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Grace of My Heart - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Grace of My Heart

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Grace of My Heart
Directed by Allison Anders
Written by Allison Anders
Starring Illeana Douglas
Matt Dillon
Eric Stoltz
John Turturro
Distributed by Gramercy Pictures
Release date(s) September 13, 1996
Running time 1 hr. 56 min.
Language English
IMDb profile

Grace of My Heart is a 1996 film from writer-director Allison Anders. The story is set in the pop-music world of the 1960s, and the personal life and career trajectory of its protagonist, Denise Waverly (played by Illeana Douglas), strongly parallel those of singer-songwriter Carole King. The soundtrack features a variety of songs, by such artists as Burt Bacharach, Elvis Costello, Joni Mitchell and Jill Sobule, which replicate the musical style that emerged from the Brill Building, New York's legendary music factory during the heyday of girl groups and "pre-fab" acts like The Monkees.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

Douglas's "Denise Waverly" is the stage name dreamed up for one Edna Buxton, an heiress from a prominent Philadelphia family, by her agent Joel Millner (played by John Turturro) in order to give Buxton credibility. Prior to meeting Millner, and reworking one of her ballads for an all male doo-wop group, Edna wins a talent contest that turns out to be more publicity stunt than viable career opportunity. Millner discourages Waverly from singing and encourages her to be a songwriter instead. After partnering with Millner and his doo-wop act, the newly rechristened Denise Waverly moves into a cramped office in the Brill Building and writes songs for The Luminaries, a girl group she befriends and urges Millner to represent. Millner doubts the commercial viability of the act but takes a chance, and The Luminaries, led by Doris Shelley (Jennifer Leigh Warren), enjoy unprecedented success. In the movie's mythos, Denise is credited with sparking the craze for girl groups at a time when female voices are scarcely heard on the airwaves. Flush with success, Denise becomes professionally and romantically linked with Howard Cazsatt (Eric Stoltz), a fellow Brill Building tunesmith who evinces a beatnik pose. The two marry but quickly divorce due to Cazsatt's infidelities. She then has a destined-to-end affair with an older, married man who is a popular DJ. Eager to begin singing again, Waverly resettles in California during the hippie movement and struggles through yet another doomed relationship (with a popular singer/producer played by Matt Dillon) before reclaiming her artistic voice.

[edit] Real life particulars

[edit] The Goffin-King connection

In real life, Carole King and her first husband Gerry Goffin were based in the Brill Building and penned such hits as "Will You Love Me Tomorrow" (recorded by The Shirelles),"The Loco-Motion" (introduced by Little Eva, the Goffin-King's babysitter), "One Fine Day" (a hit for The Chiffons) and many others. In Grace of My Heart, "One Fine Day" is paid tribute in "Born to Love That Boy," the first song Waverly composes for The Luminaries (per the lyric, "I don't care what the other girls say/One fine day he'll marry me"). A bouncy ode to the maxim that love is blind, "Born to Love That Boy," written by Goffin and Larry Klein, also recalls the thematically similar "He's A Rebel," a Gene Pitney penned tune made famous by The Crystals. Louise Goffin, daughter of Goffin and King, shares songwriting credit with her father on "Between Two Worlds" (performed on the soundtrack by Shawn Colvin). The elder Goffin's stamp can also be found on "In Another World," the tune that establishes Waverly as a hit songwriter; the band Los Lobos also contributes to the track. Finally, the album that shares the film's name, Grace of My Heart, is analogous to King's 1971 breakthrough album Tapestry. The Grace of My Heart album is depicted as Waverly's second attempt to sing her own songs in a commercially viable way, and she succeeds on a platinum scale (sales over one million). In real life, Tapestry was King's second serious attempt to sing her own songs in a commercially viable way, and she succeeded on an even greater scale than is shown in the film, as Tapestry sat at U.S. #1 for 15 weeks and stayed on the charts for over 6 years, going platinum 10 times over.

[edit] Stand-ins for Phil Spector, Lesley Gore, Ellie Greenwich, etc.

Elsewhere, real-life permeates Grace of My Heart in several forms, such as Turturro's character who invites comparisons to both Phil Spector (mainly because of his dark, wig-like coif) and Don Kirshner, while The Luminaries' Doris Shelley suggests both Shirley Owen and Doris Coley of The Shirelles. Also, former teen duo, David and Andrew Williams (nephews of crooner Andy Williams), are featured as Everly Brothers soundalikes. Similarly, Bridget Fonda has an extended cameo as Kelly Porter, a dewey faced ingenue not unlike Lesley Gore, well known for bubblegum angst like "It's My Party" and "You Don't Own Me." The lush ballad "My Secret Love" hints at Porter's lesbianism in a nod to Gore's own professed sexuality. Gore co-wrote the song, which is dubbed by Miss Lily Banquette of retro-lounge band, Combustible Edison. Further, Bruce Davison plays a disc jockey whose moniker, John Murray, evokes memories of radio's influential Murray the K. Just as in real life Murray the K was an early, ardent supporter of The Beatles, in the film it is John Murray who explains to Denise Waverly how The Fab Four are about to revolutionize the music industry.

Besides King, Goffin and Spector, the Brill Building was home base for songwriting duo Ellie Greenwich and Jeff Barry, as well as Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. In Grace of My Heart, these artists, and Greenwich in particular, are referenced musically via "I Do," The Luminaries' stylistic match for "Chapel of Love," originally written by Spector, Greenwich and Barry for The Ronettes but best remembered for the version produced by Leiber and Stoller for The Dixie Cups. The "doo-whaddy-whaddy" refrain of "I Do" also invites comparisons to Greenwich's "Doo-Wah-Diddy" which was recorded by The Exciters and Manfred Mann. Like King, however, Greenwich has no actual contributions to the movie soundtrack. '"I Do" is instead credited to Carole Bayer Sager and Dave Stewart (formerly of Eurythmics).

[edit] The Brian Wilson Connection

Matt Dillon portrays a singer/producer later in the movie, with whom Waverly falls in love. His character, Jay, is the lead singer of a surf music band who is highly respected for his creative methods of producing records. However, he becomes obsessed with his latest musical project and becomes a recluse. In all these aspects, his character begs comparison with real-life Beach Boys' frontman Brian Wilson. However, while in the movie his character becomes romantically involved with Waverly and eventually commits suicide by drowning, in real life Wilson and King were not romantically involved, and Wilson did not commit suicide, although his musician brother Dennis did die by alcohol-related drowning.

[edit] The music

[edit] Bacharach-Costello

Though Waverly sings throughout the movie, Douglas is dubbed by Kristen Vigard. At the beginning, Edna does a teasing version of "Hey There," first heard in the musical The Pajama Game and further popularized by Rosemary Clooney. Another of Waverly's big musical moments occurs when she goes into the studio to lay down tracks for "God Give Me Strength," an expensively produced single that fails to generate much excitement on the charts, thus alluding to Phil Spector's recording of "River Deep, Mountain High" for Tina Turner (written by Spector, Greenwich and Barry). In real-life "God Give Me Strength" is a Bacharach-Costello collaboration, and it is their version, not Vigard's, on the soundtrack CD. Costello also wrote "Unwanted Number," which, in the movie, is crafted by Waverly and Cazsatt as a tune for The Luminaries. The song causes a scandal because it tells a sympathetic story of an unmarried pregnant teenager, bold stuff for the early '60's, though somewhat comparable to Goffin-King's "Will You Love Me Tomorrow," or the dubious "He Hit Me (And It Felt Like a Kiss)" (The Crystals), as well as Diana Ross & the Supremes' "Love Child" or even Janis Ian's inter-racial lament, "Society's Child."

[edit] The soundtrack CD

Although Grace of My Heart is chock full of musical sequences, the selections have been pared down for the soundtrack CD. For example, Doris Shelley, with or without The Luminaries, performs a half dozen tunes onscreen but is limited to three selections on the companion CD: "Born to Love That Boy," "I Do," and "Unwanted Number." (The Luminaries are voiced by the now defunct girl group For Real.) Likewise, The Williams Brothers are depicted harmonizing two songs, "Heartbreak Kid" and "Love Doesn't Ever Fail Us," but only the latter appears on the soundtrack disc. Additionally, Vigard's rendition of "Hey There" is excluded from the CD, and the "demo" of "In Another World" depicted is jettisoned in favor of The Stylettes' rendition (via Portrait). Vigard's "God Give Me Strength" was also not available on the soundtrack; instead the Elvis Costello/Burt Bacharach recording was used.

Two artists who survive the screen-to-disc cut are Joni Mitchell and Jill Sobule. Sobule, best known for the 1995 novelty hit "I Kissed a Girl" has a walk-on and also sings the countrified waltz "Truth Is You Lied," complete with easy listening, Ray Conniff style background chorus. Mitchell, one of King's contemporaries in the Southern Californian folk-rock movement, is represented by "Man From Mars," which she wrote though Vigard supplies the plaintive vocal. (A version which featured Mitchell's vocal on the exact same music was on the initial pressing of roughly 40,000 copies. This version was recalled and the soundtrack was re-released one week later with Kristen Vigard's vocal, as heard in the movie.)[1]. Mitchell re-recorded the song with different-styled music for her follow-up album Taming the Tiger. The Mitchell version from Grace of My Heart is very hard to come by.

The soundtrack was produced by Larry Klein, who had been Joni Mitchell's husband and producer for years but had divorced her prior to the making of this soundtrack. He contributed to the writing of several songs on the soundtrack and appears briefly several times in the movie as a recording engineer.

[edit] Miscellaneous

Grace of My Heart was Anders's fourth feature film (see Border Radio, 1987; Gas Food Lodging, 1992; Mi Vida Loca, 1993). Martin Scorsese is listed in the credits as Grace of My Heart's executive producer. The movie was co-edited by Thelma Schoonmaker, an Oscar winner for her work on Scorsese's Raging Bull, The Aviator (and now The Departed). The cinematographer is Jean-Yves Escoffier; Francois Sequin is the Production designer, and the costumes are by Susan Bertram. The cast is rounded out by Lynne Adams, Kathy Barbour, Natalie Venetia Belcon, Peter Fonda, Chris Isaak, Lucinda Jenney, Patsy Kensit, Christina Pickles, Richard Schiff and Tracy Vilar.

The movie was released in the fall of 1996, just ahead of Oscar winning actor Tom Hanks' directorial debut That Thing You Do!, which likewise covered the early to mid 1960s pop music scene and featured original, retro-styled songs such as the Oscar nominated title track by Adam Schlesinger, of Fountains of Wayne.

[edit] References

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