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Danse autour de la vie

Original title: We Were Dancing
  • 1942
  • Approved
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
550
YOUR RATING
Melvyn Douglas and Norma Shearer in Danse autour de la vie (1942)
SatireComedyRomance

Two titled aristocrats support themselves by being professional house guests in the homes of star-struck American nouveau riche.Two titled aristocrats support themselves by being professional house guests in the homes of star-struck American nouveau riche.Two titled aristocrats support themselves by being professional house guests in the homes of star-struck American nouveau riche.

  • Director
    • Robert Z. Leonard
  • Writers
    • Noël Coward
    • Claudine West
    • Hans Rameau
  • Stars
    • Norma Shearer
    • Melvyn Douglas
    • Gail Patrick
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    550
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Z. Leonard
    • Writers
      • Noël Coward
      • Claudine West
      • Hans Rameau
    • Stars
      • Norma Shearer
      • Melvyn Douglas
      • Gail Patrick
    • 18User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos14

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    Top cast54

    Edit
    Norma Shearer
    Norma Shearer
    • Vicki Wilomirska
    Melvyn Douglas
    Melvyn Douglas
    • Nikki Prax
    Gail Patrick
    Gail Patrick
    • Linda Wayne
    Lee Bowman
    Lee Bowman
    • Hubert Tyler
    Marjorie Main
    Marjorie Main
    • Judge Sidney Hawkes
    Reginald Owen
    Reginald Owen
    • Major Tyler-Blane
    Alan Mowbray
    Alan Mowbray
    • Grand Duke Basil
    Florence Bates
    Florence Bates
    • Mrs. Vanderlip
    Heather Thatcher
    Heather Thatcher
    • Mrs. Tyler-Blane
    Connie Gilchrist
    Connie Gilchrist
    • Olive Ransome
    Nella Walker
    Nella Walker
    • Mrs. Bentley
    Florence Shirley
    • Mrs. Charteris
    Russell Hicks
    Russell Hicks
    • Mr. Bryce-Carew
    Norma Varden
    Norma Varden
    • Mrs. Bryce-Carew
    King Baggot
    King Baggot
    • Courtroom Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    Barbara Bedford
    Barbara Bedford
    • Tearful Courtroom Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    Barlowe Borland
    Barlowe Borland
    • McDonough
    • (uncredited)
    Adriana Caselotti
    • Opera Singer
    • (unconfirmed)
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Robert Z. Leonard
    • Writers
      • Noël Coward
      • Claudine West
      • Hans Rameau
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    6.1550
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    Featured reviews

    5bkoganbing

    We Were Wondering Noel

    We Were Dancing was one of the small playlets that Noel Coward wrote for his show Tonight At 8:30. Two years earlier Coward told anyone who wanted to hear how much he disliked what MGM did to his production of Bittersweet when Jeannete MacDonald and Nelson Eddy starred in it. MGM must have had the rights for this show before that because Coward said that he would never allow another of his shows to be filmed in Hollywood.

    Back in the day Norma Shearer and Robert Montgomery did Coward's Private Lives back in 1931 to good acclaim. It's the only reason I can think of why Shearer chose to do this film as opposed to Mrs. Miniver which she was also offered. Other than Greta Garbo, Shearer as Mrs. Irving Thalberg had first refusal on any part there. Of course it was Thalberg who did the choosing and he was gone.

    Whatever possessed the folks at MGM to take Coward's British based story about a pair of titled individuals who make a living as permanent party guests and bring it to an American setting we'll never know but through séance. Occasionally you'll hear some flashes of Coward's witty dialog, but it only shows how mediocre the rest of the words are.

    Norma Shearer and Melvyn Douglas do get a solid supporting cast of decent players, but the whole bunch can't lift this film above average.
    6blanche-2

    I can't believe Noel Coward wrote this

    This film, "We Were Dancing" from 1942 is a combination of two Noel Coward plays, and neither one was his best work.

    The film stars Norma Shearer and Melvin Douglas, with a good supporting cast including Gail Patrick, Lee Bowman, Alan Mowbray, Connie Gilchrist, Norma Varden, Reginald Owen, and Marjorie Main.

    Norma Shearer, with a blondish wig, plays Princess Victoria 'Vicki' Wilomirska who, when she gets excited, spouts outrageous Polish. At her engagement party (she is to marry the Lee Bowman character), she dances with Baron Nicholas Prax (Douglas) and they fall in love immediately. She breaks her engagement and marries the Baron.

    The profession of these two is that of houseguests. They wander from place to place staying in the homes of socially ambitious people, usually Americans, who like the pedigree.

    It's the usual break up to make up scenario.

    Norma's big problem was that she couldn't get out of the '30s, and without her husband around, she couldn't choose films either. She obviously was concerned about her age and unfortunately, she had a right to - at 40, she was about 10 years past the age where most leading ladies in those days actually were leading ladies and not character actors. It's a shame, because she would have done so well in other films more appropriate for her.

    This film has the same problem as "Her Cardboard Lover" - it came out at the wrong time, when this type of film had come and gone, and people were looking to more serious films or films that put the war into the story: "Mrs. Miniver," "The More the Merrier," "A Yank in the RAF," etc.

    Norma Shearer was a hard-working, dedicated actress, but her ego got in the way of her final film choices. If only she had stopped with the wonderful "Escape" -- but she didn't.
    jimmy860

    Norma Glorious... Don't Miss This !

    For all the new scholarship about this neglected actress, people still need to see her in action. Yes-- let's accept the fact that, by 1942, Norma Shearer was past caring about a career in the movies, and let's take this romp for what it is: fun, vibrant, and a showcase for Norma. Her penultimate film brings out her exquisite comic timing, and her bursts of Polish round out the very amusing character of Vicky. Realize that Norma is winking at the camera and her public all through this film, asking only that we accept it on its terms: a fun exercise to help finish out her career (though there is evidence that she, in retrospect, didn't care much for it).
    6SimonJack

    A big cast can't save a mundane film with a little romance but very little humor

    This is one time I will grant that the movie success of the 1939 comedy, "Ninotchka," might have influenced a Hollywood decision for another film - this one by MGM. The earlier film involved displaced European royalty, and this one has some of the same. And, of course, Melvyn Douglas was the male lead in that first comedy. But then, the differences leap out. Where the 1939 film was a satire with a timely plot and a fantastic screenplay, "We Were Dancing" is untimely and with a bland screenplay.

    This is set in the third year of World War II and the first that the U.S. was involved. The idea that two former aristocrats as perpetual traveling house guests might be funny escaped the movie-going public of the time. And these decades later it escapes one for the simple reason that the script is flat. Where is the clever dialog, with the witticisms and the funny lines that Douglas was so excellent at? Where is the subtle, cute and zinger-loaded dialog that Norma Shearer could utter so well?

    This film has none of that and very little of anything about it. It struck me as more of a drama and love story. I had to stretch to give this film six stars, and that's solely for the first-rate cast that it has. Beside the two leads, this film is loaded with top supporting actors of the day - Florence Bates, Lee Bowman, Marjorie Main, Alan Mowbray, Reginald Owen and Gail Patrick. Indeed, Marjorie Main's Judge Sidney Hawkes is the only funny role in the film, and the only one that will get some laughs.

    With that cast, I doubt that MGM covered its budget. It's $1.7 million box office was near the bottom for the year - at 137th. At least one other reviewer to date called this film "boring." It may well be that to most audiences in modern times. It came close for this film aficionado. The only thing that kept it from slipping that low was the cast of various top supporting characters who kept popping in and out at times.
    7xan-the-crawford-fan

    Norma is blonde

    Count Nicki Prax (Melvyn Douglas) and Princess Victoria "Vicki" Wilkomirska (Norma Shearer) marry after falling in love at first sight during a party held to celebrate Vicki's engagement to another man, Hubert Tyler (Lee Bowman). They pretend to be poor (and not married) to get themselves the life they were used to leading, as rich aristocrats. However, their scheme is discovered when they're found sleeping in the same room (not in the same bed, it was the production code era).

    When they actually fall poor, they take up lodgings with a whole bunch of rich friends, but will their marriage be as temporary as their wealth? There's another woman named Linda Wayne (Gail Patrick) who Nicki promised himself to before he met Vicki, and Hubert may want to get back together with Vicki. Nicki and Vicki (heh) soon divorce, but since this comedy is screwball in tone, you know it will end the same way that The Awful Truth and The Philadelphia Story ended.

    I found that the film was well-paced at the beginning, lost steam in the middle and finished on a mediocre note, with a happy conclusion that seemed forced but in truth wasn't. The acting is pretty good.

    Norma Shearer is her usual self (maybe a bit less mannered) as Princess Wilkomiska- she's clearly been made to look more 1940s, an ill attempt to transfer her image over to the new decade (this was her second-last film before retiring). She has a lightened, more 1940s hairstyle which makes her look both younger and older at the same time (shades of Billie Burke), and is placed in a lovely variety of pantsuits, suit-skirt combos and suit-looking dresses, many with tassels. Her character is supposed to be Polish, but Norma's about as Polish as maple syrup. She makes it work, launching into long threads of Polish (I think it's Polish, I don't speak the language so I wouldn't know) when she gets upset. Melvyn Douglas is also his usual self, charming, debonair, with that terrible mustache. He has very good chemistry with Norma, but I must admit, he had chemistry with all of his leading ladies. Even Greta Garbo.

    The two leads also have reliable support from several notable character actors; the aforementioned Gail Patrick, Lee Bowman, Marjorie Main and Reginald Owen. They basically just do their usual as well. (Gail Patrick's eyebrows still freak me out. 😑) The film is nice to look at, with the usual M-G-M treatment of luscious production values and big sweeping Art Deco rooms. However, as I mentioned above, the plot isn't executed well, as the pacing is a bit off. It could have been shorter in some parts and longer in others. As well, exactly WHY Vicki and Nicki divorce is a bit unclear- you can't tell me that all Gail Patrick had to do was walk into the room.

    It's not as bad as I expected it to be- much better than Her Cardboard Lover- but it doesn't rank among the best films of any actors involved. If you managed to slog your way through HCL, I'd watch this one- or if you just want to see Norma as a blonde. 🙂

    Solid 6.5/10 from me, and no, I am not the only reviewer hung up on Norma's hair colour. 😁

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      It was during the making of this film that the head of MGM, Louis B. Mayer personally offered Norma Shearer the title role in Madame Miniver (1942) but she turned it down, balking at the notion of playing a mother with a grown son. Shearer opted instead to do a poorly-received remake of Her Cardboard Lover (1942), which would be her final film before retiring.
    • Goofs
      The engagement party at the beginning of the film is held the day before the wedding.
    • Quotes

      Hubert Tyler: You're not to blame. Women should be sheltered, Vicki.

      Victoria Anastasia 'Vicki' Wilomirska: After all, what can you expect of us? We were brought up to be merely socially attractive. We have no ambition and no talent except for playing games and not enough of that.

      Hubert Tyler: If you'd kept your word to me, Vicki, you wouldn't have to invent your assets.

      Victoria Anastasia 'Vicki' Wilomirska: I have nothing to regret you with. I chose my life, and I like it.

    • Connections
      Referenced in We Must Have Music (1941)
    • Soundtracks
      The Wedding March
      (1843) (uncredited)

      from "A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.61"

      Music by Felix Mendelssohn

      Whistled by Melvyn Douglas

      Played also as part of the score

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 18, 1942 (Mexico)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Polish
    • Also known as
      • We Were Dancing
    • Filming locations
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $1,085,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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