role of Melissa Frake, and through much of the film looks as if she wished she hadn't. The remake falters from the start with a flat prologue with Boone and his hometown girlfriend arguing about his race-car driving before giving way to the film's maddeningly memorable theme song (with which the original had the good sense to open). But the remake also includes such auspicious moments as Tom Ewell, as papa Frake, singing a love song to a pig (penned by Rodgers on his own for the film), and Ann-Margaret performing a dance on the fair stage that would've gotten her arrested at any state fair in the 60s.

Fox has provided excellent source material for the transfers of both films: the colors for the original really pop in true Technicolor style. The picture is clean and clear, marred only by a tendency for the flesh tones to be a bit over-ripe. The second film was shot with much more realistic colors, which are well-realized in the sharp, crisp, image of the transfer. The original film includes an audio commentary by film historian Richard Barrios and Tom Briggs, as well as a short featurette that serves as a shameless promotion for their stage version of the film. The remake includes an audio commentary by no less than Pat Boone himself!

For more information about State Fair, visit Fox Home Entertainment. To order State Fair, go to TCM Shopping.

by Fred Hunter

State Fair (60th Anniversary Edition) - State Fair - Two Versions on One DVD

Philip Stong's homespun novel about a farm family and their adventures at the Iowa State fair first made it to the screen in 1933 as a vehicle tailored to the talents of starlet Janet Gaynor and audience favorite Will Rogers. Ten years later, when composer Richard Rodgers and lyricist/writer Oscar Hammerstein made musical theater history with their groundbreaking Oklahoma!, 20th Century Fox honcho Daryl F. Zanuck decided that the team would be the perfect choice to adapt the straight film to a musical. The willing team agreed, with the proviso that they would not be required to come to Hollywood in order to write the film. State Fair follows the fortunes of the Frake family as they visit the fair along with their pet pig Blue Boy, who father Abel (noted character actor Charles Winninger) is hoping will win the blue ribbon. His wife Melissa (Fay Bainter) entertains similar hopes for her home-made pickles and run-spiked mince sauce. They are accompanied by their son Wayne (pop singer Dick Haymes) and daughter Margy (Jeanne Crain), both of whom are ready for love. Margy is the first to find romance in the fairgrounds in a chance encounter with slightly-jaded reporter Pat Gilbert (Dana Andrews), who charms Margy while covering the fair for the local weekly, and hoping for a dream job in the big city. At the same time, Wayne finds a possible flame in sultry singer Emily Edwards (Vivian Blaine), the gorgeous cherry blond with a secret past that she keeps hidden from him. Both Margy and Wayne seem destined for romantic disaster when Pat is called away without warning or time to explain to Margy, and when Emily reviews her shattering secret, which opens Wayne's eyes to how different their lives are worlds apart. But of course, in true 40s musical style, somehow everything is able to work out happily for parents and children alike. State Fair is a pleasant if not particularly distinguished diversion, sparked by splendid performances by a cast of old pros and new stars. Crain is at her loveliest and most appealing. Her singing voice was dubbed by Louanne Hogan, a match that would prove so seamless that Hogan would end up with a contract to provide her singing voice in other films (shades of Singin' in the Rain!). Dana Andrews rounds off his rough edges to give a charming performance as Pat, and both Haymes and Blaine fill their roles beautifully. But the film is nearly stolen by the winning pairing of Winninger and Bainter as the understanding (and understated) parents. This would be Rogers and Hammerstein's only score written specifically for the screen, and while the music for State Fair doesn't match the emotional depth of their stage work, the team still managed to produce another pair of timeless standards with the lovely It Might as Well Be Spring, and the lilting It's a Grand Night for Singing. The two-disc 50th Anniversary edition of the film includes the egregious 1962 remake starring Pat Boone as Wayne, Bobby Darin as Pat, and Ann-Margaret as the object of Wayne's affection. Screen musical legend Alice Faye came out of retirement after a sixteen year absence to take on the role of Melissa Frake, and through much of the film looks as if she wished she hadn't. The remake falters from the start with a flat prologue with Boone and his hometown girlfriend arguing about his race-car driving before giving way to the film's maddeningly memorable theme song (with which the original had the good sense to open). But the remake also includes such auspicious moments as Tom Ewell, as papa Frake, singing a love song to a pig (penned by Rodgers on his own for the film), and Ann-Margaret performing a dance on the fair stage that would've gotten her arrested at any state fair in the 60s. Fox has provided excellent source material for the transfers of both films: the colors for the original really pop in true Technicolor style. The picture is clean and clear, marred only by a tendency for the flesh tones to be a bit over-ripe. The second film was shot with much more realistic colors, which are well-realized in the sharp, crisp, image of the transfer. The original film includes an audio commentary by film historian Richard Barrios and Tom Briggs, as well as a short featurette that serves as a shameless promotion for their stage version of the film. The remake includes an audio commentary by no less than Pat Boone himself! For more information about State Fair, visit Fox Home Entertainment. To order State Fair, go to TCM Shopping. by Fred Hunter

Quotes

Trivia

There was supposed to be a romantic scene between 'Pat Boone' and 'Ann-Margaret' . However, due to Pat Boone's religious beliefs, he couldn't kiss a woman other than his wife, the scene was strategically "interrupted" before their lips could touch.

Notes

Location scenes filmed in Dallas and Oklahoma City. Previously filmed and released under the same title by Twentieth Century-Fox in 1933 and 1945.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Spring April 4, 1962

CinemaScope

Released in United States Spring April 4, 1962