Down Argentine way Nicholas Brothers

Les Nicholas Brothers (les frères Nicholas) Fayard Nicholas (1914-2006) et Harold Nicholas (en) (1921-2000) sont un duo de danseurs de claquettes américains, en activité des années 1930 aux années 1990. Ils sont considérés parmi les meilleurs danseurs de swing-jazz-jive flash dance (en) acrobatique de l’histoire du cinéma américain, et de tous les temps, avec en particulier Chattanooga Choo Choo1 de Glenn Miller, du film Tu seras mon mari (1941), ou Jumpin’ Jive2 de Cab Calloway, du film Symphonie magique Down Argentine Way is a 1940 American musical film made in Technicolor by Twentieth Century Fox. It made a star of Betty Grable in her first leading role for the studio although she had already appeared in 31 films,[1] and it introduced American audiences to Carmen Miranda. It also starred Don Ameche, The Nicholas Brothers, Charlotte Greenwood, and J. Carrol Naish. The film was directed by Irving Cummings and produced by Darryl F. Zanuck from a screenplay by Karl Tunberg and Darrell Ware, based on a story by Rian James and Ralph Spence. The cinematography was by Leon Shamroy and Ray Rennahan, and the costume design was by Travis Banton. The American-composed music was by Harry Warren and Jimmy McHugh, with lyrics by Mack Gordon and Al Dubin. Shooting lasted for 10 months in which members of the film’s crew traveled about 35,000 miles. A second unit was sent to Buenos Aires for location establishing shots, returning with about 20,000 feet of film, and another group flew to New York City and filmed Miranda for over a month. Miranda was then performing South American songs in the Broadway production The Streets of Paris. She was thus a prominent participant in the film although she spent no time in Hollywood.[2] In 2014, Down Argentine Way was deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant“ by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.
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