Bette Midler’s incredible
rise to national prominence lost momentum after the release of this concert
film, which failed to match her previous success with albums, concerts, singles,
television specials, and theatrical features. Happily, a massive comeback
began with several hit comedy movies in the mid-’80s and peaked with the
tearjerker film Beaches (1988), which
spawned the gigantic pop single “Wind Beneath My Wings.” Since then, Midler has
achieved the rarified status of being a pop-culture institution. Understanding
this context is helpful when considering Divine
Madness, which deliberately encapsulates the first decade of Midler’s
mainstream success. Lest anyone forget, before Midler conquered the Adult
Contemporary charts with saccharine ballads, she made her mark by acting in
stage musicals and by performing raunchy comedy/music routines in gay bathhouses.
Divine Madness, which contains
footage captured during four shows of Midler’s 1979 concert tour, attempts to
reconcile the many moods of the Divine Miss M. The movie contains boisterous
musical performances, lewd stand-up comedy, and even a few serious moments,
like a suite of songs from The Rose
(1979), the dramatic film that made Midler a movie star. In any other context,
these disparate tonalities would seem incompatible, but the point is to show
viewers that Midler is a gutter-mouthed broad, a hellacious belter, a sensitive
balladeer, and a tender artiste. The film’s only coherence, therefore, stems
from demonstrating Midler’s incredible versatility. Given the anything-goes
approach, however, it’s no surprise that some parts of Divine Madness fall flat.
A pantomime bit in which Midler portrays
a bag lady is cringe-inducing because of its hokey sentimentality, and Midler’s
voice frays during overblown rock numbers including her spins on Bob Seger’s
“Fire Down Below” and Bruce Springsteen’s “The E Street Shuffle.” Yet Midler
summons real fire on a medley of the Stones’ “You Can’t Always Get What You
Want” and Dylan’s “I Shall Be Released,” and her performance of “The Rose,”
complete with artful hand movements, is moving. Similarly, many of the crass
sequences are droll if not exactly delightful. Midler seems utterly without
inhibition as she interacts with the largely male audience at a theater in
Pasadena. (Before exposing her bra, she good-naturedly asks the crowd: “Oh, you
wanna see more of my tits?”)
Midler steamrolls through jokes in a machine-gun
style borrowing from Mae West and other Vaudeville icons, and she even
introduces one sequence by warning that the quality of the jokes is about to
dramatically decrease. As the saying goes, it’s all in good fun, and that’s
ultimately what Midler provides. Divine
Madness is an exercise in upbeat escapism, sometimes in the unlikely form
of a smiling diva working her way across the stage in a motorized wheelchair
while she wears a starfish brassiere and a mermaid tail, her backup singers the
Harlettes and her tight rock band giving every tune a sound as big as the
star’s personality.
Divine Madness: GROOVY
Did you notice that one of her back-up singers (The Harlettes) was Katey Sagal?
ReplyDeleteMike C.
"Did you notice that one of her back-up singers (The Harlettes) was Katey Sagal?"
ReplyDeleteUm. Not actually true.
Great write-up! I agree, I wasn't knocked out by the film overall, but it was educational to see this time capsule of Bette in her early prime. Also, "Stay with Me" was kind of amazing. And the random headstand at the end.