A Touch of Magic (1961) is a cult-classic General Motors sponsored-film short musical.
The film begins with a designer at the drawing board, daydreaming about a 1920s couple who travel to the Middle Ages; the Man saves the Woman from a wizard ("an evil charmer") and a dragon, only to abruptly discover that they are all performing for an audience in the 1960s. The film then features the couple courting in General Motors' latest cars. Now married, the Man and Woman next appear in an early 1960s style home of the future with a magical kitchen; they host a housewarming party attended by invisible guests. We last see the couple dancing dreamily on a cloud.[1]
The film, which went into the public domain, was produced and directed by Victor D. Solow through MPO Productions. Joseph Moncure March and Edward Eliscu wrote the script and lyrics; Sol Kaplan, the score. It starred dancers Tad Tadlock (real name Thelma Tadlock) and James Mitchell.
This is one in a series of Populuxe films and events sponsored by General Motors. The series began with the General Motors Futurerama exhibit at the 1939 World's Fair, which displayed a vision of the future involving urban sprawl and multilane limited access freeways. GM's later Motorama exhibits continued this theme into the 1960s. A Touch of Magic was the film for the 1961 Motorama.
Selected quotes
- Man - "This dream house you and I will share/Was planned for us by Frigidaire"
- Man and Woman - "Aladdin's lamp has had its day/This modern magic is here to stay"
- Man and Woman - "A touch of magic every day/Is the charm that goes the long long way,/It keeps our spirits young and gay/And the magic is constantly new/In a world full of magic with..."
See also
- Design for Dreaming, another GM film in the same series, also starring Tad Tadlock
References
- ^ Burgess, Helen J.; Hamming, Jeanne (2014). Highways of the Mind. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 179. ISBN 9780812291797.
External links
- A Touch of Magic at the Internet Movie Database
- A Touch of Magic is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive
- Sublett, Jesse (December 13, 1996). "Motoramas in Pink Pajamas and Other Illusions from When Life Was Mighty Swell". Austin Chronicle. Texas. Archived from the original on September 12, 2015. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
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