A lovely story
about aging, identity, and romance, offbeat telefilm Queen of the Stardust Ballroom features a multidimensional leading
performance by Maureen Stapleton, as well as a touching supporting turn from
Charles Durning. Both were nominated for Emmys. Tracking the experiences of a
woman in late middle age who struggles to build a new life after the death of
her husband, Queen of the Stardust
Ballroom explores the tender theme of how difficult it is to reconcile the disappointments
of life with the desire to live happily, especially when the passage of time
creates limitations. The central conceit involves dance, because the widow
discovers new joy by visiting a ballroom where old songs provide the
soundtrack, so there’s a certain innate elegance to the piece—among other
things, the movie revels in the irony that heavyset Durning was light on his
feet. Had the filmmakers presented their story without extraneous adornment, Queen of the Stardust Ballroom would
have been a near-perfect gem. Alas, the filmmakers elected to make Queen of the Stardust Ballroom into a
musical, with characters talk-singing several original tunes by the songwriting
team of Marilyn and Alan Bergman. The songs are fine in and of themselves, but
they diminish the movie’s verisimilitude instead of adding, as was undoubtedly
the intention, to the story’s magic.
The narrative begins with Bea Asher
(Stapleton) losing her husband and beginning a lonely new life in her empty
house in the Bronx. Her adult daughter lives in the suburbs, and her adult son
relocates to Los Angeles. Determined to stay in the house where she’s lived for
decades, Bea opens a junk shop but remains desperately lonely until a friend
recommends she visit the Stardust Ballroom. That’s where Bea meets portly
mailman Al Green (Durning). They connect through dancing and eventually become
a couple, but problems—including judgment from Bea’s relatives—soon challenge
their happiness. Through it all, writer Jerome Kass emphasizes the combination
of excitement and fear Bea experiences every time she steps outside her comfort
zone. Yet Queen of the Stardust Ballroom
isn’t some manipulative piece about being young at heart; rather, it’s a
bittersweet meditation on finding fulfillment no matter what compromised form
it takes.
Director Sam O’Steen, an Oscar-nominated film editor who helmed a
handful of projects for the big and small screens, applies an unobtrusive style
to the film’s storytelling, keeping the focus during dramatic scenes on the
expressive faces of his actors and letting wide shots during dance scenes
display figures gliding across the ballroom floor while lights bounce off the
facets of a glitter ball. More than anything, Queen of the Stardust Ballroom is an actors’ piece, with the deep
humanity that Stapleton and Durning bring to their roles infusing every scene.
As for the songs, some are more jarring than others, though, to the Bergmans’
credit, Stapleton’s first number, “How Could You Do This To Me?”, sets up her
character well. The songs are not the film’s best element, but they’re not egregious.
Queen of the Stardust Ballroom: GROOVY
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