Ages of Baby and Johnny in Dirty Dancing

1987 American romantic drama film by Emile Ardolino

Muddy Dancing
Dirty Dancing.jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Emile Ardolino
Written by Eleanor Bergstein
Produced past Linda Gottlieb
Starring
  • Jennifer Grey
  • Patrick Swayze
  • Jerry Orbach
  • Cynthia Rhodes
Cinematography Jeffrey Jur
Edited past Peter C. Frank
Music past
  • John Morris
  • Erich Bulling
  • Jon Barns

Product
visitor

Great American Films Limited Partnership

Distributed by Vestron Pictures

Release dates

  • May 12, 1987 (1987-05-12) (Cannes)
  • August 21, 1987 (1987-08-21) (United States)

Running time

100 minutes[1]
Country U.s.
Linguistic communication English
Budget $4.v million
Box office $214.six million

Dirty Dancing is a 1987 American romantic drama dance film written by Eleanor Bergstein, produced by Linda Gottlieb, and directed by Emile Ardolino. Starring Jennifer Gray and Patrick Swayze, it tells the story of Frances "Baby" Houseman (Grey), a young woman who falls in dearest with dance instructor Johnny Castle (Swayze) at a vacation resort.

The film was based on screenwriter Bergstein's ain childhood. She originally wrote a screenplay for the Michael Douglas moving-picture show It's My Turn, merely ultimately ended up conceiving a story for a pic which became Dirty Dancing. She finished the script in 1985, simply management changes at MGM put the film in development hell. The production company was changed to Vestron Pictures with Emile Ardolino equally managing director and Linda Gottlieb every bit producer. Filming took place in Lake Lure, North Carolina, and Mount Lake, Virginia, with the film's score composed by John Morris and trip the light fantastic toe choreography by Kenny Ortega.

Dirty Dancing premiered at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival on May 12, 1987, and was released on August 21, 1987, in the United States, earning over $214 million worldwide, and was the kickoff movie to sell more than a one thousand thousand copies for home video.[ii] Information technology earned positive reviews from critics, who specially praised the performances of Grey and Swayze, and its soundtrack, created by Jimmy Ienner, generated two multi-platinum albums and multiple singles. "(I've Had) The Fourth dimension of My Life", performed by Neb Medley and Jennifer Warnes, won the Academy Award for All-time Original Song, the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Vocal, and the Grammy Award for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals.[three]

The picture'southward popularity led to a 2004 prequel, Dingy Dancing: Havana Nights, and a phase version which has had sellout performances in Commonwealth of australia, Europe, and North America. A made-for-TV remake was also released in 2017.[4]

Plot [edit]

In the summer of 1963, Frances "Baby" Houseman is vacationing with her parents Jake and Marjorie Houseman, and her older sister Lisa at Kellerman'due south, an upscale Catskills resort in the Borscht Belt endemic by Jake'due south sarcastic best friend Max. Exploring one night, Baby secretly observes Max instructing the waiters, all Ivy League students, to romance the guests' daughters, no matter how unattractive. Max also demeans the working class entertainment staff, including Johnny Castle, i of the dance instructors. Infant is attracted to Johnny, and dances briefly with him subsequently his kind hearted cousin, Baton, introduces them at a secret "muddied dancing" party for resort staff. Max's smart aleck grandson Neil flirts with Baby in the concurrently.

Infant learns Johnny's dance partner Penny is pregnant by Robbie, a waiter and womanizer who attends Yale School of Medicine and now has his eye on Lisa. When Robbie refuses to help Penny, Baby, without explaining why, borrows coin from her father to pay for Penny's abortion. At outset, Penny declines as information technology would cause her and Johnny to miss a performance at a nearby resort, costing them the season's bacon, but Baby volunteers to stand in for Penny. During her trip the light fantastic toe sessions with Johnny, they develop a common allure, and except for their failure to execute a climactic lift (Babe hesitated), Johnny and Baby'southward performance is successful.

Back at Kellerman's, Penny is gravely injured by the botched ballgame, and Baby enlists her father'south aid to stabilize Penny. Angered by Babe's deception, and assuming Johnny got Penny pregnant, Dr. Houseman orders Infant to stay abroad from them. Baby sneaks off to apologize to Johnny for her dad's handling, but Johnny feels he deserves it due to his lower status; Infant reassures him of his worth, declaring her beloved. They begin secretly seeing each other, and her male parent now refuses to talk to her.

Scene from the dancing finale[5] [6]

Johnny rejects an indecent proposal by Vivian Pressman, an adulterous wife, who instead sleeps with Robbie, inadvertently foiling Lisa'south own plan to lose her virginity to him. When Vivian spots Baby leaving Johnny's cabin, she feels spurned and attempts revenge on Johnny past claiming he stole her husband's wallet. Max is prepare to fire Johnny, simply Baby backs up his alibi, revealing she was with Johnny at the time of the theft. The real thieves, Sydney and Sylvia Schumacher are defenseless, but Johnny is still fired for mixing with Baby. Earlier leaving, Johnny tries to talk to Dr. Houseman, only is only accused of trying to go at Baby. Babe later apologizes to her male parent for lying, but not for her romance with Johnny, so accuses him of classism.

At the end-of-season talent bear witness, Dr. Houseman gives Robbie money for medical school, but when Robbie admits that he got Penny significant, and and then insults her and Babe, Dr. Houseman angrily grabs the money back. Johnny arrives and disrupts the concluding song by bringing Babe up on stage and declaring that she has fabricated him a better person, and so they do the dance they practiced all summertime, ending with a successful performance of the climactic lift. Dr. Houseman admits he was wrong about Johnny and reconciles with Baby, and all the staff and guests join Babe and Johnny dancing to "(I've Had) The Fourth dimension of My Life".

Cast [edit]

  • Jennifer Grey as Frances "Baby" Houseman
  • Patrick Swayze as Johnny Castle
  • Cynthia Rhodes as Penny Johnson
  • Jerry Orbach equally Jake Houseman
  • Jane Brucker equally Lisa Houseman
  • Jack Weston as Max Kellerman
  • Lonny Price as Neil Kellerman
  • Kelly Bishop as Marjorie Houseman
  • Steve Lennard as Robbie Gould
  • Charles Coles as Tito Suarez
  • Neal Jones every bit Billy Kostecki
  • Miranda Garrison as Vivian Pressman
  • Garry Goodrow as Moe Pressman
  • Paula Trueman as Sylvia Schumacher
  • Alvin Myerovich equally Sydney Schumacher
  • Wayne Knight every bit Stan

Bruce Morrow appears in a cameo as a magician; Morrow himself could be heard as a DJ's voice in unlike parts of the film. Emile Ardolino and Matthew Broderick (who was dating Greyness and co-starred with her in Ferris Bueller's Twenty-four hours Off) take cameos.[seven]

Soundtrack [edit]

  1. "Be My Infant" – The Ronettes
  2. "Big Girls Don't Cry" – Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons
  3. "Where Are Yous Tonight?" – Tom Johnston
  4. "Do You Love Me" – The Contours
  5. "Dearest Man" – Otis Redding
  6. "Stay" – Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs
  7. "Hungry Eyes" – Eric Carmen
  8. "Overload" – Zappacosta
  9. "Hey! Infant" – Bruce Channel
  10. "De Todo Un Poco" – Melon
  11. "Some Kind of Wonderful" – The Drifters
  12. "These Arms of Mine" – Otis Redding
  13. "Weep to Me" – Solomon Burke
  14. "Will You Honey Me Tomorrow" – The Shirelles
  15. "Love Is Strange" – Mickey & Sylvia
  16. "You lot Don't Ain Me" – The Blow Monkeys
  17. "Yeah" – Merry Clayton
  18. "In the Still of the Night" – The V Satins
  19. "She's Like the Current of air" – Patrick Swayze
  20. "(I've Had) The Time of My Life" – Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes

Actress Jane Brucker wrote the song "Hula Hana", which she performed in her role of Lisa in the prove rehearsal scene.[8]

Product [edit]

Pre-production [edit]

Dirty Dancing is based in large role on screenwriter Eleanor Bergstein'southward ain babyhood: she is the younger daughter of a Jewish medico from New York and had spent summers with her family unit in the Catskills where she participated in "Dingy Dancing" competitions; she was as well nicknamed "Infant" herself as a girl.[9] [x] In 1980, Bergstein wrote a screenplay for the Michael Douglas film, It'south My Turn, even so the producers cutting an erotic dancing scene from the script, prompting her to excogitate a new story that took inspiration from her youth dance competitions.[ix] In 1984, she pitched the idea to MGM executive Eileen Miselle, who liked it and teamed Bergstein with producer Linda Gottlieb. They set the movie in 1963, with the grapheme of Baby based on Bergstein'due south own life and the character of Johnny based on the stories of Michael Terrace, a dance instructor whom Bergstein met in the Catskills in 1985 while she was researching the story.[xi] She finished the script in Nov 1985, merely direction changes at MGM put the script into turnaround, or limbo.[12]

Bergstein gave the script to other studios only was repeatedly rejected until she brought it to Vestron Pictures. While honing their pitch to Vestron, Gottlieb had agreed to cut the proposed upkeep in one-half. Bergstein and Gottlieb then chose Emile Ardolino as the film'due south director;[13] Ardolino had never directed a feature film, simply was extremely passionate almost the project after reading the script while he was on jury duty.[14] The team of Gottlieb, Bergstein, and Ardolino and then presented their vision for the film to Vestron's president, Jon Peisinger, and the company's vice president for product, Mitchell Cannold. Past the end of the meeting, Peisinger had greenlit the project to become Vestron's first feature film product. The canonical film was budgeted at the relatively low amount of $5 million, at a time when the average cost for a motion-picture show was $12 million.[xv]

For choreographer, Bergstein chose Kenny Ortega, who had been trained past Cistron Kelly.[16] For a location, they did not find anything suitable in the Catskills (as many of the Borscht Chugalug resorts had been close down at that betoken), so they decided on a combination of two locations: Lake Lure, North Carolina, and the Mountain Lake Hotel near Pembroke, Virginia, and with careful editing fabricated information technology look like all shooting was washed in the aforementioned area.[17]

Casting [edit]

Managing director Ardolino was adamant that they choose dancers, such as Swayze, who could also human activity,[eighteen] equally he did non desire to use the "stand-in" method that had been used with Flashdance (1983).[19]

For the female lead of Frances "Baby" Houseman, Winona Ryder and Sarah Jessica Parker were considered.[20] Bergstein chose the 26-year-erstwhile Jennifer Greyness, daughter of the Oscar-winning actor and dancer Joel Grey (east.g., of the picture Cabaret (1972)). The producers and then sought a male person lead, initially considering 20-year-old Billy Zane, though initial screen tests when he was partnered with Grey did not encounter expectations.[21] Val Kilmer and Benicio del Toro were likewise considered for Johnny.[20] The next choice was 34-twelvemonth-old Patrick Swayze, who appeared in Grandview, UsA. (1984) and had co-starred with Grey on Cherry Dawn (1984). He was a seasoned dancer, with experience from the Joffrey Ballet.[22] The producers were thrilled with him, but his resume read "No dancing" after a knee joint injury. However, Swayze read the script, liked the multi-level character of Johnny, and took the part anyway. After this, Johnny'due south heritage was inverse from being Italian to Irish gaelic. Grey was initially not happy about the choice, equally she and Swayze had difficulty getting along on Ruby-red Dawn, but when they did their dancing screen test, the chemistry between them was obvious. Bergstein described it equally "breathtaking".[23] Other casting choices were Broadway actor Jerry Orbach equally Dr. Jake Houseman, Baby'due south male parent; and Jane Brucker as Lisa Houseman, her older sister.

Bergstein, equally the picture'south writer, besides attempted to cast her friend, sex therapist Dr. Ruth Westheimer, to play Mrs. Schumacher (and Joel Grey as Dr. Ruth's husband).[24] [25] Yet, Westheimer backed out when she learned the role involved her playing a thief.[26] [27] [25] The role went instead to 89-year-old Paula Trueman.

Another role went to Bergstein'south friend, New York radio personality "Cousin Brucie" Morrow. She initially wanted him to portray the social director, but then later asked him to play the part of the magician. Morrow himself could be heard at unlike parts of the pic as a New York surface area DJ (at the time of the movie's setting he was working at WABC, a acme twoscore station), and served as period music consultant. The function of the social director went to the and then-unknown Wayne Knight (of later Seinfeld and third Stone from the Sun fame).[28]

The part of Infant's female parent was originally given to Lynne Lipton, who is briefly visible in the beginning, when the Houseman family first pulls into Kellerman's (she is in the front seat for a few seconds; her blonde hair is the only indication), but she became ill during the first week of shooting and was replaced past actress Kelly Bishop, who had already been cast to play resort invitee Vivian Pressman. Bishop moved into the function of Mrs. Houseman, and the film's assistant choreographer Miranda Garrison took on the part of Vivian.[29] [xxx] (When Baby is dancing in the concluding scene, the line that her mother says to Jerry Orbach, "She gets that from me ..." is a wink to the fact that Kelly Bishop was in the original bandage of A Chorus Line, using the proper name at that time of Carole Bishop, and had been a professional person dancer.)

Filming [edit]

Chief photography for Dingy Dancing took identify in Lake Lure, Due north Carolina, and Mountain Lake, Virginia.[31] Scenes in Lake Lure were filmed at a former Boy Scout Camp called Camp Occoneechee, which is now a individual, residential community known as Firefly Cove.[32] These scenes included the interior dancing scenes, Baby conveying the watermelon and practicing on the signature stairs, Johnny's cabin,[33] the staff cabins, the golf scene where Baby asks her father for $250 and the famous "log" scenes.[ commendation needed ] The climactic lift scene was filmed in the ballroom of the Lake Lure Inn. Scenes filmed at Mountain Lake included dining scenes, Kellerman's Hotel, the embankment games, the Houseman family unit'south cabins, the water elevator scene[34] and Penny crying in the kitchen.

Filming started for Dirty Dancing on September 5, 1986,[33] and lasted just 43 days.[35] The production had to battle bad weather, including exterior temperatures of 105 °F (41 °C).[36] With the camera and lighting equipment needed for filming, the temperature inside could be equally high every bit 120 °F (49 °C).[36] According to choreographer Kenny Ortega, ten people passed out within 25 minutes of shooting one day.[36] Paula Trueman collapsed and was taken to the local emergency room to be treated for dehydration.[36] Patrick Swayze besides required a hospital visit; insisting on doing his own stunts, he repeatedly fell off the log during the "balancing" scene and injured his knee so desperately he had to have fluid drained from the swelling.[36]

Delays in the shooting schedule pushed filming into the autumn, which required the set decorators to spray-paint the autumn leaves green.[36] The atmospheric condition became common cold, causing the lake's temperatures to drop to near xl °F (4 °C) for the famous swimming scene, which was filmed in October.[37] Despite her character'south enjoyment, Greyness later described the water as "horrifically" cold, and she might not accept gone into the lake, except that she was "young and hungry".[36]

Relations between the two main stars varied throughout product. They had already had trouble getting along in their previous project, Red Dawn (1984),[38] and worked things out enough to accept an extremely positive screen test, but that initial cooperation soon faded, and they were soon "facing off" earlier every scene.[39] To address this, producer Bergstein and director Ardolino forced the stars to re-watch their initial screen-tests—the ones with the "scenic" chemical science.[39] This had the desired effect, and Swayze and Greyness were able to return to the film with renewed energy and enthusiasm.[29]

Some of the scenes in the flick are improvised. For instance, the scene where Grey was to stand in front of Swayze with her back to him and put her arm upwardly backside his head while he trailed his fingers down her arm. Grey was exhausted at the time and constitute the move ticklish, and could not stop giggling each fourth dimension Swayze tried it, and he became annoyed.[40] The footage was plant in the editing room and the producers decided the scene worked every bit it was and put it into the flick, complete with Grey'southward giggling and Swayze'due south annoyed expression.[twoscore] It became one of the most famous scenes in the movie, turning out, as choreographer Kenny Ortega put it, "as one of the virtually delicate and honest moments in the motion picture."[23]

Post-production [edit]

The shooting wrapped on October 27, 1986, both on-fourth dimension and on-upkeep. No ane on the team, however, liked the rough cutting that was put together, and Vestron executives were convinced the film was going to be a flop. Thirty-nine per centum of people who viewed the film did non realize abortion was the subplot. In May 1987, the movie was screened for producer Aaron Russo. According to Vestron executive Mitchell Cannold, Russo'south reaction at the end was to say but, "Burn the negative, and collect the insurance."[41]

Further disputes arose over whether a corporate sponsor could exist found to promote the film. Marketers of the Clearasil acne production liked the moving picture, seeing it every bit a vehicle to reach a teen target audience. All the same, when they learned the film contained an abortion scene, they asked for that part of the plot to be cut. Equally Bergstein refused, the Clearasil promotion was dropped. Consequently, Vestron promoted the movie themselves and initially aimed for a July premiere[42] earlier setting the premiere on August 16, 1987. The Vestron executives had planned to release the film in theaters for a weekend, and and so home video, since Vestron had been in the video distribution business organization before film production.[5]

Reception [edit]

Critical response [edit]

Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives the moving picture a rating of 69% based on reviews from 70 critics and a rating average of 6.20/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Like its winsome characters, Dirty Dancing uses impressive choreography and the ability of song to surmount a series of formidable obstacles."[43] Metacritic, another review aggregator, assigned the movie a weighted boilerplate score of 65 out of 100, based on 20 critics, indicating "mostly favorable reviews".[44] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the movie an average class of "A–" on an A+ to F scale.[45]

The New York Times described the movie as "a metaphor for America in the summer of 1963 – orderly, prosperous, bursting with good intentions, a sort of Yiddish-inflected Camelot."[46] Other reviews were more mixed: Gene Siskel gave the picture a "marginal Thumbs Up" as he liked Jennifer Grey's acting and development of her character, while Roger Ebert gave it "Thumbs Downwardly" due to its "idiot plot",[47] calling it a "tired and relentlessly predictable story of honey between kids from different backgrounds."[48] Fourth dimension mag was lukewarm, maxim, "If the ending of Eleanor Bergstein'southward script is besides neat and inspirational, the rough energy of the pic's song and trip the light fantastic toe does acquit 1 along, by the whispered doubts of better judgment."[49] In a retrospective review, Jezebel 's Irin Carmon called the film "the greatest movie of all time" equally "a great, brave movie for women" with "some subtle, retrospectively sharp-eyed critiques of form and gender."[50]

Ballgame rights advocates have called the film the "gold standard" for cinematic portrayals of abortion,[51] which author Yannis Tzioumakis described equally offering a "compassionate depiction of abortion in which the woman seeking an abortion was not demonized with the principal concerns being her health and preserving her capacity to bear children at a hereafter time rather than the ethical dilemma that might or might not inform her decision, a portrayal that is not necessarily bachelor in current films."[52]

The film drew adult audiences instead of the expected teens, with viewers rating the picture show highly.[29] Many filmgoers, after seeing the pic once, went back into the theater to watch it a 2d time.[29] Discussion-of-mouth promotion took the moving picture to the number i position in the United States, and in ten days it had cleaved the $10 1000000 marking. By November, it was also achieving international fame. Within vii months of release, it had brought in $63 1000000 in the US and boosted attendance in dance classes across America.[53] It was one of the highest-grossing films of 1987, earning $170 million worldwide.[54] [55]

The film's popularity continued to grow afterward its initial release. It was the number one video rental of 1988[56] and became the first film to sell a 1000000 copies on video. When the film was re-released in 1997, 10 years later on its original release, Swayze received his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame,[13] and videos were still selling at the charge per unit of over 40,000 per month.[13] As of 2005[update], it was selling a one thousand thousand DVDs per twelvemonth,[57] with over 10 million copies sold equally of 2007[update].[58]

A May 2007 survey by Uk's Sky Movies listed Dirty Dancing every bit number i on "Women's virtually-watched films", above the Star Wars trilogy, Grease, The Audio of Music, and Pretty Woman.[59] The picture show's popularity has also caused it to exist chosen "the Star Wars for girls."[6] [threescore] [61]

The film's music has also had considerable bear on. The closing song, "(I've Had) The Time of My Life", has been listed as the "third near popular vocal played at funerals" in the UK.[six]

In October 2021, amidst a dispute over abortion in Texas, magazine The Hollywood Reporter recommended the film as one to revisit on abortion in the cinema industry. Angie Han, writing for the mag, highlighted Eleanor Bergstein'south writing of the film.[62]

Awards and honors [edit]

Laurels Category Nominee(s) Result
University Awards[63] All-time Original Song "(I've Had) The Time of My Life"
Music by Franke Previte, John DeNicola and Donald Markowitz;
Lyrics past Franke Previte
Won
Amanda Awards Best Foreign Feature Film Emile Ardolino Won
ASCAP Pic and Boob tube Music Awards Near Performed Songs from Movement Pictures "Hungry Optics"
Music and Lyrics by Franke Previte and John DeNicola
Won
"(I've Had) The Fourth dimension of My Life"
Music by Franke Previte, John DeNicola and Donald Markowitz;
Lyrics by Franke Previte
Won
BMI Film & Telly Awards Most Performed Song from a Film "She's Like the Current of air"
Music and Lyrics by Patrick Swayze and Stacy Widelitz
Won
Deauville American Picture show Festival[64] International Critics Awards Emile Ardolino Nominated
Golden Globe Awards[65] Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy Nominated
Best Player in a Motion Pic – Musical or Comedy Patrick Swayze Nominated
All-time Extra in a Move Film – Musical or One-act Jennifer Grey Nominated
Best Original Vocal – Motion Picture "(I've Had) The Fourth dimension of My Life"
Music by Franke Previte, John DeNicola and Donald Markowitz;
Lyrics past Franke Previte
Won
Gilt Screen Awards Won
Grammy Awards[66] Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocals "(I've Had) The Fourth dimension of My Life" – Nib Medley and Jennifer Warnes Won
Best Song Written Specifically for a Picture or Idiot box "(I've Had) The Time of My Life"
Music by Franke Previte, John DeNicola and Donald Markowitz;
Lyrics by Franke Previte
Nominated
Independent Spirit Awards[67] Best Get-go Feature Emile Ardolino Won
Jupiter Awards All-time International Motion-picture show Nominated
Kids' Choice Awards Favorite Movie Actor Patrick Swayze Nominated
Goggle box State Awards Film Dance Sequence You Reenacted in Your Living Room "(I've Had) The Time of My Life" Won

The pic is recognized by American Motion picture Constitute in these lists:

  • 2002: AFI'due south 100 Years...100 Passions – #93[68]
  • 2004: AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs:
    • "(I've Had) The Time of My Life" – #86[69]
    • "Practise You Dearest Me" – Nominated[70]
  • 2005: AFI's 100 Years...100 Movie Quotes:
    • Johnny Castle: "Nobody puts Baby in a corner." – #98[71]
  • 2006: AFI's 100 Years...100 Cheers – Nominated[72]

Music [edit]

Rehearsals for the dancing, and some filming, used music from Bergstein's personal drove of gramophone records. When it came fourth dimension to select actual music for the film, Vestron chose Jimmy Ienner every bit music supervisor. Ienner, who had previously produced albums and songs for John Lennon and Iii Dog Night, opted to stick with much of the music that had already been used during filming and obtained licenses for the songs from Bergstein's collection. He too enlisted Swayze to sing the new song "She's Like the Air current". Swayze had written the vocal a few years earlier with Stacy Widelitz, originally intending for information technology to be used in the film Grandview, U.S.A. (1984).[73]

John Morris composed the film's score. The lyrics for the Kellermans' song that closes the talent testify were written specifically for the movie[29] and were sung to the melody of "Annie Lisle", a usually used theme for school alma maters.[74] Kenny Ortega and his banana Miranda Garrison chose the song for the finale past going through an entire box of tapes, listening to each one. According to Ortega, literally the final tape they listened to had "The Time of My Life", which they saw as the obvious pick.[75] [ verify ] Ienner then insisted that Neb Medley and Jennifer Warnes record information technology. The song won the 1988 Grammy Honour for Best Pop Operation by a Duo or Group, an Academy Award for Best Original Vocal, and the Golden Globe Award for All-time Original Vocal.[75] [76]

The moving-picture show'southward soundtrack started an oldies music revival,[77] and demand for the album caught RCA Records by surprise. The Dirty Dancing anthology spent eighteen weeks at number i on the Billboard 200 anthology sales charts and went platinum eleven times, selling more than 32 1000000 copies worldwide.[78] [79] It spawned a follow-upwardly multi-platinum album in February 1988, entitled More Dirty Dancing.[80]

Songs from the album that appeared on the charts included:[75]

  • "(I've Had) The Time of My Life," performed by Neb Medley and Jennifer Warnes, composed by Franke Previte, John deNicola, and Donald Markowitz – this song rose to #1 on the pop charts.[81]
  • "She's Like the Wind," performed past lead actor Patrick Swayze, equanimous past Swayze and Stacy Widelitz; this vocal peaked at #three in 1988.
  • "Hungry Optics," performed by Eric Carmen, equanimous by Franke Previte and John deNicola; this song peaked at #four in 1988.
  • "Yes," performed by Merry Clayton, composed past Neal Cavanaugh, Terry Fryer, and Tom Graf; this vocal peaked #45 in 1988.

Additionally, the resurgence in popularity of the oldies independent in the motion picture led to a re-release of The Contours' single "Do Yous Dear Me." "Do Y'all Honey Me" was featured in the moving picture just was omitted from the original soundtrack; it was included on More than Muddied Dancing. Upon being re-released, "Do You Love Me" became a surprise hit all over once more, this fourth dimension peaking at #11 (information technology originally hit #three back in 1962).[82]

Legacy [edit]

The iconic scene where Johnny confronts Jake with the line "Nobody puts Infant in a corner."[83]

Memorial stone for Patrick Swayze dedicated in 2009, at Mount Lake Hotel

Diverse images and lines from the picture show take worked their style into pop culture. Johnny Castle'southward line, "Nobody puts Infant in a corner", has been used in song lyrics, as the title of the "Nobody Puts Baby in a Corner" episode of the TV serial Veronica Mars, and as the title of a Fall Out Male child song. "Nobody puts Baby in a corner" was also quoted in Supernatural: when Dean says the line concerning his honey Impala and his brother Sam retorts that the line is from a Swayze movie; Dean responds: "Swayze always gets a pass". The line was parodied in the webcomic Looking for Group where Richard, one of the chief characters, uttered a variation involving his own name, and in Family Guy, where the scene is parodied by Baby's parents questioning Johnny due to her youth. In Sweden, feminist art group Sisters of Jam put the text "Nobody puts Baby in a corner" (in English) in white neon light at Umeå Bus Square (2008) and at Karlstad University (2012).[84]

Family unit Guy too parodies the scene where Baby first sees Johnny dancing with the staff. In the TV serial How I Met Your Female parent, Barney Stinson attempts to laissez passer off the Dirty Dancing story as the story of his own loss of virginity considering he is ashamed of his actual story; the original "Honey is Strange" scene is shown with Barney replacing Johnny.

The famous elevator scene is too widely referenced in popular civilisation. In the 2011 moving picture Crazy, Stupid, Love Ryan Gosling'due south character is able to perform the "move from Dirty Dancing" and does information technology with Emma Stone's character. In the soap opera Coronation Street the famous lift dance sequence was rehearsed for the 2022 wedding of Steve McDonald and Tracy Barlow and was also performed to "The Time of My Life" as in the flick.

The French film Heartbreaker (2010) pays homage to the film, as a plot detail, with some clips from the film shown and a "recreation" past the two main characters of the "lift" scene.

In the first episode of the TV serial New Girl, the female person lead Jess watches the film repeatedly after her suspension up. Jess continues to repeatedly watch the film afterward various break-ups throughout the series.

Alternate versions [edit]

Stage version [edit]

Muddy Dancing: The Classic Story on Stage musical at the Aldwych Theatre (2007)

The motion picture was adjusted for the phase in 2004 equally a musical, Dirty Dancing: The Classic Story on Phase. Produced by Jacobsen Entertainment in Australia for $6.5 million, it was written past Eleanor Bergstein and had the same songs as the film, plus a few extra scenes. Musical direction was by Chong Lim (one of the composers for the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney), and the initial product starred Kym Valentine as Baby and Sydney Dance Company's Josef Brown equally Johnny. Although reviews were mixed,[61] the production was a commercial success, selling over 200,000 tickets during its vi-month run.[55] It has likewise had sellout runs in Germany and in London's West Stop, where it opened at the Aldwych Theatre on Oct 23, 2006 with the highest pre-sell in London history, earning £half-dozen 1000000 (US$12 million).[5] [6] [61] As of March 2011[update], over one million people accept seen the musical in London, selling out half dozen months in advance.[85] The original West Terminate production closed in July 2011 subsequently a five-yr run, prior to a two-year national tour.[86] The show returned to the West End at the Piccadilly Theatre and ran from July 13, 2013 to February 22, 2022 earlier resuming its bout of the United Kingdom and the Democracy of Ireland.[87]

A New York production was in the planning stage in 2006,[61] with the show first starting in other Northward American cities. It broke box office records in May 2007 for its kickoff such venue, selling $ii million on the outset day of ticket sales in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The production opened on November 15, 2007 at the Purple Alexandra Theatre, with an all-Canadian cast, except for Monica West (Infant Housman), Britta Lazenga (Penny), and Al Sapienza (Jake Housman). After Toronto, the musical opened in Chicago in previews on September 28, 2008 and officially on October 19, 2008, running through January 17, 2009,[88] followed past Boston (February 7 – March xv, 2009) and Los Angeles.[89] [ninety] [91]

An official American tour began in September 2022 at the National Theatre in Washington, DC with dates scheduled in 31 cities. Previews started Baronial 26 and the official opening night was on September two.[92] The original tour's cast included Jillian Mueller equally Frances "Infant" Houseman, Samuel Pergande equally Johnny Castle, Jenny Winton as Penny Johnson, Mark Elliot Wilson equally Dr. Jake Houseman, Emily Rice every bit Lisa Houseman, Gary Lynch as Max Kellerman, Jesse Liebman as Neil Kellerman, Caralyn Kozlowski as Marjorie Houseman, Sam Edgerly as Robbie Gould, Jerome Harmann-Hardeman equally Tito Suarez, Doug Carpenter as Billy Kostecki, Amanda Brantley every bit Vivian Pressman, Jon Drake as Moe Pressman, and Herman Petras as Mr. Schumacher.[93]

Tours and TV bear witness [edit]

Dirty Dancing has appeared in other forms than the phase version. In 1988, a music tour named Dirty Dancing: Live in Concert, featuring Nib Medley and Eric Carmen,[75] played ninety cities in three months.[94] Besides in 1988, the CBS network launched a Muddied Dancing television receiver series, however with none of the original bandage or coiffure. The series was canceled afterward only a few episodes.

Sequel [edit]

In 2020, a sequel to the film was appear. Jennifer Gray will reprise the role as Infant Houseman.[95]

Prequel [edit]

In 2004, a prequel of the film was released, entitled Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights. It tells the story of a sheltered American teenager learning almost life through dance, when her family relocates to Havana, Republic of cuba merely earlier the 1959 Cuban Revolution. Swayze was paid $five million to announced in a cameo role equally a dance instructor.

20th ceremony releases [edit]

For the 20th ceremony in 2007, the motion picture was re-released in theaters with additional footage, while the original motion-picture show version was re-released on DVD with deleted scenes, and included writer commentary.[96] At the same time, Codemasters released Dirty Dancing: The Video Game.[97] In the U.k., the anniversary was marked by a reality Idiot box testify based on the movie; titled Dirty Dancing: The Time of Your Life, the Tv set show was filmed at the Mountain Lake resort.

In the UK, to marker the 20th anniversary of the motion picture, Channel Five broadcast a special documentary called Seriously Dirty Dancing. It was presented by Dawn Porter, an investigative journalist and a self-confessed Dingy Dancing addict. The documentary was very successful, beingness Channel 5'southward highest rated documentary of 2007. Porter visited the ready of the picture, met other Dirty Dancing fanatics, and learned the final trip the light fantastic toe, which she performed at the end of the documentary in front end of family and friends.

Remake [edit]

In August 2011, Lionsgate, which owns the moving picture rights, announced their plan to remake the film. Information technology was confirmed that the studio had hired the motion picture'due south choreographer, Kenny Ortega, to directly. "We believe that the timing couldn't exist amend to modernize this story on the big screen, and we are proud to have Kenny Ortega at the helm", Joe Drake, president of Lionsgate'due south Motility Picture Group, explained about the project. A miniseries version of Dingy Dancing had been scheduled to be shot in Western Northward Carolina.[98] As of July 29, 2015[update], the miniseries has been put on agree.[99]

In December 2015, ABC ordered a three-60 minutes musical remake of Muddy Dancing, starring Abigail Breslin, Filly Prattes, Debra Messing, Sarah Hyland, Nicole Scherzinger, Billy Dee Williams & Shane Harper.[100] [101] [102] [103] [104] It aired on May 24, 2017.[iv] It received negative reviews from a majority of critics.[105]

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External links [edit]

  • Dirty Dancing at the American Film Found Itemize
  • Dingy Dancing at IMDb
  • Dirty Dancing at the TCM Movie Database
  • Dirty Dancing at Box Function Mojo
  • Dirty Dancing at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Muddy Dancing at Metacritic

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirty_Dancing

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