17 out of 22 people found the following comment useful :- The last of the 70's movies, 27 August 2002
Author:
Tasos Tz. from London, England
'Fame' (1980) is brilliant. It's got all these qualities that made the late
70's movies so great. It is proud of its directness and not ashamed of being
over the top.
What really matters here, is the journey, not the destination. Ignorant
idiots with soap opera mentality, will never realize that 'Fame' is about
the struggles, anxieties and triumphs of these young people, not about their
careers.
Ironically enough, none of the very talented actors of 'Fame' made it in
Hollywood. 'Fame' marked the end of an era. The end of artistic freedom and
experimentation and the beginning of commercialization and political
correctness. It's the last statement of a generation that had a voice of its
own.
10/10
14 out of 19 people found the following comment useful :- Fame! I'm going to live forever. I'm going to learn how to fly., 3 July 2000
Author:
PinkBubbles from Ottawa, Canada
I LOVE this movie.
It is way too bad they don't make movies like this any more, and that
teenagers are more amazed by a bunch of trashy movies with big name actors
and big time special effects, but not big time plots and
characters.
I'm 15 years old, a teenager in the "nothing 90's" (oh, so it's 2000 now,
who gives a care?), and being a lover of musicals, 80's high school movies
(The Breakfast Club, Sixteen Candles, etc.) and those sort of things, I was
recommended this by a "Fame fanatic", my aunt.
I knew after the audition scenes that this was a perfect movie for me. It
follows the lives of tear-jerkingly believable characters of several
different backgrounds. I laughed, I cried, and I bought the soundtrack. The
acting is so excellent that the first time I saw it, I'd forgotten that
these were not real living, flesh people, only actors.
There a some flaws, however. There are a few gaps in some of the characters,
and the movie should have went on for another 30 minutes, although it was
already about 2 hours and 30 minutes (which it didn't feel like). It is also
outdated, and you sometimes can't help but laugh at how much it
is.
If you've never seen this movie, and you are a fan of musicals, arts, and
realistic teenage movies, run, don't walk, to a local video
store.
Hopefully, Fame will truly live forever!
My rating: **** (out of 5 *'s)
10 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :- Story about potential., 20 April 2001
Author:
Schlockmeister from Midnight MovieLand
This movie showcases a LOT of incredible talent. Fantastic performances
throughout. The movie also is a great story about potential and how people
use, abuse or ignore it in themselves. This is a story about students who
look like they are all headed for fame and fortune. It shows the pitfalls
along the way. We learn that talent is not enough. We also learn that many
fall short and give up along the way. As an adult who was a teenager back
when this movie first came out, it is a very bittersweet look at potential
in us all and has us examine what we did with it in our lives, are we where
we thought we would be?
Yes, this movie is dated, it is over 20 years old, it HAS to be in some
regard. But the story is timeless and will rank among classics of teenage
movies and also always have a warm spot in the hearts of adults who grew up
in the era.
Highly recommended. Would make a great double feature with "Gold Diggers
of 1933" just to show contrast and to see how Broadway has changed over the
years.
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Good. Could have been great., 10 January 2007
Author:
TOMASBBloodhound from Lincoln, NE USA
A recent survey of children in the UK re-enforced the notion put forth
by this film 27 years ago. That being more than anything else, young
people want to grow up to be somebody famous. It used to be doctors and
firemen that kids wanted to be. Now, everyone wants to be famous. Fame
is a story of a group of kids accepted into the High School for
Performing Arts in New York City. We seen them first audition, then
take classes and learn about life for the next four years. The film has
a lot of fine qualities, but ultimately leaves you feeling a little
unsatisfied.
Alan Parker's bold directorial style fits the story pretty well. The
film has been classified as a musical, but more than anything it is a
drama. Musical numbers and dance routines break out here and there, and
Parker keeps them as close to realistic as they really could have been
filmed. The acting is for the most part top-drawer with a few
exceptions. The pacing is a little off, particularly toward the end of
the film, but by that point, the story has already taken a few wrong
turns anyway.
First off, the auditions at the beginning of the film should have
weeded a couple of the principle characters out. It seems unlikely that
anyone would show up and audition for one department, then stumble
their way through admissions to another. Some of these people just
don't look that talented or interested to begin with. Once the first
year of classes gets going, the film settles into a nice groove. The
interaction between students and teachers is very well handled, and it
leaves you wanting more. The film begins to lose itself later on as we
see more and more of the students' lives out of school. Some of these
people just aren't worth caring about.
The film's biggest mistake is making the Ralph Garcy character so
prominent. This guy is a boorish; self-centered jerk. A "professional
a-hole" as he proudly declares on stage during his comedy routines. The
audience is supposed to somehow feel for this guy and his tragic
personal situation, but I was just hoping they'd throw his butt out of
school. Irene Cara, Maureen Teefy, Paul McCrane and the late Gene
Anthony Ray are the people you'll care about by the time this film is
over. Try as I might, I still can't develop abs like Gene Anthony Ray
had in this film.
Overall this film is good. It is memorable, interesting, and full of
daring scenes and performances. It runs maybe a little too long, and
perhaps some of the wrong characters get fully developed while others
kind of hover in the background. The musical numbers are great, and
there is even a surprise or two waiting to be discovered by the time
the film is over. Though not perfect, Fame will be a film that lives on
in one way or another for many years to come.
7 of 10 stars.
The Hound.
9 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :- Brilliant movie, 2 March 2006
Author:
adam-1009 from Poland
I truly hate musicals because music numbers just start out of the
sudden and usually spoil scenes, but this one is completely different -
it's simply brilliant. Plot perhaps isn't any challenge for the
viewers, but the simplicity of people life stories makes this movie
great.
I've seen it at least dozen times and still I'm not tired with the
plot, characters or music (I just love the soundtrack - it's the only
soundtrack that I've really wanted to have and most probably will
remain the only one that I owe).
For me it's a must-seen kind of movie, great characters compiled with
entertaining songs and a lot of things to think about after the movie
end.
6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- The Game Of Fame, 12 November 2008
Author:
The_Discolored_Chameleon from Fraggle Rock
Alan Parker's 'Fame' beautifully showcases college-life of eight
aspiring artistes. Many seem to have a problem with the open ending and
ponder on questions like what happened to Coco after the porn shoot or
what happened to Ralph and Doris etc. However, I think this works well
as it points to the uncertainty of their future as that's how life is.
The point was to show their struggles during the college years and
Parker captures that very well making it easy for the viewers to relate
to and bringing a nostalgic feel.
'Fame' starts with some audition scenes which are hilarious. Then it
shows which candidates are selected and that's when the story starts.
Though it is labelled a musical drama, it doesn't follow the
traditional musical genre. The songs do not appear out of nowhere. They
are well situated within the context of the film and quite nice to
listen to. 'Fame' also has that wild 70's feel. If this movie is the
last of the 70s then it 'rounds' up the decade well.
The actors, most of them in their 20s, do a fine job. There are those
who are shy, naive and afraid, those who are wacky, wild and a little
reckless and those who put a front but all these characters are
striving for their dream which is to become an artiste. The actors
brilliantly demonstrate this. I particularly liked Barry Miller, Paul
McCrane and Maureen Teefy who play the three close friends and Irene
Cara who as the vulnerable singer Coco.
I had heard a lot about 'Fame' but I was under the impression that it
would be a flimsy musical. I got a chance to watch it last night and I
was certainly under the wrong impression. Even though many won't
appreciate it, To me it is great.
8 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Loved it, 3 January 2005
Author:
jlon from Dublin
Parker's best movie. DVD review.
Four years in the lives of talented students attending a performing
arts school on 46th Street, New York.
Amazing, energetic, funny, lively, and memorable movie dealing with a
group of performing pupils. That scene where everyone literally dances
in the street has to one of the best scenes from the '80s. Picture has
incredible editing where most of the early scenes are only a few
seconds in duration. Highlights include the Rocky Horror scene, the
student playing those awesome analogue synths (one was a Prophet 5?),
the girl pretending to be OJ Simpson, the ballet dancers, and the
spontaneous singing and dancing in the canteen (Cara has a great
voice). Some of the drama and character plots seemed a bit forced (and
dated) but nevertheless this is my favourite movie from director
Parker.
Fame is a must-see movie from the early '80s.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- not really good, 28 April 2007
Author:
thetoweriscloser from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
There were very few good moments in this film. Only a couple of
characters were fleshed out and not that well. There were plot holes
big enough to drive a truck through. The pace creep-ed along like an
old man. There were many moments that the film never came back to like
Coco stripping. What happened to her? How about Garci's sister? Is she
better now? What about Leroy? We learned absolutely nothing about him.
What about the electronic piano guy? How about the rich girl that got
an abortion? What happened to her? That was an interesting subplot.
Overall this is not a good movie and I recommend another musical that
was in this film. LET'S DO THE TIME WARP AGAIN!!!!!!!
14 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :- It builds up--and then insults--its own characters, 11 September 2004
Author:
moonspinner55 from redlands, ca
"Fame", about teenage kids in Manhattan's School for the Performing
Arts, looks right, feels right, and it sometimes sounds right--but too
soon the film becomes a muddled soap opera about wiseass children
reaching too far for their stars. The large cast does good work, and
director Alan Parker has alert eyes, but better editing might've left
some of Parker's pretensions out of the mix. After one student admits
to being homosexual (not just once, to a girl student, but twice, to
his entire class and teacher), he is seen in tight close-up putting on
lipstick; this is done for a sniggering effect, which is stupefying
once you realize the ENTIRE CLASS is dolled up to look like characters
from "Rocky Horror". The gay kid is the only one we see humiliated, by
the class bully and the camera. This manufactured slapping-down is then
used several more times: against the promising disco queen, the wealthy
white ballerina, the talkative dancer, the stand-up comedian, and the
illiterate who can't move on to better things because of his failing
grades. It's a big, smelly cart full of aged clichés. If people
respond, it's due to the cinematography (which captures some of New
York's squalor and dusty classrooms with a bracing realism), the
propulsive soundtrack, and the cynical-funny talk. These characters are
quite a different matter; probably resembling no real student at the
actual school, they are plot-mechanisms, and their pitfalls are
punctuated by a director who can almost be heard saying, "Look! See!"
** from ****
8 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- Can you believe this movie was made over 20 years ago? It still hasn't lost its punch 20 years later., 6 March 2003
Author:
raysond from Chapel Hill,North Carolina
Its amazing after 20 years this movie still hasn't lost none of its
punch and its too bad that they don't make movies like this
anymore. I remember when this movie came out. I was 14 years
old and I thought it was going to be another one of those idiotic
teen comedies and so forth. Boy, was I dead wrong. This movie
had a lot to go for it especially during a decade where a lot of high
school movies of the 80's consisted of "The Breakfast Club", "Sixteen
Candles","Pretty In Pink","Fast Times At Ridgemont High", "The Last
American Virgin" and so forth.
Fame consisted of eight talented teenagers all hotly pursing their
dreams at the prestigious New York's High School Of The
Performing Arts. Its a stunning combination of drama and
pathos,but in the same level it's an explosion of pulsating song
and electrifying dance numbers that made this one of the most
memorable movie musicals of the 1980's.
Director Alan Parker(of Midnight Express,Mississippi Burning,and
others)brings to the screen a profusion of fresh young talent in
front of the camera and behind it(like choreographer Louis Falco and
composer Micheal Gore who won Oscars for the film's
dynamic score and the title song he co-wrote with lyricist Dean
Pitchford). The action here is very intense as it spills all over the
Big Apple from the shadows of 42nd Street to the bright lights of
the great white way and not to mention the sequences around Times
Square.
As for the characters who were then unknowns at the time it was a
stark reality check as it follows the lives of several individuals from
different backgrounds. Some of them made it while the others
were just getting by and the rest knew the getting their fame would
cost them the ultimate price. However,there are some gaps in
some of the characters but after seeing it again it makes you
wonder after 20 years that this film still has the emotional pull and
from there it never lets go. The soundtrack to this movie is still
great even after 20 years later.
If you have never seen this movie brace yourself for some roof
raising pleasure cause from the beginning its one helluva ride. Make
sure that you get the director's version which contains
additional scenes that were cut from the original print.
NOTE: "Fame" also brought some unknown talent like choreographer/dancer
Gene Anthony Ray,and also singer/ songwriter Irene Cara(who would got
on to become one of the
biggest R&B/Pop singers of the decade--the Mariah Carey of her
generation)and also two years later would become a subsequent TV series
that would showcased the talents of Ray and other
original cast members including Debbie Allen(which ran for five
seasons ending its run in 1986).
As for movie itself,its worth seeing.
Watch it at Amazon
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17 out of 22 people found the following comment useful :-

The last of the 70's movies, 27 August 2002
Author: Tasos Tz. from London, England
'Fame' (1980) is brilliant. It's got all these qualities that made the late 70's movies so great. It is proud of its directness and not ashamed of being over the top.
What really matters here, is the journey, not the destination. Ignorant idiots with soap opera mentality, will never realize that 'Fame' is about the struggles, anxieties and triumphs of these young people, not about their careers.
Ironically enough, none of the very talented actors of 'Fame' made it in Hollywood. 'Fame' marked the end of an era. The end of artistic freedom and experimentation and the beginning of commercialization and political correctness. It's the last statement of a generation that had a voice of its own.
10/10
14 out of 19 people found the following comment useful :-
Fame! I'm going to live forever. I'm going to learn how to fly., 3 July 2000
Author: PinkBubbles from Ottawa, Canada
I LOVE this movie.
It is way too bad they don't make movies like this any more, and that teenagers are more amazed by a bunch of trashy movies with big name actors and big time special effects, but not big time plots and characters.
I'm 15 years old, a teenager in the "nothing 90's" (oh, so it's 2000 now, who gives a care?), and being a lover of musicals, 80's high school movies (The Breakfast Club, Sixteen Candles, etc.) and those sort of things, I was recommended this by a "Fame fanatic", my aunt.
I knew after the audition scenes that this was a perfect movie for me. It follows the lives of tear-jerkingly believable characters of several different backgrounds. I laughed, I cried, and I bought the soundtrack. The acting is so excellent that the first time I saw it, I'd forgotten that these were not real living, flesh people, only actors.
There a some flaws, however. There are a few gaps in some of the characters, and the movie should have went on for another 30 minutes, although it was already about 2 hours and 30 minutes (which it didn't feel like). It is also outdated, and you sometimes can't help but laugh at how much it is.
If you've never seen this movie, and you are a fan of musicals, arts, and realistic teenage movies, run, don't walk, to a local video store.
Hopefully, Fame will truly live forever!
My rating: **** (out of 5 *'s)
10 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :-
Story about potential., 20 April 2001
Author: Schlockmeister from Midnight MovieLand
This movie showcases a LOT of incredible talent. Fantastic performances throughout. The movie also is a great story about potential and how people use, abuse or ignore it in themselves. This is a story about students who look like they are all headed for fame and fortune. It shows the pitfalls along the way. We learn that talent is not enough. We also learn that many fall short and give up along the way. As an adult who was a teenager back when this movie first came out, it is a very bittersweet look at potential in us all and has us examine what we did with it in our lives, are we where we thought we would be? Yes, this movie is dated, it is over 20 years old, it HAS to be in some regard. But the story is timeless and will rank among classics of teenage movies and also always have a warm spot in the hearts of adults who grew up in the era. Highly recommended. Would make a great double feature with "Gold Diggers of 1933" just to show contrast and to see how Broadway has changed over the years.
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

Good. Could have been great., 10 January 2007
Author: TOMASBBloodhound from Lincoln, NE USA
A recent survey of children in the UK re-enforced the notion put forth by this film 27 years ago. That being more than anything else, young people want to grow up to be somebody famous. It used to be doctors and firemen that kids wanted to be. Now, everyone wants to be famous. Fame is a story of a group of kids accepted into the High School for Performing Arts in New York City. We seen them first audition, then take classes and learn about life for the next four years. The film has a lot of fine qualities, but ultimately leaves you feeling a little unsatisfied.
Alan Parker's bold directorial style fits the story pretty well. The film has been classified as a musical, but more than anything it is a drama. Musical numbers and dance routines break out here and there, and Parker keeps them as close to realistic as they really could have been filmed. The acting is for the most part top-drawer with a few exceptions. The pacing is a little off, particularly toward the end of the film, but by that point, the story has already taken a few wrong turns anyway.
First off, the auditions at the beginning of the film should have weeded a couple of the principle characters out. It seems unlikely that anyone would show up and audition for one department, then stumble their way through admissions to another. Some of these people just don't look that talented or interested to begin with. Once the first year of classes gets going, the film settles into a nice groove. The interaction between students and teachers is very well handled, and it leaves you wanting more. The film begins to lose itself later on as we see more and more of the students' lives out of school. Some of these people just aren't worth caring about.
The film's biggest mistake is making the Ralph Garcy character so prominent. This guy is a boorish; self-centered jerk. A "professional a-hole" as he proudly declares on stage during his comedy routines. The audience is supposed to somehow feel for this guy and his tragic personal situation, but I was just hoping they'd throw his butt out of school. Irene Cara, Maureen Teefy, Paul McCrane and the late Gene Anthony Ray are the people you'll care about by the time this film is over. Try as I might, I still can't develop abs like Gene Anthony Ray had in this film.
Overall this film is good. It is memorable, interesting, and full of daring scenes and performances. It runs maybe a little too long, and perhaps some of the wrong characters get fully developed while others kind of hover in the background. The musical numbers are great, and there is even a surprise or two waiting to be discovered by the time the film is over. Though not perfect, Fame will be a film that lives on in one way or another for many years to come.
7 of 10 stars.
The Hound.
9 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :-

Brilliant movie, 2 March 2006
Author: adam-1009 from Poland
I truly hate musicals because music numbers just start out of the sudden and usually spoil scenes, but this one is completely different - it's simply brilliant. Plot perhaps isn't any challenge for the viewers, but the simplicity of people life stories makes this movie great.
I've seen it at least dozen times and still I'm not tired with the plot, characters or music (I just love the soundtrack - it's the only soundtrack that I've really wanted to have and most probably will remain the only one that I owe).
For me it's a must-seen kind of movie, great characters compiled with entertaining songs and a lot of things to think about after the movie end.
6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-
The Game Of Fame, 12 November 2008
Author: The_Discolored_Chameleon from Fraggle Rock
Alan Parker's 'Fame' beautifully showcases college-life of eight aspiring artistes. Many seem to have a problem with the open ending and ponder on questions like what happened to Coco after the porn shoot or what happened to Ralph and Doris etc. However, I think this works well as it points to the uncertainty of their future as that's how life is. The point was to show their struggles during the college years and Parker captures that very well making it easy for the viewers to relate to and bringing a nostalgic feel.
'Fame' starts with some audition scenes which are hilarious. Then it shows which candidates are selected and that's when the story starts. Though it is labelled a musical drama, it doesn't follow the traditional musical genre. The songs do not appear out of nowhere. They are well situated within the context of the film and quite nice to listen to. 'Fame' also has that wild 70's feel. If this movie is the last of the 70s then it 'rounds' up the decade well.
The actors, most of them in their 20s, do a fine job. There are those who are shy, naive and afraid, those who are wacky, wild and a little reckless and those who put a front but all these characters are striving for their dream which is to become an artiste. The actors brilliantly demonstrate this. I particularly liked Barry Miller, Paul McCrane and Maureen Teefy who play the three close friends and Irene Cara who as the vulnerable singer Coco.
I had heard a lot about 'Fame' but I was under the impression that it would be a flimsy musical. I got a chance to watch it last night and I was certainly under the wrong impression. Even though many won't appreciate it, To me it is great.
8 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-
Loved it, 3 January 2005
Author: jlon from Dublin
Parker's best movie. DVD review.
Four years in the lives of talented students attending a performing arts school on 46th Street, New York.
Amazing, energetic, funny, lively, and memorable movie dealing with a group of performing pupils. That scene where everyone literally dances in the street has to one of the best scenes from the '80s. Picture has incredible editing where most of the early scenes are only a few seconds in duration. Highlights include the Rocky Horror scene, the student playing those awesome analogue synths (one was a Prophet 5?), the girl pretending to be OJ Simpson, the ballet dancers, and the spontaneous singing and dancing in the canteen (Cara has a great voice). Some of the drama and character plots seemed a bit forced (and dated) but nevertheless this is my favourite movie from director Parker.
Fame is a must-see movie from the early '80s.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

not really good, 28 April 2007
Author: thetoweriscloser from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
There were very few good moments in this film. Only a couple of characters were fleshed out and not that well. There were plot holes big enough to drive a truck through. The pace creep-ed along like an old man. There were many moments that the film never came back to like Coco stripping. What happened to her? How about Garci's sister? Is she better now? What about Leroy? We learned absolutely nothing about him. What about the electronic piano guy? How about the rich girl that got an abortion? What happened to her? That was an interesting subplot.
Overall this is not a good movie and I recommend another musical that was in this film. LET'S DO THE TIME WARP AGAIN!!!!!!!
14 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :-

It builds up--and then insults--its own characters, 11 September 2004
Author: moonspinner55 from redlands, ca
"Fame", about teenage kids in Manhattan's School for the Performing Arts, looks right, feels right, and it sometimes sounds right--but too soon the film becomes a muddled soap opera about wiseass children reaching too far for their stars. The large cast does good work, and director Alan Parker has alert eyes, but better editing might've left some of Parker's pretensions out of the mix. After one student admits to being homosexual (not just once, to a girl student, but twice, to his entire class and teacher), he is seen in tight close-up putting on lipstick; this is done for a sniggering effect, which is stupefying once you realize the ENTIRE CLASS is dolled up to look like characters from "Rocky Horror". The gay kid is the only one we see humiliated, by the class bully and the camera. This manufactured slapping-down is then used several more times: against the promising disco queen, the wealthy white ballerina, the talkative dancer, the stand-up comedian, and the illiterate who can't move on to better things because of his failing grades. It's a big, smelly cart full of aged clichés. If people respond, it's due to the cinematography (which captures some of New York's squalor and dusty classrooms with a bracing realism), the propulsive soundtrack, and the cynical-funny talk. These characters are quite a different matter; probably resembling no real student at the actual school, they are plot-mechanisms, and their pitfalls are punctuated by a director who can almost be heard saying, "Look! See!" ** from ****
8 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-
Can you believe this movie was made over 20 years ago? It still hasn't lost its punch 20 years later., 6 March 2003
Author: raysond from Chapel Hill,North Carolina
Its amazing after 20 years this movie still hasn't lost none of its punch and its too bad that they don't make movies like this anymore. I remember when this movie came out. I was 14 years old and I thought it was going to be another one of those idiotic teen comedies and so forth. Boy, was I dead wrong. This movie had a lot to go for it especially during a decade where a lot of high school movies of the 80's consisted of "The Breakfast Club", "Sixteen Candles","Pretty In Pink","Fast Times At Ridgemont High", "The Last American Virgin" and so forth. Fame consisted of eight talented teenagers all hotly pursing their dreams at the prestigious New York's High School Of The Performing Arts. Its a stunning combination of drama and pathos,but in the same level it's an explosion of pulsating song and electrifying dance numbers that made this one of the most memorable movie musicals of the 1980's. Director Alan Parker(of Midnight Express,Mississippi Burning,and others)brings to the screen a profusion of fresh young talent in front of the camera and behind it(like choreographer Louis Falco and composer Micheal Gore who won Oscars for the film's dynamic score and the title song he co-wrote with lyricist Dean Pitchford). The action here is very intense as it spills all over the Big Apple from the shadows of 42nd Street to the bright lights of the great white way and not to mention the sequences around Times Square. As for the characters who were then unknowns at the time it was a stark reality check as it follows the lives of several individuals from different backgrounds. Some of them made it while the others were just getting by and the rest knew the getting their fame would cost them the ultimate price. However,there are some gaps in some of the characters but after seeing it again it makes you wonder after 20 years that this film still has the emotional pull and from there it never lets go. The soundtrack to this movie is still great even after 20 years later. If you have never seen this movie brace yourself for some roof raising pleasure cause from the beginning its one helluva ride. Make sure that you get the director's version which contains additional scenes that were cut from the original print. NOTE: "Fame" also brought some unknown talent like choreographer/dancer Gene Anthony Ray,and also singer/ songwriter Irene Cara(who would got on to become one of the biggest R&B/Pop singers of the decade--the Mariah Carey of her generation)and also two years later would become a subsequent TV series that would showcased the talents of Ray and other original cast members including Debbie Allen(which ran for five seasons ending its run in 1986). As for movie itself,its worth seeing.
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