This filmed version of the 1927 George Gershwin Broadway musical Funny Face utilizes the play's original star, Fred Astaire, and several of the original tunes, then goes merrily off on its own. Astaire is cast as as fashion photographer Dick Avery (a character based on Richard Avedon, the film's "visual consultant"), who is sent out by his female boss Maggie Prescott (Kay Thompson) to find a "new face". It doesn't take Dick long to discover Jo (Audrey Hepburn, who does her own singing), an owlish Greenwich Village bookstore clerk. Acting as Pygmalion to Jo's Galatea, Dick whisks the wide-eyed girl off to Paris and transforms her into the fashion world's hottest model. Along the way, he falls in love with Jo, and works overtime to wean her away from such phony-baloney intellectuals as Professor Emile Flostre (Michel Auclair). The Gershwin tunes include the title song, "S'wonderful", "How Long Has This Been Going On" and "He Loves and She Loves"; among the newer numbers is Kay Thompson's energetic opener "Think Pink". For years available only in washed-out, flat prints, Funny Face was eventually restored to its full Technicolor and VistaVision glory. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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Disc #1 -- Funny Face
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English 5.1 Surround
Restored English Mono
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Special Features
Theatrical Trailer
Retrospective Documentary - Paramount In the 1950's
Photo Gallery
Scene Selection
Chapters
Disc #1 -- Funny Face
1. Main Titles [1:53]
2. Think Pink [4:26]
3. A Woman Who Thinks [:32]
4. Empathy [5:36]
5. How Long Has This Been Going On? [1:29]
6. The Quality Woman [3:11]
7. Funny Face [1:33]
8. Bonjour, Paris! [2:49]
9. Basal Metabolism [4:47]
10. Let's Kiss And Make Up [6:18]
11. Take The Picture! [:21]
12. He Loves And She Loves [4:37]
13. On How To Be Lovely [1:27]
14. Professor Flaustre [5:03]
15. Lovers Quarrel [3:17]
16. Clap Yo' Hands [2:36]
17. Flaustre The Phony [4:46]
18. The Collection [1:11]
19. S'Wonderful [6:12]
Additional Music - Roger Edens
Additional Music - Leonard Gershe
Art Director - George W. Davis
Art Director - Hal Pereira
Choreography - Eugene Loring
Choreography - Fred Astaire
Cinematographer - Ray June
Conductor - Adolph Deutsch
Costume Designer - Hubert de Givenchy
Costume Designer - Edith Head
Featured Music - George Gershwin
Featured Music - Ira Gershwin
Makeup - Wally Westmore
Musical Arrangement - Alexander Courage
Special Effects - John P. Fulton
The Paris fashion scene is rendered in broad, cartoonish glory by director Stanley Donen in Audrey Hepburn's first attempt at a major studio musical. Hepburn's American naif is discovered in a bookstore by photographer Dick Avery (played by Fred Astaire, in a deliberate homage to Richard Avedon), who romances her into the role of his It girl. Donen satirizes the fashion industry as gently as he did the movie business in "Singin' in the Rain", poking fun at the milieu without diminishing its escapist glamour. The candy-colored sets and stellar George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin songbook -- including S'wonderful and Kay Thompson's witty rendition of Think Pink -- are Funny Face's most lasting qualities. The musical's strengths are enough to make one overlook the preposterous gulf between the ages of the two leads, or the script's facile, anti-intellectual subplot. ~ Michael Hastings, Rovi
Stanley Donen : Best Director - Directors Guild of America, 1957
George w. Davis : Best Art Direction - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1957
Ray Moyer : Best Art Direction - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1957
Sam Comer : Best Art Direction - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1957
Leonard Gershe : Best Original Screenplay - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1957
Hubert de Givenchy : Best Costume Design - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1957
Edith Head : Best Costume Design - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1957
Ray June : Best Cinematography - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1957
Hal Pereira : Best Art Direction - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1957