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The only Rodgers and Hammerstein cinemadaptation to be produced by Universal Pictures, Flower Drum Song was, alas, also the only Rogers and Hammerstein film to lose money at the box office. It looks far better now than it did back in 1961, if only because of the paucity of musical films in the 1990s. Essentially a comedy about the culture clash between old-world Chinese and assimilated Chinese-Americans, the film begins when Mei Li (Miyoshi Umeki) and her grandfather (Kam Tong) smuggle themselves into San Francisco. It seems that Mei Li has arrived to honor an arranged marriage between herself and Runyonesque nightclub owner Sammy Fong (the incomparable Jack Soo). This might prove delicate, since Sammy is in love with flashy cabaret entertainer Linda Low (Nancy Kwan). Meanwhile, Linda is romancing Wang Ta (James Shigeta), the son of a wealthy Chinatown merchant (Benson Fong). Soon, however, Mei Li and Wang Ta have fallen in love.......It's a complex plot, to be sure, but comedy and music manage to predominate. The songs include "I Enjoy Being a Girl" (a tour de force for the special effects department, and for Nancy Kwan), "A Hundred Million Miracles," "The Other Generation," "Love Look Away," "I Am Going to Like It Here," "Don't Marry Me," "You Are Beautiful," "Grant Avenue" and "Chop Suey." Flower Drum Song is attractively produced and consummately acted; while no classic along the lines of "King and I" or Sound of Music, it deserves a second look. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
Menu
Disc #1 -- Flower Drum Song
Scenes
Languages
Spoken Language
English Dolby Digital 5.1
English Dolby Digital 2.0
Feature Commentary With Actress Nancy Kwan and Film Historian Nick Redman
Subtitles
English SDH
Español
Français
Off
Bonus Materials
A Classic Evolves: From Print to Stage to Screen
Faces of the East: Casting Flower Drum Song
The Songs of Flower Drum Song
An All-Access Pass to the Sets and Costumes of Flower Drum Song
The Legacy of Rodgers and Hammerstein
Feature Commentary With Actress Nancy Kwan and Film Historian Nick Redman: On
Feature Commentary With Actress Nancy Kwan and Film Historian Nick Redman: Off
Play
Chapters
Disc #1 -- Flower Drum Song
1. Main Titles [3:59]
2. "A Hundred Million Miracles" [9:22]
3. "Fan Tan Fannie" [5:58]
4. "The Other Generation" [7:53]
5. "A Hundred Million Miracles (Reprise)" [6:11]
6. "I Enjoy Being a Girl" [7:50]
7. "I Am Going to Like It Here" [8:40]
8. Outspoken [5:10]
9. "Chop Suey" [6:52]
10. "You Be the Rock" [7:40]
11. "Grant Avenue" [6:08]
12. "Gliding Through My Memoree" [8:20]
13. "Love Look Away" [9:52]
14. "You Are Beautiful" [7:50]
15. "Sunday" [9:20]
16. "Don't Marry Me" [9:02]
17. Sealed With a Kiss [6:39]
18. "A Hundred Million Miracles (Reprise)/Finale" [4:05]
Features
A classic evolves: From print to stage to screen - Broadway legends Rodgers and Hammerstein adapt the best-selling novel into a theatrical hit and a Hollywood classic
Faces of the east: Casting Flower Drum Song - learn how the film was one of Hollywood's first to cast Asian actors as strong Chinese characters who achieve success and happiness
The songs of Flower Drum Song - from the unforgettable "I Enjoy Being a Girl" to the east-meets-west classic "Chop Suey," experience the wonder of these dazzling musical numbers.
An all-access pass to the sets and costumes of Flower Drum Song
The legacy of Rodgers and Hammerstein
Feature commentary with actress Nancy Kwan and film historian Nick Redman
Ken Darby Alfred Newman Rodgers & Hammerstein Richard Rodgers
Editors
Miton Carruth
Screen Writers
Joseph Fields
Others
Art Director - Joseph C. Wright
Book Author - C.Y. Lee
Choreography - Hermes Pan
Cinematographer - Russell Metty
Composer (Music Score) - Ken Darby
Composer (Music Score) - Alfred Newman
Composer (Music Score) - Rodgers & Hammerstein
Composer (Music Score) - Richard Rodgers
Costume Designer - Irene Sharaff
From Musical by - Oscar Hammerstein II
Musical Direction/Supervision - Alfred Newman
Production Designer - Alexander Golitzen
The weakest of the Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein musicals to be adapted for the screen, Flower Drum Song is noteworthy for its use of Asian characters and actors of Asian descent. Unfortunately, those characters are not given a great deal of depth -- or, more precisely, the attempts at giving them depth are entirely too shallow. Neither the characters nor the theme -- old ways vs. new ways -- are really delved into, with the result that the entire enterprise comes across as rather plastic and artificial. In such circumstances, an exceptionally strong score is required to make up for the deficiencies in the script. "Song" has a number of first rate songs, such as the haunting "Love Look Away and the charming "I Am Going to Like It Here," which contains one of Hammerstein's most interestingly constructed lyrics, as well as the "guilty pleasure" of "I Enjoy Being a Girl." However, these are offset by the likes of the embarrassing "Chop Suey" and the hokey "The Other Generation." On the plus side, the cast is strong, with Myoshi Umeki absolutely endearing and enchanting, Linda Kwan sexy and saucy, Jack Soo nonchalantly amusing, and Patrick Adiarte provides some dazzling dance moves. "I Enjoy Being a Girl" is given the most effective production, and "Sunday" the most entertainingly bizarre. The "Love Look Away" ballet is impressive, but it ultimately is a tremendous amount of time wasted on a secondary character. Far from a classic, "Song" is still entertaining, especially for aficionados of the musical film. ~ Craig Butler, Rovi
Henry Koster : Best Director - Directors Guild of America, 1961
Miyoshi Umeki : Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy - Hollywood Foreign Press Association, 1961
Howard Bristol : Best Color Art Direction - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1961
Alexander Golitzen : Best Color Art Direction - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1961
Joseph C. Wright : Best Color Art Direction - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1961
Russell Metty : Best Color Cinematography - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1961
Irene Sharaff : Best Color Costume Design - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1961
Ken Darby : Best Musical Score - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1961
Alfred Newman : Best Musical Score - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1961
Waldon O. Watson : Best Sound - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 1961