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Title Tanz in den Wolken
Originaltitle: Pennies from heaven
Regie: Herbert Ross
Darsteller: Bob Hoskins, Cheryl Campbell, Gemma Craven
Erscheinungsjahr: 1978
Land: UK
Stichwort: Epilepsie, epileptischer Anfall, Anfälle
Release: 07.03.1978

Handlung
Ein erfolgloser Verkäufer von Notenblättern im Chicago der 30er Jahre gerät immer tiefer ins Unglück, flüchtet sich aber in die Scheinwelt des Musicals und verklärt in seiner Fantasie seine Mißerfolge zu glanzvollen Tanznummern. Auf einer seiner Reisen überfährt er beinahe einen an Epilepsie leidenden alten und hinfälligen Vagabunden, den Akkordion-Mann, dessen Elend ihn an das eigene gemahnt.



Weitere Info
Episode 1 - 'Down Sunnyside Lane'Originally BBC1, 7th March 1978

1935: England during the Great Depression. Arthur Parker, a cockney songsheet salesman, believes in the sugary sentiments of the songs he peddles. When he is refused sex by his repressed wife Joan, he suddenly appears to burst into song, lip-synching to the voice of Elsie Carlisle singing 'The Clouds Will Soon Roll By'. Back in mundane 'reality', Arthur drives to Gloucester in a desperate attempt to sell his sheet music. En route, he nearly runs over a stammering epileptic old tramp, The Accordion Man, whose plight strangely seems to mirror his own. Meanwhile, at home, Joan receives a visit from a smooth vacuum cleaner salesman. When he tries to seduce her with a kiss, Joan spurns his advances, in the same way as she had earlier spurned Arthur's.

In Gloucester, Arthur is awestruck by the appearance in a music shop of Eileen Everson, a demure schoolteacher who seems to represent the kind of girl he dreams about in the songs. Following her out of the shop, he watches as she puts two pennies in the hat of The Accordion Man, who is playing hymns on a street corner. Later, Arthur briefly spies Eileen in a pub but when she flees his initial approach, he has to make do with an adulterous fling with a local goodtime girl he picks up in the bar. In his head, however, he dreams of himself and Eileen dancing 'cheek to cheek'.

Back home in London with Joan, Arthur attempts to persuade her to give him access to her late father's money to help his business. When she refuses, and later, when she is completely unresponsive to his lovemaking, Arthur lies in bed lip-synching to the words of 'Down Sunnyside Lane', tears glistening in his eyes.

With the six-part serial "Pennies from Heaven", distinguished TV playwright Dennis Potter achieved his first real popular success. Transforming his career, it would eventually lead to a lucrative spell working in Hollywood.

The serial was conceived as the equivalent of a 'television novel', giving Potter a larger canvas than the one-off television plays with which he had made his name. It also arose from a desire to foreground the sweet and sentimental melodies of the 1930s popular songs of which both he and Pennies' producer, Kenith Trodd, were devoted fans.

The way Potter did this helped revolutionise the creative possibilities of television drama. In Pennies, characters intermittently step out of the drama to mime and dance to original recordings from the 1930s. In this way, the romantic hopes and dreams expressed in the songs reflect the genuine yearnings of ordinary people trapped in the Great Depression of the 1930s.

As realised on videotape by director Piers Haggard and choreographer Tudor Davies, the songs function as 'pennies from heaven': little interludes of brightness and happiness in an otherwise dark '30s tale of murder, lust, betrayal and frustration, in which the lead character, salesman Arthur Parker, is eventually hanged for a crime he did not commit. Potter himself went so far as to compare the songs to 'psalms', in as much as for characters struggling in the teeth of Depression, they encapsulate a similar, almost religious yearning for the world to be a better place. In this way, the drama balances itself on a knife edge between optimism and pessimism - the Eden-like non-naturalistic realm of the songs offering a brighter alternative to the downbeat naturalism of the more materialist world-view of Britain in the grip of Depression.

Millions were enthralled by the resulting concoction when it was first transmitted by BBC1 in March and April 1978. The serial went on to win awards and made a star of its lead actor, Bob Hoskins, who played Arthur Parker.

In 1981, a big-budget Hollywood version of Pennies from Heaven (US, d. Herbert Ross) was released, based on a new screenplay by Potter and starring Steve Martin as Arthur. Yet despite Potter being nominated for an Oscar for best original screenplay, the film failed to make the same impact as the earlier TV version, perhaps suggesting that Potter's bold miming device worked most powerfully within the more confined space of the small screen.

John R.Cook



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