EMBARGOED UNTIL JULY 10, 2006
Dancing's Dream Team is back Oct 17...
The Astaire and Rogers Collection:
Volume 2
Carefree, Flying Down To Rio, The Gay Divorcee, Roberta, Story of Vernon and Irene Castle
All Stunningly Remastered and New to DVD
from Warner Home Video
Also, Astaire and Rogers Ultimate Collector's Edition (The Complete Film Collection)
with all 10 Films, New Documentary, Collectible Photo Cards, Replicas of Original Press Books and Soundtrack CD Sampler
Burbank, Calif. July 10, 2006 - On October 17, Warner Home Video (WHV) will release
The Astaire and Rogers Collection: Volume Two, completing the collection of films that starred Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. Last year's release of Volume One featured the critically acclaimed Top Hat and Swing Time, along with Follow the Fleet, Shall We Dance and The Barkleys of Broadway, the couple's final film together. Included in the Collection are: Carefree, Flying Down To Rio, The Gay Divorcee, Roberta and Story of Vernon and Irene Castle.
All five films are new to DVD and have been newly remastered. The five disc giftset will sell for $59.92 SRP. All titles will also be available individually for $19.97 SRP. Orders for all are due September 12.
Also being offered for the first time is the Astaire and Rogers Ultimate Collector's Edition
featuring all 10 of the dance duo's films along with the documentary Astaire and Rogers: Partners in Rhythm, a glorious salute that includes candid photos, behind-the-scene tidbits and sidelights about famed collaborators Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern and George Gershwin, among others. This edition includes an exclusive bonus audio CD with 10 soundtrack songs from the team's movies, set of collectible behind-the-scenes photo cards, reproductions of the Shall We Dance and Roberta press books and a mail-in offer for four Astaire and Rogers movie posters. The 12-disc giftset is the definitive set to own, and will sell for $99.92 SRP.
For consumers who already own Volume One, a special Ultimate Collector's Edition will be available at a price (not yet determined) which will contain empty sleeves for the five remastered and restored films released last year.
"We're excited to be following up last year's hugely successful Volume One, said George Feltenstein, WHV's Senior Vice President Theatrical Catalog Marketing. "These films are some of the crown jewels of our peerless library and we went to great lengths to create the extras as well as to develop plentiful memorabilia and special material for the Ultimate Collectors Edition."
Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers
Ginger Rogers had already built a career in Hollywood, starring in two dozen movies before first appearing with Fred Astaire in 1933's Flying Down to Rio.
In comparison, Astaire had yet to make his mark on the big screen, starring in only one film before his pairing with Rogers. (The legendary Paramount screen test report read simply, "Can't sing. Can't act. Slightly balding. Can dance a little.").
Astaire would prove his detractors wrong in Flying Down to Rio.
Though cast as supporting players, Astaire and Rogers's incredible energy turned "The Carioca" dance number into the highlight of the film. Movie executives saw the duo's star potential and quickly gave them leading roles.
Their first was 1934's, The Gay Divorcee, a huge hit nominated for three Academy Awards and winning one for Best Music. The film also established the highly successful Astaire-Rogers formula - a devil-may-care playboy and a sweet, spunky girl get into a tangle of mistaken identities, fall in love on the dance floor, resolve their misunderstandings in the nick of time and foxtrot their way to happily ever after.
Astaire and Rogers captivated audiences in eight more films, ending their partnership in 1939 with The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle. Rogers sought to prove herself as a dramatic actress and succeeded when she won a Best Actress Oscar in 1941 for her role in Kitty Foyle: The Natural History of a Woman.
Astaire, while appearing in a variety of notable movie and television roles, never gave up the dancing bug and went on to partner with Eleanor Powell, Rita Hayworth, Cyd Charisse and Barrie Chase -- not to mention a few turns with Gene Kelly.
Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers would reunite on screen for one last time in 1949's The Barkleys of Broadway.
The Astaire and Rogers Collection: Volume Two
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