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The Court Jester

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The Court Jester is a 1956 comedy film starring Danny Kaye, Glynis Johns, Basil Rathbone, and a young Angela Lansbury (she turned thirty-one during the making of this film). The movie is co-written, co-directed, and co-produced by Melvin Frank and Norman Panama.

Danny Kaye received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Motion Picture Actor - Comedy/Musical.

The motion picture bombed at the box-office on its release. Made for a cost of $4 million in the fall of 1955, it only brought in $2.2 million in receipts the following winter and spring of 1956. Since then it has become a television favorite. The film contains the famous repertoire: "The vessel with the pestle has the pellet with the poison; the chalice from the palace has the brew that is true" (mainly with Kaye and Mildred Natwick as Griselda).

Synopsis

Ostensibly set in medieval England, the plot nominally concerns the struggle to restore the rightful heir, a child, to the throne, the King and all his family having been murdered or otherwise disposed of. Kaye plays Hubert Hawkins, an ex-carnival entertainer ("a jester, unemployed, is nobody's fool"), who becomes minstrel to the Black Fox, a Robin Hood-type character (who actually makes only a minor appearance in the film), played by Edward Ashley.

In the introductory scene — a musical song and dance — the audience is led to believe that Kaye is playing the part of the Black Fox, with his assistants, a band of dwarves, all in identical costumes. It is only after the end of this production that the real Black Fox appears, and suggests that Hawkins should stay out of his wardrobe, having been previously warned. Kaye responds that he is only trying to improve the morale of the troops.

Hawkins is given a serious task to perform; when the location of their camp becomes known to the King, he must escort the rightful heir to the throne, the baby that bears the royal birthmark — a purple pimpernel — and Maid Jean (Glynis Johns) to safety. To achieve this, he disguises himself as an asthmatic old man (supposedly the father of the maiden).

Much hilarity ensues as Hawkins infiltrates the evil King Roderick's castle by impersonating the king's new talented and multilingual jester, Giacomo (King of Jesters and Jester of Kings). In this guise, he contrives to worm his way into the King's confidence. However, the Princess (Angela Lansbury) has taken a fancy to the new jester, and commands her servant, the witch Griselda (Natwick) to hypnotize him with her evil eye. Once hypnotized, Hawkins can be brought in and out of a trance at will by a snap of the fingers. While under this trance, he also takes on the role of assassin-for-hire to the evil Lord Ravenhurst and his henchmen.

When the King discovers that his daughter has fallen in love with the jester, Hawkins is swiftly promoted to Knight with the intent that he can be legitimately challenged to a joust by the Princess's suitor Sir Griswold of Mackalwane (The Grim and Gruesome Grisly Griswold) and killed. The challenges of knighthood are made easy for him (he is given no chance not to succeed). He is warned of the plot, but while trying to escape, he finds himself walking into the ranks of knights marching to his own investiture. A dead slow, stately, time honored ritual, the knighting ritual is accelerated to breakneck speed in one of the more memorable scenes of the film.

Immediately upon being knighted, Hawkins is challenged to a duel to the death by Griswold. Help is given to him in the form of a poisonous potion made by Griselda, but Sir Griswold is also told of it by a courtier who overhears of the plot. In a scene full of tongue twisting English, both combatants approach the King, each trying desperately to remember which cup contains the poison, with the result that the potion spills when the two men try to avoid drinking it. The king decides to abandon the ritual of drinking a toast before the joust and gets straight on to the fight, but a storm is rising, and Hawkins' armor, struck by lightning, has become magnetized. Griswold is pulled from his horse by a mace which sticks to Hubert's armor. Later, when Hubert must defeat the villainous Ravenhurst at swordplay, he is again entranced by the witch into thinking that he is a great swordsman. As the usurpers of the throne are defeated by the Black Fox and his army of dwarves, the rightful King is finally revealed by his distinctive birthmark and acknowledged by good and bad alike.

The switch with the poisoned drink builds to the following:

Hubert: I've got it! The pellet with the poison's in the vessel with the pestle; the chalice from the palace has the brew that is true! Right?
Griselda: ...but there's been a change: they broke the chalice from the palace...
Hubert: They broke the chalice from the palace?
Griselda: ...and replaced it. With a flagon.
Hubert: A flagon?
Griselda: With the figure of a dragon.
Hubert: Flagon with a dragon.
Griselda: Right.
Hubert: ...but did you put the pellet with the poison in the vessel with the pestle?
Griselda: No! The pellet with the poison's in the flagon with the dragon! The vessel with the pestle has the brew that is true!
Hubert: The pellet with the poison's in the flagon with the dragon, the vessel with the pestle has the brew that is true.
Griselda: Just remember that!
Other famous scenes include Hubert's rapid promotion to knight in preparation for a joust against a champion, the joust itself, and the final duel in which Hubert has been hypnotised into feeling brave, only to revert to his normal cowardly state every time anyone snaps their fingers.

Kaye's boundless energy and wit make this movie a classic.

Songs

:(Note: Sylvia Fine was Danny Kaye's wife)

Trivia

External links

 


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