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Shall We Dance?
Plot Synopsis by Hal Erickson

The seventh of RKO's Fred Astaire--Ginger Rogers musicals, Shall We Dance casts Astaire as a world-renowned ballet dancer and Rogers as a musical comedy headliner. Rogers' manager Jerome Cowan concocts a phony romance between his client and Astaire in order to garner publicity for them both. Eventually, of course, the twosome falls in love for real, but not before a cornucopia of confusion, complications and misunderstandings. Highlights include a number performed on roller skates and Astaire's dance solo in the art-deco boiler room of an ocean liner. The George and Ira Gershwin score (their last for Astaire and Rogers) includes "Slap That Bass," "Beginner's Luck," "Let's Call the Whole Thing Off," "They All Laughed," "They Can't Take That Away From Me," and the title number. Shall We Dance was slated as the last of the Fred-and-Ginger romps, but within a year they were together again in Carefree.

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Similar Works
Singin' in the Rain  (1952, Stanley Donen, Gene Kelly)
Let's Make Love  (1960, George Cukor)
You'll Never Get Rich  (1941, Sidney Lanfield)
Other Related Works
 Is related to:    The Band Wagon  (1953, Vincente Minnelli)
   The Barkleys of Broadway  (1949, Charles Walters)
   Carefree  (1938, Mark Sandrich)
   Daddy Long Legs  (1955, Jean Negulesco)
   Easter Parade  (1948, Charles Walters)
   Flying Down to Rio  (1933, Thornton Freeland)
   Follow the Fleet  (1936, Mark Sandrich)
   The Gay Divorcee  (1934, Mark Sandrich)
   Roberta  (1935, William Seiter)
   Royal Wedding  (1951, Stanley Donen)
   The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle  (1939, H.C. Potter)
   Swing Time  (1936, George Stevens)
   Top Hat  (1935, Mark Sandrich)
   They Can't Take That Away from Me: The Music of Shall We Dance