1946-1952: The glory years at MGM
On his return to Hollywood in the spring of 1946, MGM had nothing lined up and used him in yet another B-movie:
Living in a Big Way. The film was considered so weak that Kelly was asked to design and insert a series of dance routines, and his ability to carry off such assignments was noticed. This led to his next picture with
Judy Garland and director
Vincente Minnelli, the film version of Cole Porter's
The Pirate, in which Kelly plays the eponymous swashbuckler. Now regarded as a classic, the film was ahead of its time and was not well received.
The Pirate gave full reign to Kelly's athleticism and is probably best remembered for the teaming of Kelly with
The Nicholas Brothers - the leading African-American dancers of their day - in a virtuoso dance routine.
Although MGM wanted Kelly to return to safer and more commercial vehicles, he ceaselessly fought for an opportunity to direct his own musical film. In the interim, he capitalised on his swashbuckling image as one of
The Three Musketeers and appeared with
Vera-Ellen in the
Slaughter on Tenth Avenue ballet from
Words and Music (
1948). There followed
Take Me Out to the Ball Game (
1949), his second film with Sinatra, where Kelly paid tribute to his Irish heritage in
The Hat My Father Wore on St. Patrick's Day routine. It was this musical film which persuaded Arthur Freed to allow Kelly to make
On the Town, where he teamed for the third and final time with Frank Sinatra, creating a breakthrough in the musical film genre which has been described as "the most inventive and effervescent musical thus far produced in Hollywood".
Stanley Donen, brought to Hollywood by Kelly to be his assistant choreographer, received co-director credit for
On the Town. According to Kelly: "...when you are involved in doing choreography for film you must have expert assistants. I needed one to watch my performance, and one to work with the cameraman on the timing..without such people as Stanley, Carol Haney and Jeanne Coyne I could never have done these things. When we came to do
On the Town, I knew it was time for Stanley to get screen credit because we weren't boss-assistant anymore but co-creators." Together, they opened up the musical form, taking the film musical out of the studio and into real locations, with Donen taking responsibility for the staging and Kelly handling the choreography. Kelly went much further than before in introducing modern ballet into his dance sequences, going so far in the "Day in New York" routine as to substitute four leading ballet specialists for Sinatra, Munshin, Garrett and Miller.
It was now Kelly's turn to ask the studio for a straight acting role and he took the lead role in the early
mafia melodrama:
The Black Hand (
1949). There followed
Summer Stock (
1950) - Judy Garland's last musical film for MGM - in which Kelly performed the celebrated "You, You Wonderful You" solo routine with a newspaper and a squeaky floorboard. In his book "Easy the Hard Way",
Joe Pasternak singles out Kelly for his patience and willingness to spend as much time as necessary to enable the ailing Garland to complete her part.
There followed in quick succession two musicals which have secured Kelly's reputation as a major force in the Americal musical film,
An American in Paris (1951) and - probably the most popular and admired of all film musicals -
Singin' in the Rain (1952). As co-director, lead star and choreographer, Kelly was the central driving force.
Johnny Green, head of music at MGM at the time, described him as follows: "Gene is easygoing as long as you know exactly what you are doing when you're working with him. He's a hard taskmaster and he loves hard work. If you want to play on his team you'd better like hard work too. He isn't cruel but he is tough, and if Gene believed in something he didn't care who he was talking to, whether it was
Louis B. Mayer or the gatekeeper. He wasn't awed by anybody and he had a good record of getting what he wanted"..
An American in Paris won six Academy Awards, including
Best Picture and, in the same year, Kelly was presented with an honorary Academy Award for his contribution to film musicals and the art of choreography. The film also marked the debut of
Leslie Caron, who Kelly had spotted in Paris and brought to Hollywood. Its dream ballet finale, lasting an unprecedented thirteen minutes was the most expensive production number ever filmed up to that point and was described by
Bosley Crowther as being "whoop de doo ... one of the finest ever put on the screen".
Singin' in the Rain featured Kelly's celebrated and much imitated solo dance routine to the title song, along with the famous "Moses Supposes" routine with
Donald O'Connor and the "Broadway Melody" finale with
Cyd Charisse, and while it did not initially generate the same enthusiasm as
An American in Paris, it subsequently overtook the latter film to occupy its current pre-eminent place among critics and filmgoers alike.