Xanadu
Brief Synopsis
A mythological muse helps an artist and a former big-band clarinetist open a roller disco.
Cast & Crew
Read More
Robert Greenwald
Director
Olivia Newton-john
Michael Beck
Gene Kelly
Lynn Latham
James J. Sloyan
Film Details
MPAA Rating
Genre
Musical
Adaptation
Fantasy
Period
Romance
Release Date
1980
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 33m
Synopsis
A mythological muse helps an artist and a former big-band clarinetist open a roller disco.
Director
Robert Greenwald
Director
Cast
Olivia Newton-john
Michael Beck
Gene Kelly
Lynn Latham
James J. Sloyan
Melody Santangelo
Re Styles
Bobby Walker
Noreen Xavier
Hilary Beane
Matt Lattanzi
Madison Arnold
Michael Springer
Darcell Wynne
Tony Selesnick
Roger Steen
Bill Spooner
Rick Anderson
Marilyn Tokuda
Melinda Phelps
Brenda Lee
David Tress
Cynthia Leake
Stephen Pearlman
Dimitra Arliss
Katie Hanley
Leroy Jones
Michael Donley
Tykin Mikals
Victoria Mansi
Sandahl Bergman
Clyde Barrett
Mark Ziebell
Shelley Pang
Yolanda Hernandez
Miranda Garrison
Paul Sachelle
Ellen Cadwallader
Judith Bernett
Hillary Carlip
Coral Browne
Voice
Cindy Spoonr
Cheryl Hangland
Dale Leeche
Alan C. Peterson
Francisco Torres
Lynda Chase
Christine Nazareth
Russell Clark
Yvette Van Voorhees
Jeff Osser
Gary Dion
Randy T Williams
Micky Mcmeel
Lena Pousette
Teda Bracci
Bebe Drake
Michael James
John Waybill
Tim O'brien
Fred Mccarren
Lonny Carabajal
Patty Keene
The Mumm Brothers
Fred Kirby
Derrick Cross
Sally Pansing
Renn Woods
Kathy Singleton
Juliette Marshall
Adria Wilson
Yvette Matthews
Jei Guerrero
Glenn Nash
Deborah Jenssen
Church Ortiz
Sandra Gray
Ira Newborn
Annie Behringer
Tom Sachelle
Michael Watkins
Cheryl Baxter
Lise Lang
Aharon Ipale
Jim Thompson
Michele Martinez
Arlette Patterson
Contessa Cohn
Cherise Bate
Susan Inouye
Teri Beckerman
Vince Welnick
Marisol Garcia
Stelio Calagias
Melvin Jones
Wilfrid Hyde-white
Voice
Vic Prim
Kyle Hanford
Veda Jackson
Robert Winters
Michael Cotton
Marty Davis
Maria V Langston
Jo Ann Harris
Prairie Prince
Crew
Ann Ashcraft
Production Assistant
Randall Balsmeyer
Animator
Larry Barbier
Photography
Barbara Black-sterne
Art Department
Harry Blake
Makeup
Don Bluth
Animator
Michael Boddicker
Special Effects
Garrett Brown
Steadicam Operator
Milton C Burrow
Sound Editor
Bill Butler
Effects Assistant
Allison Caine
Consultant
Paul Cajero
Production Assistant
Jim Coleman
Animator
Candida Conery
Hair
John W Corso
Production Designer
Fred Craig
Production Associate
Olga Craig
Production Associate
Burt Dalton
Special Effects
Richard Christian Danus
Screenplay
Lisa Day
Assistant Editor
Barry Devorzon
Music
Alan Disler
Assistant Camera Operator
Andy Evans
Special Effects
John Farrar
Music
John Farrar
Song
Darcy Fleming
Consultant
Mike Fleming
Consultant
Jaroslav Gebr
Art Department
Walter Gest
Sound
Larry Gordon
Producer
Robert Gravenor
Sound
Richard Alan Greenberg
Visual Effects
Richard Alan Greenberg
Titles
Betty Abbott Griffin
Script Supervisor
Dick Hazard
Original Music
Richard Hewson
Music Arranger
Tina Hirsch
Associate Editor
Phyllis Huffman
Casting
Joel Hyniek
Photography
Joe Jiuliano
Animation Photography
Gene Kelly
Song Performer
Victor J Kemper
Director Of Photography
David J Kimball
Sound
Rick Kline
Sound
Dan Kolsrud
Assistant Director
Lee Kramer
Executive Producer
Sherman Labby
Production
Dorse A Lanpher
Animator
Vera Lanpher
Effects Assistant
John Lindahl
Animation Photography
Joseph P Lucky
Set Designer
Judy Lynn
Effects Assistant
Jeff Lynne
Music
Jeff Lynne
Song
William L Manger
Sound Editor
Lou Mann
Set Designer
Bobbie Mannix
Costume Designer
Joan Marcus
Consultant
Lisa Marmon
Assistant Director
Marc E Meyer
Set Decorator
Donald O Mitchell
Sound
Terry D Nelson
Associate Producer
Terry D Nelson
Unit Production Manager
Joseph Nemec
Set Designer
Olivia Newton-john
Song Performer
William M Nicholson
Sound
Carmen Oliver
Animator
Kenny Ortega
Choreographer
George Osaki
Consultant
Venita Ozols-graham
Assistant Director
Mark A Peterson
Costume Supervisor
Victor Petrotta
Props
Larry Plastrick
Editor
Mark Plastrik
Animation Photography
Robert Arnold Reich
Sound Editor
Cliff Richard
Song Performer
Dick Ritchie
Consultant
Gary Ritchie
Sound
Alex Romero
Digital Effects Supervisor
Jerry Rosenthal
Sound Editor
Larry Rovetti
Color
Andy Rovins
Boom Operator
Marc Rubel
Screenplay
Martin Samuel
Hair
Gaylin Schultz
Key Grip
Louis Schwartzberg
Photography
Rick Sharp
Makeup
Joel Silver
Coproducer
Craig Smith
Makeup
Laurie Stevens
Art Department
Kenneth Stytzer
Digital Effects Supervisor
James Szalapski
Photography
Robert C. Thomas
Camera Operator
Jerry Trent
Choreographer
Dennis Virkler
Editor
Charles Warren
Animation Photography
Brian Williams
Visual Effects
Pamela J Wise
Costumes
Film Details
MPAA Rating
Genre
Musical
Adaptation
Fantasy
Period
Romance
Release Date
1980
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 33m
Articles
Xanadu -
The idea behind Xanadu came from co-producer Joel Silver. Silver was developing projects for the Lawrence Gordon Productions company through Warner Bros, but that studio later dropped Xanadu and it was picked up by Universal Pictures. Xanadu was originally conceived as a low-budget disco roller-skating film to capitalize on the then current crazes, but the budget was boosted to $10 million when singer Newton-John, then hot off the success of Grease (1978) was added to the cast, and later rose to $20 million. Gene Kelly agreed to appear in the film only if he was not required to dance, yet would later dance and roller skate. It would be Kelly's last dramatic role.
Directed by Robert Greenwald from a screenplay by Richard Christian Danus and Marc Reid Rubel, Xanadu began filming on September 18, 1979 at various locations in Los Angeles, including the Pan-Pacific Auditorium, which was used for exterior shots of the Xanadu nightclub. The City of Los Angeles would not grant permission for the filmmakers to shoot inside the building, so Greenwald was forced to create interiors on Hollywood Center Studios' Stage 4. The Pan-Pacific Auditorium, an iconic LA Art Deco landmark, had fallen on hard times by the 1970s and would burn down in the 1990s.
The film's soundtrack album went Double Platinum in the United States on the strength of Newton-John's title track Xanadu (which would go to number one on the Billboard charts in the United States),Magic, Suddenly a duet Newton-John sang with Cliff Richard, and other songs by The Tubes and ELO.
Xanadu made back its cost for Universal when it went into general release in September 1980, earning $22.8 million at the box office, but was generally panned by the critics. Roger Ebert wrote in The Chicago Sun-Times that the film was "a mushy and limp musical fantasy, so insubstantial it keeps evaporating before our eyes. It's one of those rare movies in which every scene seems to be the final scene; it's all ends and no beginnings, right up to its actual end, which is a cheat. [...] [I]t's not as bad as Can't Stop the Music (1980) [but] [i]t's pretty bad, though." While it was a critical flop, Xanadu and Can't Stop the Music inspired John (J.B.) Wilson to create the satirical Golden Raspberry Awards, given annually to the worst films of the year on the night before the Academy Awards. At the first Razzie Awards, Xanadu earned six nominations, with Greenwald winning for "Worst Director." In 2005, it would be nominated again as "The Worst Musical of Our First 25 Years." Despite the Raspberries, this wasn't the end of Xanadu; a 2007 Broadway adaptation of the film was a surprise hit starring Tony Roberts, Cheyenne Jackson, and Jane Krakowski, and was nominated for several Tony Awards.
SOURCES:
The AFI Catalog of Feature Films
Ebert, Roger "Xanadu (1980)" The Chicago Sun-Times 1 Sep 80
The Internet Movie Database
By Lorraine LoBianco
Xanadu -
Xanadu (1980) was a remake of the Rita Hayworth film Down to Earth (1947) about Terpsichore, the Muse of Dance who falls in love with a mortal. Xanadu has Terpsichore (Olivia Newton-John), one of the Nine Muses of Olympia, fall in love with mortal Sonny (Michael Beck), a frustrated painter who creates large copies of record albums for store advertising but dreams of being an important artist. While working on an album by a group named The Nine Sisters, Sonny meets the mysterious, roller-skating Kira, who is really Terpsichore in disguise. Sonny learns that his friend Danny (Gene Kelly), a former 1940s big-band clarinetist and nightclub owner, lost his own muse forty years before when his girlfriend left him. That girlfriend looked a lot like Kira, who befriends the two men and encourages them to open a new nightclub called Xanadu. Also in the cast were Matt Lattanzi (who would later marry Olivia Newton-John), and veteran actors Wilfrid Hyde-White and Coral Browne.
The idea behind Xanadu came from co-producer Joel Silver. Silver was developing projects for the Lawrence Gordon Productions company through Warner Bros, but that studio later dropped Xanadu and it was picked up by Universal Pictures. Xanadu was originally conceived as a low-budget disco roller-skating film to capitalize on the then current crazes, but the budget was boosted to $10 million when singer Newton-John, then hot off the success of Grease (1978) was added to the cast, and later rose to $20 million. Gene Kelly agreed to appear in the film only if he was not required to dance, yet would later dance and roller skate. It would be Kelly's last dramatic role.
Directed by Robert Greenwald from a screenplay by Richard Christian Danus and Marc Reid Rubel, Xanadu began filming on September 18, 1979 at various locations in Los Angeles, including the Pan-Pacific Auditorium, which was used for exterior shots of the Xanadu nightclub. The City of Los Angeles would not grant permission for the filmmakers to shoot inside the building, so Greenwald was forced to create interiors on Hollywood Center Studios' Stage 4. The Pan-Pacific Auditorium, an iconic LA Art Deco landmark, had fallen on hard times by the 1970s and would burn down in the 1990s.
The film's soundtrack album went Double Platinum in the United States on the strength of Newton-John's title track Xanadu (which would go to number one on the Billboard charts in the United States),Magic, Suddenly a duet Newton-John sang with Cliff Richard, and other songs by The Tubes and ELO.
Xanadu made back its cost for Universal when it went into general release in September 1980, earning $22.8 million at the box office, but was generally panned by the critics. Roger Ebert wrote in The Chicago Sun-Times that the film was "a mushy and limp musical fantasy, so insubstantial it keeps evaporating before our eyes. It's one of those rare movies in which every scene seems to be the final scene; it's all ends and no beginnings, right up to its actual end, which is a cheat. [...] [I]t's not as bad as Can't Stop the Music (1980) [but] [i]t's pretty bad, though." While it was a critical flop, Xanadu and Can't Stop the Music inspired John (J.B.) Wilson to create the satirical Golden Raspberry Awards, given annually to the worst films of the year on the night before the Academy Awards. At the first Razzie Awards, Xanadu earned six nominations, with Greenwald winning for "Worst Director." In 2005, it would be nominated again as "The Worst Musical of Our First 25 Years." Despite the Raspberries, this wasn't the end of Xanadu; a 2007 Broadway adaptation of the film was a surprise hit starring Tony Roberts, Cheyenne Jackson, and Jane Krakowski, and was nominated for several Tony Awards.
SOURCES:
The AFI Catalog of Feature Films
Ebert, Roger "Xanadu (1980)" The Chicago Sun-Times 1 Sep 80
The Internet Movie Database
By Lorraine LoBianco
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1980
Re-released in United States on Video July 13, 1994
Formerly distributed by MCA Home Video.
Released in USA on laserdisc December 1988.
Released in United States 1980
Re-released in United States on Video July 13, 1994