Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 224
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7425-2634-1 • Paperback • January 2005 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
978-1-4616-0433-4 • eBook • January 2005 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Steve Vineberg is professor in the theatre department at College of the Holy Cross in Massachusetts and author of Method Actors and No Surprises, Please. His movie reviews and articles have appeared in the New York Times, the Boston Phoenix, the Threepenny Review, the Chronicle of Higher Education, and the Christian Century, as well as many other publications.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 1 Europe in Hollywood
Chapter 3 2 High Comedy, American Style
Chapter 4 3 High Comedy and Social Satire
Chapter 5 4 The Poison in the Champagne: What It's Really Like to Be Rich and Famous
Chapter 6 5 The Aristocracy of the Hip
Chapter 7 6 The Eighties and Beyond
Chapter 8 Filmography
Chapter 9 Bibliography
In looking at the various subgenres of comedy, the author zeroes in on comedy of manners, the high comedy that privileges elegance, wit, and sophisticated banter among its iridescent, pedigreed characters. Vineberg smartly connects stage and screen. . . . He looks at the ways in which the more egalitarian U.S. movies handle the class-conscious lives of the rich and elite through comic twists and tweaks. Vineberg's work illumines the stylish, genteel, and buoyant narratives of the film comedy of manners, from glossy hijinks to poisoned champagne, with its own polished intelligence. Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
Vineberg has brought much-needed attention to the way class has shaped American film comedy, hence has shaped the social and political ideals of its audiences.
— Cineaste
High Comedy in American Movies provides a concise, accessible, and entertaining critical tour through some of the most beloved and celebrated of Hollywood films. The tight focus of this genre study is on those comedies of the upper classes filled with charming characters, sharp banter, and delightfully romantic, if often bittersweet, resolutions. This book is rather like the comedies it celebrates-witty and graceful, wearing its erudite roots in theatre history lightly, but leaving us with a sharp sense there is something to explore more deeply.
— Australian Feminist Studies
At a time when low comedy, sitcoms, and crafty hybrids like 'dramedy' rule box offices and TV tubes, Steve Vineberg reminds us of high comedy's more sophisticated virtues, exploring the roles played by class structures in American culture and clarifying the complex relationships between page, stage, and screen along the way. The result is as entertaining as it is illuminating, written with a generosity of spirit that enriches the acuity of its analyses. It arrives just when it's most needed, spotlighting a legacy that many moviegoers are in danger of forgetting while recognizing that genre boundaries are always fluid, open-ended, and mercurial. This is the high, fun-to-read scholarship that high American comedy deserves.
— David Sterritt, Long Island University; film critic, The Christian Science Monitor
—An engaging, brief introduction to the high comedy film genre.
—Discusses the British roots of the comedy of manners/class comedy in drama—back to its origins in seventeenth-century Restoration playwrights—and the American modifications of the genre in film over time.
—Explains the conventions of high comedy.
—Surveys over 100 films including Private Lives, Topper, The Philadelphia Story, Holiday, The Shop Around the Corner, The Merry Widow, Trouble in Paradise, Roman Holiday, Strangers on a Train, Citizen Kane, Sunset Boulevard, All About Eve, Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice, Alice's Restaurant, Shampoo, Manhattan, Down and Out in Beverly Hills, Tootsie, Six Degrees of Separation, Bullets Over Broadway, Quiz Show, The New Age, The Player, and Gosford Park.
—Includes 7 film images (black and white) and an annotated filmography of key films.