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The Cotton Club
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Synopsis
Combining electric song and dance performances with drama (both on and off screen), Francis Ford Coppola's The Cotton Club (1984) looks back to the 1920s-1930s peak of the legendary Harlem nightclub where only blacks performed and only whites could sit in the audience. Mixing historical figures with characters loosely based on actual people, Coppola and co-writers William Kennedy and The Godfather's Mario Puzo create a panorama of love, crime, and entertainment centered on the Club. Among them are cornet player Dixie Dwyer (Richard Gere, playing his own solos), who escapes psycho gangster "benefactor" Dutch Schultz (James Remar) for a George Raft-type Hollywood career as a gangster film star; Schultz's nubile mistress Vera Cicero (Diane Lane), who loves Dixie against her mercenary instincts; Cotton Club Mob owner Owney Madden (Bob Hoskins) and close associate Frenchy Demarge (Fred Gwynne); Vincent (Nicolas Cage), Dixie's no-good Mad Dog Coll-esque brother; Club tap star Sandman Williams (Gregory Hines), who woos ambitious light-skinned Club singer Lila Rose Oliver (Lonette McKee); and cameos by Charles "Honi" Coles and Cab Calloway impersonator Larry Marshall. Complementing the period story, Coppola evokes the style of '30s gangster movies and musicals through an array of old-fashioned devices like montages of headlines, songs and shoot-outs. Conceived by producer Robert Evans as his crowning achievement and directorial debut, Evans had to hand over the troubled production to Coppola, but the budget spiraled out of control as the script was repeatedly re-written throughout the chaotic shoot. By the time it was released, The Cotton Club's epic production story of power struggles, financial bloat, and even a murder overshadowed the "reunion" of The Godfather's creative team. Neither a Heaven's Gate-sized failure nor a wallet-saving hit like Coppola's Apocalypse Now, The Cotton Club got some favorable critical notices (although it drew fire for subordinating the African American stories). It did not, however, find a large enough audience to justify its expense and controversy, becoming another mark against 1970s "auteur" cinema in increasingly blockbuster-driven 1980s Hollywood. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide

Cast

Julian Beck Sol Weinstein
Nicolas Cage Vincent Dwyer
Charles "Honi" Coles Sugar Coates
Allen Garfield Abbadabba Berman
Richard Gere Dixie Dwyer
Fred Gwynne Frenchy Demange
Gregory Hines Sandman Williams
Maurice Hines Clay Williams
Bob Hoskins Owney Madden
Diane Lane Vera Cicero
Larry Marshall Cab Calloway
Lonette McKee Lila Rose Oliver
Novella Nelson Madame St. Clair
Lisa Jane Persky Frances Flegenheimer
James Remar Dutch Schultz
Wynonna Smith Winnie Williams
Woody Strode Holmes
Tom Waits Irving Stark

Production Crew

David Chapman Art Director
Gregory W.M. Bolton Art Director
Elizabeth Shelton Assistant Costumer Designer
Richard Shissler Assistant Costumer Designer
Melissa Prophet Associate Producer
Michael Stone Camera Operator
Gretchen Rennell Casting
Arthur Mitchell Choreography
Gregory Hines Choreography
Henry Le Tang Choreography
Michael Meacham Choreography
Michael Smuin Choreography
Stephen Goldblatt Cinematographer
Fred Roos Co-producer
Sylvio Tabet Co-producer
John Barry Composer (Music Score)
Judianna Makovsky Costume Designer
Milena Canonero Costume Designer
Francis Ford Coppola Director
Barry Malkin Editor
Robert Q. Lovett Editor
Dyson Lovell Executive Producer
Barrie M. Osborne Line Producer
Richard Dean Makeup
Robert Evans Producer
Richard Sylbert Production Designer
Mario Puzo Screen Story
William Kennedy Screen Story
Francis Ford Coppola Screenwriter
Mario Puzo Screenwriter
William Kennedy Screenwriter
George P. Gaines Set Designer
Les Bloom Set Designer
Connie Brink Special Effects
Year: 1984
Runtime: 127
Country: USA
MPAA Rating: R
Category: Feature

Genre
Drama

Sound
Dolby

Produced by
Orion
Zoetrope Studios

Awards
1984 - Best Film - Drama - Golden Globe