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Flashback: Les Belles (1961) – Linda Lin Dai stars in acclaimed Hong Kong musical

Age hasn’t dimmed this joyous Shaw Brothers musical, with a wispy plot that serves merely as a vehicle for an abundance of choreographed numbers that run the gamut from Broadway tap to classical Chinese

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Linda Lin Dai (centre right) stars in the Shaw Brothers musical Les Belles.

With the success of La La Land heralding a 21st-century rebirth of the Hollywood musical, Les Belles strikes a relevant note as a lavish example of how Hong Kong emulated the genre more than a half-century ago. Shot using the then-novel technologies of Shawscope and Eastmancolor (as promi­nent­ly proclaimed in the original posters), the Shaw Brothers production is a star-laden, tune-filled spectacle that is the very defini­tion of Hong Kong cinema’s aspirations towards Hollywood-style escapism.

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The wisp of a plot by director-writer Doe Chingused the “pen pals who don’t realise they already know and detest each other” scenario already familiar to contemporary audiences via MGM’sThe Shop Around the Corner (1940) and In the Good Old Summertime (1949) – and later recycled as You’ve Got Mail (1998).

In this case, the antagonistic lovebirds, played by Mandarin movie superstars Linda Lin Dai and Peter Chen Ho, are members of a travelling song-and-dance troupe. The showbiz milieu, while only superficially explored, provides a rationale for the abun­dance of choreographed numbers that saturate the 113-minute running time. The underlying inspiration is Gene Kelly, whose similarly backstage-themed Les Girls was released in Hong Kong a year before Les Belles went into production.

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A scene from Les Belles.
A scene from Les Belles.
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