Astaire by numbers: Time and the straight white male dancer

  • Todd Decker

    Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

    1 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    Astaire by Numbers looks at every second of dancing Fred Astaire committed to film in the studio era--all six hours, thirty-four minutes, and fifty seconds. Using a quantitative digital humanities approach, as well as previously untapped production records, author Todd Decker takes the reader onto the set and into the rehearsal halls and editing rooms where Astaire created his seemingly perfect film dances. Watching closely in this way reveals how Astaire used the technically sophisticated resources of the Hollywood film making machine to craft a singular career in mass entertainment as a straight white man who danced. Decker dissects Astaire's work at the level of the shot, the cut, and the dance step to reveal the aesthetic and practical choices that yielded Astaire's dancing figure on screen. He offers new insights into how Astaire secured his masculinity and his heterosexuality, along with a new understanding of Astaire's whiteness, which emerges in both the sheer extent of his work and the larger implications of his famous "full figure" framing of his dancing body. Astaire by Numbers rethinks this towering straight white male figure from the ground up by digging deeply into questions of race, gender, and sexuality, ultimately offering a complete re-assessment of a twentieth-century icon of American popular culture.

    Original languageEnglish
    PublisherOxford University Press
    Number of pages456
    ISBN (Print)9780197643587
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Jan 19 2023

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Astaire by numbers: Time and the straight white male dancer'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this