Moroder had been asked to score the film, and Cara and Forsey wrote most of the lyrics after they were shown the last scene, in which the main character dances at an audition for a group of judges. They felt that the dancer's ambition to succeed could act as a metaphor for achieving any dream a person has and wrote lyrics that described what it feels like when music inspires someone to dance. The song was used for that scene as well as during the opening credits.
The song was the first single to be released from the soundtrack album and received positive reviews. Because Flashdance was going to be released in mid-April of that year, Casablanca Records released the single in March to market the film. The unexpected success at the box office resulted in stores across the US selling out of both the single and its parent album just days after Flashdance was in theaters.
The success of the song made it clear to Cara that she was not receiving royalties stipulated in her recording contract, and she took legal action against her label in order to be compensated. The backlash that she claims she suffered in retaliation for filing a lawsuit left her feeling shut out of the entertainment industry as she struggled to find work. Although she began receiving royalties for the recordings she made for them, the label and its owner declared bankruptcy and claimed that they were unable to pay her the $1.5million settlement she was awarded by a Los Angeles Superior Court.
Background and writing
After winning the Academy Award for Best Original Score in 1979 for Midnight Express, Giorgio Moroder worked with Flashdance producer Jerry Bruckheimer on the 1980 film American Gigolo, and Bruckheimer contacted Moroder in 1982 to see if he would be interested in composing the music for the new film, which told the story of Alex Owens, a young woman who dreams of becoming a ballerina and must overcome her fear of auditioning before a panel of judges. Despite his lack of interest due to other commitments,[4] Moroder came up with some music that was "a very rough sketch".[5] He thought it might fit the project well[6] and sent it in before filming began.[7] The demo was the music for what became "Flashdance... What a Feeling",[7] but Moroder did not agree to composing the score until after seeing a video of a rough cut of the film,[8] which completed shooting on December 30, 1982.[9] He then delegated the writing of the lyrics to his session drummer, Keith Forsey, who started on the task by himself[10] but later received help from Irene Cara.[11] She described Forsey as "very personable, just a sweetheart. He was very funny. We definitely clicked."[12]
Cara received her big break in 1980 in the role of Coco Hernandez, a student at the High School of Performing Arts, in the movie Fame. The soundtrack album included two chart hits that Cara recorded: the title song, which got as high as number 4 on the Billboard Hot 100, and "Out Here on My Own", which peaked at number 19.[13] When the record label for the soundtrack, RSO, went out of business, one of its executives, Al Coury, convinced her to join his newly-formed Network Records,[14] and the title track from her first album there, Anyone Can See, reached number 42 on the Hot 100 during a run of 18 weeks that began in November 1981.[13] She was working on an album and looking for a producer in early 1983 when she was contacted by Paramount Pictures to provide lyrics for the new soundtrack song.[15] Although Moroder had shown interest in working with her once she had success with Fame, she was reluctant about being compared to another singer he had produced, Donna Summer.[16] "But with 'Flashdance[… What a Feeling],'" Cara explained, "we were thrown together by Paramount."[17]
We used dance as a metaphor for... attaining anything in your life that you want to accomplish.
– Irene Cara on writing the lyrics with Keith Forsey[18]
Cara and Forsey were shown the last scene of the film, in which Alex auditions, to have a sense of what the lyrics should be.[19] They were then driven from the screening to Giorgio's studio to record the song and, during the trip, were able to come up with most of the words that Cara would sing.[20] She said, "I had no idea what the movie was about or anything. It did seem to me to have a similar look in regards to Fame, so I figured, well, this is another performing arts film."[12] She told Forsey that she thought the lyrics should describe the feeling of dance and credits him with coming up with the lyric that inspired the working title for the song, "Dancing for Your Life".[21][22] She explained how the song became "a metaphor about a dancer, how she's in control of her body when she dances and how she can be in control of her life"[23] and how that particular art form could represent any goal someone has.[18] Moroder felt that the lyric "what a feeling" was right for the story[24] but tried persuading them to incorporate the title of the film into the lyrics; the closest they could come to doing that was to use the two words that formed the title in separate lines of the song, such as, "In a flash it takes hold of my heart".[25] It was only after the song was completed with the title "What a Feeling" that "Flashdance…" was added "to get some extra promotional mileage" out of it.[26]
The song is in the key of B♭ Major and has a tempo of 122 beats per minute.[27] Cara's voice spans from the tonal nodes of F3 to D5.[28]
Recording
Moroder had produced Summer's hit "Heaven Knows", which featured Brooklyn Dreams vocalist Joe "Bean" Esposito, and had Esposito record a vocal demo of "Flashdance... What a Feeling".[29] Moroder would have had Esposito do the final recording, but Paramount wanted somebody who was well known.[30] The film's producers also felt the singer of the song should be female.[31] Cara stipulated in her agreement to write the lyrics that she would be the one to sing the song,[32] and Moroder thought "she did absolutely fantastic work."[33] She wanted to do more than one take, and he felt her third crack at it was her best.[34]
They completed recording the song in a few days, and the movie studio liked what they heard.[36] On the Special Collector's Edition DVD release of Flashdance from 2010, Bruckheimer said, "When you first heard it, you said, 'It's a hit.' It’s one of those things you just heard, and you just couldn’t get it out of your head. And it just got us all so excited. We kept playing it over and over and never got tired of it. To this day, I’m not tired of that song.[35] Cara also had a good feeling about it: "I knew when we were recording it that we had something special with the song. Some things you just feel, you know? You can’t really dissect it or analyze it. It’s a spiritual thing that you sense, and I did sense that I had something special with this song."[12]
"Flashdance…What a Feeling" received predominantly positive reviews at the time of its release and has continued to do so. Billboard magazine proclaimed that the song was "the best showcase for Cara's vocal talents since she first came to 'Fame' three years ago. The spirited Giorgio Moroder tune has the same kind of yearning optimism as that initial hit."[37]Cash Box concurred, "This should be the vehicle Cara has been searching for since her 'Fame' debut. Moroder's hook is powerful, the arrangement well sculpted. Strong stuff."[38]Record Mirror's Betty Page predicted, "Huge hitsville, USA... Next year's Grammy, Oscar... winner, no doubt."[39] Maureen Rice of Number One magazine admitted, "I really like this", and described it as "a perfect radio record".[40]New York Timespop music critic John Rockwell wrote that the song, "sung by Irene Cara in a manner directly evocative of her big hit, 'Fame,' still possesses a buoyant energy of its own."[41] The editors of Digital Audio's Guide to Compact Discs described the song as "a blend of crooning synthesizer background music and a hard disco beat," and concluded, "These effects and Cara's enthusiastic voice make this an impressive song."[42]
In their retrospective reviews, AllMusic labeled the song as one of their Album Picks from the Flashdance soundtrack,[43] Cara's What a Feelin' album,[44] and the 1994 Casablanca Records Story compilation.[45]
Release and commercial performance
Since Flashdance was to be released on April 15, 1983,[46] Cara's recording was made available as a "scout" single[47] in March[48] as a way of getting the attention of the target audience for the film,[49] but Paramount Pictures had doubts that the movie would do well at the box office.[50] Bruckheimer explained that Casablanca's parent company, Polygram, "only shipped 60,000 [copies of the soundtrack album], so they really had no faith in the record."[51] The May 7 issue of Cashbox magazine, however, reported on the surprise success of the film, noting that by Tuesday, April 19, retailers were reporting that all Flashdance merchandise was gone.[52] Paramount planned to have the film's director, Adrian Lyne, take parts of scenes from it to create music videos for songs from the soundtrack, including Cara's contribution,[53] which would also be used in all subsequent radio and television ads for the film as a way for potential ticket buyers to "identify the motion picture".[54]
In the April 2, 1983, issue of Billboard magazine, "Flashdance…What a Feeling" began a run of 25 weeks on the Hot 100,[13] which included 14 weeks in the top 10, making it the longest-running top-10 single of 1983.[55] The May 28 Billboard marked its first of 6 weeks as the most popular song in the US,[23] and it also went to number one in Australia,[56] Canada,[57] Denmark,[58]Japan,[59] New Zealand,[60] Norway,[61] South Africa,[62] Spain,[63] Sweden,[64] and Switzerland[65] and made the top five in Austria,[66] Finland,[67] Ireland,[68] the UK,[69] and West Germany.[70] It debuted on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart in the April 30 issue and got as high as number 4 during its 24 weeks there.[71] In the May 7 issue it made its first appearance on their list of the most popular Black Singles in the US and spent 5 of its 22 weeks there at number 2 (behind "Juicy Fruit" by Mtume, which only reached #45 on the Hot 100).[72] The May 7 issue also began the 18 weeks that the 12-inch remix spent on their Dance/Disco Top 80 chart, 3 of which were in the top spot.[73] On Billboard's Year-End Hot 100 singles of 1983, it came in at number 3.
On June 17, the Recording Industry Association of America awarded the single Gold certification for achieving sales of one million copies,[74] and on July 1, the British Phonographic Industry issued Silver certification to it for shipment of 250,000 units.[75] Also on July 1, Music Canada awarded the single both Gold and Platinum awards for reaching the 50,000 and 100,000 thresholds for units shipped, respectively, and the Double Platinum award was issued on January 1, 1984, after reaching the 200,000 mark.[76] Later that month, Billboard reported that sales in Japan were over 700,000.[77] In France, sales have also reached the one million mark for Platinum certification.[78]
Film context
Film scholars who have commented on Flashdance in essays have highlighted the relationship between the song and Alex's story. "Flashdance... What a Feeling" is heard over the opening credits of the film as a young woman rides her bike through the streets of Pittsburgh just after sunrise and then continues as work goes on in a steel mill. In his dissertation on film musicals about dance, John Trenz explained that the song functions as our way into the story since no other introductory information, such as the bicyclist's identity, is provided on the soundtrack.[79] The mill workers use machinery that represents the "world made of steel, made of stone" that Cara sings about,[80] and we are shown several of them at work while the song continues. As the chorus is heard for the last time to finish presenting the opening credits, the worker that the film keeps cutting back to is wearing a welding helmet with Alex printed on the front. The welder removes the protective gear to reveal that Alex is female, and she shakes her hair loose from the helmet and catches her breath. With the film's unveiling of its main character, Trenz wrote, "The gender revelation seems to punctuate the song's lyrics, 'What a feeling! Being’s believing, I can have it all.'"[81]
In the February 1984 issue of Jump Cut, Kathryn Kalinak delineated an instance in which the lyrics coincide with Alex's dialogue. Alex is uncomfortable when her boyfriend Nick sees her dancing outside of her work setting, but her job performing onstage to contemporary music in a bar is a different kind of presentation where the audience means nothing to her.[82] When Nick asks why she seems so comfortable in front of the bar patrons, she explains, "I never see them. You go out there, and the music starts, and you begin to feel it. And your body just starts to move. I know it sounds really silly. But something inside you just clicks, and you just take off. You're gone. It's like you're somebody else for a second." This freedom she describes is reflected in the lyrics, "When I hear the music, close my eyes, feel the rhythm wrap around, take ahold of my heart, what a feeling."[83]
The song is heard again during Alex's audition at the Pittsburgh Conservatory of Dance and Repertory as the recording that she brings to play while she performs, but Trenz pointed out that, instead of functioning as an introduction to the character as it did during the opening credits, the song is now Alex's means of interpreting her story through dance.[84] He averred that "she inhabits the song and reproduces an expression of her story by dancing to it and signifying the music and being the significance of its lyrics at the same time."[81] Since this is an audition to measure her skill as a dancer and not judge an acting performance, the song provides a unique function for the two audiences witnessing the audition. For the judges in the film, she is translating the artistry of the song, which symbolizes this applicant reaching the goal of being considered for admission.[85] The film audience, however, can now interpret the song as her story,[86] making it more than just a soundtrack hit.[87] Trenz wrote, "The narrative allows the film audience to read the sequence as expressive of her story in association with the song while the reactions of the committee seem to signify the resolution expressed by the song – that Alex can make it happen and have it all."[88]
"Everything that we feel about Alex's success as a dancer through her performance and the music is hijacked… so that our 'feeling' about success, performance, and dance is conflated with romance, surrender, and the loss of independence."
– Film lecturer Gary Needham describing how the film's transition from Alex's audition to her reunion with Nick changes the meaning of the song[89]
In his essay, "Reaganite Cinema: What a Feeling!", Gary Needham, a senior lecturer in film at the University of Liverpool, provided a different interpretation of the ending of Flashdance because of the way the song is used. In contributing momentum to the audition performance, the tempo of "Flashdance... What a Feeling" combines with the editing and choreography of the scene in such a way to make it clear to the audience that Alex has earned her happy ending.[90] The song continues to play when she bounds down the steps outside of the Conservatory and rounds the sidewalk to find Nick and her dog Grunt waiting to greet her afterward, but the meaning of the song changes. During the audition, it exists in the world created by the film and conveys the success that has been her goal,[91] but because it continues on the soundtrack as her joyous reunion with Nick is presented, Needham argues, "Everything that we feel about Alex's success as a dancer through her performance and the music is hijacked… so that our 'feeling' about success, performance, and dance is conflated with romance, surrender, and the loss of independence."[89] The politics of the film shift from the idea that a woman can thrive on her own to one in which she relies on a relationship to survive,[92] which, "echoed in the lyrics 'What a Feeling', secures her a place in a traditional, appropriately feminine, patriarchal system."[89]
Live performances
Some of Cara's appearances to promote "Flashdance…What a Feeling" included programs where performers would lip sync to the hit recording of their song, such as American Bandstand, where she appeared on the April 30, 1983, broadcast.[93] This sort of performance on the Solid Gold episode from that same date allowed her to show off some of her own moves alongside the Solid Gold Dancers.[94] When she returned for their 1983 year-end countdown to perform the song again, she only lip synched through the first chorus, after which she sang live to a remix as a group of breakdancers performed.[95] In 2013, she commented, "This Solid Gold performance of "Flashdance..." was one of the most memorable for me. It included all the great pioneers of breakdancing and I got to perform the long version of the song!"[96] In 1984, she also incorporated her training as a dancer into a lip sync performance of the song at the 11th Annual American Music Awards on January 16.[97] Vocal performances included the Fame Looks at Music '83 television concert that was broadcast on January 28, the 26th Annual Grammy Awards a month later, on February 28,[98] and the 56th Academy Awards on April 9, where she was joined onstage by 44 boys and girls from the National Dance Institute.[99] The song became a part of her first concert tour, which began at the end of the following summer.[100]
In 1998, "Flashdance... What a Feeling" came in at number nine on Billboard magazine's list of the top 10 soundtrack songs,[108] and on the Songs of the Century list compiled by the Recording Industry Association of America in 2001, the song was listed at number 256.[13] In 2004, it finished at number 55 on AFI's 100 Years ... 100 Songs survey of top tunes in American cinema, and in 2008, the song was ranked at number 26 on Billboard's All Time Top 100, which commemorated the 50th anniversary of the Billboard Hot 100.[109] When Rolling Stone magazine ranked the 20 Greatest Best Song Oscar Performances in 2016, Cara's appearance at the 1984 Academy Awards was listed at number 20.[110] In 2018, Insider included the title song on its list of 35 of the most iconic movie songs of all time, generously adding that it "has a special place in pop culture history."[111] That same year, it came in at number 34 on Billboard's list of the "600 most massive smashes over the [Hot 100]'s six decades",[112] and in 2019, the magazine ranked the song at number 11 on its list of the Greatest of All Time Hot 100 Songs by Women.[113]
"Flashdance... What a Feeling" was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the National Recording Registry in 2023, based on its "cultural, historical or aesthetic importance in the nation’s recorded sound heritage."[114][115]
Aftermath
"I never realized that what seemed so logical a decision at the time would cost me so much."
– Irene Cara on suing her record label for unpaid royalties two decades earlier, in 1985[116]
In addition to being available on the soundtrack album, "Flashdance... What a Feeling" was included on Cara's follow-up LP, What a Feelin', which was produced by Moroder. As she promoted the new hit singles from that album at the end of 1983 and through the first half of 1984, she was also busy collecting awards for her soundtrack hit, but the good fortune was tainted by the feeling of being cheated by her record company. Even with this recent success,[117] she had only been paid $183 in royalties from Network Records[118] and demanded an explanation from Coury, who "tried to appease her with gifts and promises."[116] By the end of 1984 she still had only received $61,343[119] and decided to hire entertainment lawyers to get the money that her contract said she was due and also to help her break free from the label.[120] Years later she said, "I never realized that what seemed so logical a decision at the time would cost me so much."[116]
In 1985 Cara filed a lawsuit against Al Coury Inc.[121] and Network Records seeking $10million in punitive and approximately $2million in compensatory damages, claiming, among other things, that Coury withheld $2million in composing and recording deals involving "Flashdance... What a Feeling".[119] The treatment she received in the entertainment industry from that point on, however, caused her to suspect that Coury initiated a smear campaign to ruin her career.[122] She claims that they warned the other record labels of her lawsuit so that no one would sign her[123] and that people who once welcomed her—from producers and casting agents to the staff at restaurants and other favorite establishments around Los Angeles—now wanted nothing to do with her.[124] There was even talk that her career had been destroyed by drug addiction.[125] When Network Records folded, Coury went to work for David Geffen, whom Cara is certain also took part in vilifying her.[126]
The original team of lawyers that Cara hired had argued in her lawsuit that Network was not a functioning label instead of simply making a case for fraud,[127] so she tried several other firms when the case was no longer going anywhere before she found Tom Nunziato, an attorney who got things moving again.[128] "She was obviously strung out and upset, but she was very credible," Nunziato recalled.[128] "She was impressive. I'm a contingency lawyer, and ninety percent of a contingency case is the believability of your client, assuming the facts are there."[128] Because the statute of limitations had run out on claiming fraud, he had to focus on it as an accounting matter, but Cara would finally be able to make her case before a jury.[128]
In 1993, after concluding that Cara's career was damaged as a result of the treatment she received, a Los Angeles County Superior Court awarded her $1.5million[129] for misaccounted funds.[121] No case was allowed to be made for punitive damages, however,[121] and Nunziato explained how actually getting the money was more complicated: "Because only the corporations [Al Coury Inc. and Network Records] were sued back in the beginning and not the individuals, the corporations just declared bankruptcy; supposedly they used all the money to pay attorneys… Irene was vindicated by the jury, but the legal system kind of fell down, and there was no way to compensate her."[121] She did, however, begin earning royalties for her Network recordings almost a decade after her last chart hit in 1984.[130]
American-Australian singer Marcia Hines recorded a version of the song titled "What a Feeling" in 1998. It was released as the lead single from her ninth studio album, Time of Our Lives (1999).
In 2005, Austrian house music group Global Deejays covered "Flashdance... What a Feeling" on their album Network, retitled "What a Feeling (Flashdance)".
Track listings
Austrian, German and Australian CD maxi single
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Progressive Follow Up Radio Version) – 3:14
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Clubhouse Radio Version) – 3:32
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Pop Radio Version) – 2:46
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Clubhouse Mix) – 6:11
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (G.L.O.W's Feelin' Da Vox Mix) – 6:25
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Progressive Follow Up Mix) – 5:29
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (OSX Version) – 6:02
French CD maxi single
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (House Radio Edit) – 3:33
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Progressive Follow Up Radio Version) – 3:14
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Pop Radio Version) – 2:46
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Clubhouse Mix) – 6:11
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Progressive Follow Up Mix) – 5:27
Belgian CD maxi single
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Progressive Follow Up Radio Version) – 3:14
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Clubhouse Radio Version) – 3:32
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Pop Radio Version) – 2:46
"What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Progressive Follow Up Mix) – 5:29
German and Italian 12-inch single
A1. "What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Clubhouse Mix) – 6:07
A2. "What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (G.L.O.W's Feelin' Da Vox Mix) – 6:25
B1. "What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Progressive Follow Up Mix) – 5:28
B2. "What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (OSX Version) – 6:02
French 12-inch single
A. "What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Clubhouse Mix) – 6:11
B. "What a Feeling (Flashdance)" (Progressive Follow Up Mix) – 5:27
Björn Again released a version of the song as a single in 1993, which reached number 65 on the UK Singles Chart.[188]
Swiss singer DJ BoBo released a version as a duet with Irene Cara in 2001, which reached number two in Switzerland, number three in Germany, number 10 in Spain, and number 11 in Austria.[189]
French singer Priscilla Betti released a French version of the song named "Cette vie nouvelle" as the second single from her debut album Cette vie nouvelle (2002). It peaked at number nine in France and number 36 in the Walloon region of Belgium.[190]
Marie Picasso covered the song in 2007, peaking at number 54 on the Swedish singles chart.[191]
A 2024 television commercial for T-MobileHome Internet features Zach Braff, Donald Faison, and Jason Momoa singing a version of the song with lyrics about wireless broadband Internet access. During the commercial, they dance in a routine reminiscent of "Flashdance" (the full edit of the commercial includes a version of the iconic "water splash" moment and an appearance by Jennifer Beals), and at the end Faison pulls Braff's shirt down on one shoulder like Beals wore hers in the movie.[195][196][197][198]
^"Giorgio Moroder is back in business". Chicago Tribune. Chicago Tribune Media Group. 17 July 2014. Retrieved December 28, 2019. At first I was not interested, because I was so busy with some other stuff. I was in the studio day and night.
^Moroder, Giorgio (2010). Flashdance: Music and Songs (bonus feature from Flashdance, Special Collector's Edition) (DVD). Paramount.
^ abBruckheimer, Jerry (2010). Flashdance: Music and Songs (bonus feature from Flashdance, Special Collector's Edition) (DVD). Paramount. Maybe 6 to 8 weeks before we started filming, he sent this little demo in, and it was "What a Feeling".
^Moroder, Giorgio (May 20, 2013). "Electric Dreams: The Giorgio Moroder Story, Episode 2". BBC Radio 2 (Interview). BBC. The word was out that Flashdance could be a little bit of a soft porno because nobody knew what 'flashdance' means [sic]. So I wasn't really sure if I wanted to do it, but I said, 'Jerry, I'm going to watch the movie, and if I like it, I'll do it.' So I got the tapes… And, in fact, I watched it, and I loved it. And I said, 'Jerry, I absolutely want to do it.'
^Forsey, Keith (May 20, 2013). "Electric Dreams: The Giorgio Moroder Story, Episode 2". BBC Radio 2 (Interview). BBC. Flashdance with Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer was one of the movies that showed up, and Giorgio said, "OK, write the lyrics. Off you go." So I jumped into the back room, which was the drum room, and started collecting lyrics.
^Cara, Irene (May 20, 2013). "Electric Dreams: The Giorgio Moroder Story, Episode 2". BBC Radio 2 (Interview). BBC. Giorgio thought it best that I co-write it with Keith.
^ abcCara, Irene (May 20, 2013). "Electric Dreams: The Giorgio Moroder Story, Episode 2". BBC Radio 2 (Interview). BBC.
^Guinn & Perry 2005, p. 88: When RSO shut down, Coury decided to launch his own label. Cara could have written her own ticket at any record label in the world. Instead, she signed with Coury.
^Birch, Ian (June 23, 1983). "Flashdance: The Song". Smash Hits. London: Emap. Retrieved April 17, 2021. I was in California, working on an album and trying to find a producer. Paramount Pictures called me out of the blue and said that Giorgio Moroder, who was writing the music, needed some lyrics. I agreed to help out.
^Grein, Paul (March 10, 1984). "Grammy Caps Year of Success, Frustration for Cara". Billboard. New York: Billboard Publications, Inc. p. 54. Cara says she held off from working with Summer's longtime producer Giorgio Moroder until Flashdance and the subsequent What a Feelin' album in an effort to avoid comparisons with Summer. "Giorgio approached me right after 'Fame.' The only reason I didn't go with him at the time was all the comparisons."
^Grein, Paul (March 10, 1984). "Grammy Caps Year of Success, Frustration for Cara". Billboard. New York: Billboard Publications, Inc. p. 54.
^ abCara, Irene (May 20, 2013). "Electric Dreams: The Giorgio Moroder Story, Episode 2". BBC Radio 2 (Interview). BBC. We used dance as a metaphor for, you know, attaining anything in your life that you want to accomplish.
^Cara, Irene (May 20, 2013). "Electric Dreams: The Giorgio Moroder Story, Episode 2". BBC Radio 2 (Interview). BBC. They didn't show us the entire film. They just showed us the scene they wanted the song to go into, which was the big finale dance scene, so that's all I really had to go on.
^Cara, Irene (May 20, 2013). "Electric Dreams: The Giorgio Moroder Story, Episode 2". BBC Radio 2 (Interview). BBC. I mean, we jumped into the cab. I don't remember them sending a car for us, so we jumped in a cab. And by the time we got back to Giorgio's studio, I would say 80% of the song was written.
^Bronson 2003, p. 573: I came up with the original idea about talking about the feeling of dance. Keith elaborated on it, saying, "dancing for my life."
^Cara, Irene (May 20, 2013). "Electric Dreams: The Giorgio Moroder Story, Episode 2". BBC Radio 2 (Interview). BBC. [the title] wasn't "Flashdance[…What a Feeling]". It was "Dancing for Your Life".
^Moroder, Giorgio (May 20, 2013). "Electric Dreams: The Giorgio Moroder Story, Episode 2". BBC Radio 2 (Interview). BBC. I loved it. I feel the lyric, "what a feeling", sounds perfect for the movie.
^Cara, Irene (May 20, 2013). "Electric Dreams: The Giorgio Moroder Story, Episode 2". BBC Radio 2 (Interview). BBC. Giorgio came in and said, "Well, look, if you want it to be nominated, you better put the word Flashdance in there somewhere." So, uh, which we never quite did. We just kind of put the word "in a flash it takes hold of your heart" was the best we could do. We couldn't actually just say Flashdance. It didn't work in anything to say Flashdance.
^Lichtman, Irv (August 6, 1983). "Paramount Pictures Works To Help Sell Soundtracks". Billboard. New York: Billboard Publications, Inc. p. 55.
^"'Good Old Disco' Still Works for Moroder". Billboard. New York: Billboard Publications, Inc. October 29, 1983. p. 6.
^"'Good Old Disco' Still Works for Moroder". Billboard. New York: Billboard Publications, Inc. October 29, 1983. p. 6. I would have liked him to do the song for the film, but the film company wanted to have a bigger name.
^Ressner, Jeffrey (May 7, 1983). "Polygram Gears Up Push For Flashdance LP". Cashbox. New York: Cash Box Publishing Co., Inc. p. 10.
^Hall & Neale 2010, p. 216: Paramount followed the usual route of releasing the title track as a scout single succeeded by the release of the soundtrack album thereafter.
^Smith 1999, p. 49: Since 1960, the conventional wisdom about soundtracks is that they should be released about four to six weeks before the film's general release in order to give the music an opportunity to work its way up the charts and circulate the film's title in radio and retail markets. The same generally holds true for theme songs and music videos. In theory, a so-called scout single generates positive buzz for the film, which in turn creates consumer interest in the film's theme song and soundtrack album.
^Eszterhas 2010, p. 171: "Paramount had so little faith in Flashdance that the studio sold off 30 percent of its own potential profit to a private investors group. We all knew, of course, that studios only did that with movies that they were absolutely certain would stiff."
^Bruckheimer, Jerry (2010). Releasing the Flashdance Phenomenon (bonus feature from Flashdance, Special Collector's Edition) (DVD). Paramount.
^Ressner, Jeffrey (May 7, 1983). "Polygram Gears Up Push For Flashdance LP". Cashbox. New York: Cash Box Publishing Co., Inc. p. 18. Retailers told us that every store in the country had sold out of every piece of Flashdance product.
^Ressner, Jeffrey (May 7, 1983). "Polygram Gears Up Push For Flashdance LP". Cashbox. New York: Cash Box Publishing Co., Inc. p. 18. Paramount has enlisted Adrian Lyne, the director of the motion picture, to edit outtakes from the film into four music videos to be shown on MTV: Music Television, other youth-oriented cable shows, in-store at various record retail outlets and dance clubs. The quartet of videos highlights the songs "Manhunt," performed by Karen Kamon; "Imagination," by Laura Branigan; "Maniac," belted out by Michael Sembello; and Cara's title tune.
^Ressner, Jeffrey (May 7, 1983). "Polygram Gears Up Push For Flashdance LP". Cashbox. New York: Cash Box Publishing Co., Inc. p. 18.
^ ab"Les Certifications depuis 1973: Singles". Infodisc.fr. Retrieved August 31, 2020. (In the box labeled "Choisir Un Artiste Dans la Liste", type the letter "I". Arrow down the list to "Irene Cara" and click OK.)
^Kalinak, Kathryn (February 1984). "Flashdance: The dead end kid". Jump Cut (29): 3–5. Retrieved May 30, 2021. But interestingly enough for the women who perform it, flashdancing constitutes a kind of non-performance. Ignoring the audience, they dance for each other and for themselves. Alex(andra) is embarrassed when her boyfriend, Nick, catches her dancing in an unguarded moment, but the ogling at Mawby's leaves her unfazed
^Kalinak, Kathryn (February 1984). "Flashdance: The dead end kid". Jump Cut (29): 3–5. Retrieved May 30, 2021. 'I never see them. You go out there, and the music starts, and you begin to feel it. And your body just starts to move. I know it sounds really silly. But something inside you just clicks, and you just take off. You're gone. It's like you're somebody else for a second.' Echoing the lyrics of the film's title song, 'Flashdance… What a Feeling,' Alex celebrates the physical liberation of the dance: 'When I hear the music, Close my eyes, feel the rhythm Wrap around, take ahold of my heart, What a feeling!'
^Needham 2016, p. 322: The gradual acceleration and momentum of this scene in terms of performance, music and editing and the fact that it does not even have to be spoken that she has won over the conservatory make for a truly uplifting moment that takes the audience to the giddy highs of plenitude.
^Needham 2016, p. 322: The "true" ending of Flashdance is the point at which we realize Alex has won over the audition panel with her energetic performance to "What a Feeling." The music at this point is established as diegetic, since Alex brings along the record and we see her play it as part of her audition.
^Needham 2016, p. 322: In a single cut we see Alex run out of the Conservatory and into the waiting arms of Nick, and only then does the film end on a freeze-frame of the couple and the credits begin. It is in that single cut from interior to exterior, from audition to romance, from the loss of an independent life to one of coupledom and financial dependence where Flashdance does make its politics known.
^"Irene Cara/Felony". American Bandstand. Season 26. Episode 28. April 30, 1983.
^"Marilyn McCoo & Rex Smith Show 30". Solid Gold. Season 3. Episode 30. April 30, 1983.
^"Solid Gold Countdown 83". Solid Gold. Season 4. Episode 53. February 15, 1984.
^Guinn & Perry 2005, p. 89: When Cara finally realized she wasn't getting paid for her first album or for the Flashdance soundtrack,… she decided to speak up.
^Guinn & Perry 2005, p. 93: in the years with Coury, a period that included the recording of Anyone Can See and What a Feelin', she had been paid a total of $183 in royalties.
^ ab"Cara Takes Legal Action Against Coury, Network". Billboard. New York: Billboard Publications, Inc. June 1, 1985. p. 76.
^Guinn & Perry 2005, p. 89: Cara consulted her agent and hired a team of entertainment lawyers… She wanted her share of the record-sales profits that were stipulated in her contract with Coury, and she wanted to leave Network Records.
^Guinn & Perry 2005, p. 90: He—they—made sure there were consequences. Big time. Coury and all his mogul buddies. He basically made sure I'd never record again. They blacklisted me.
^Guinn & Perry 2005, p. 90: They sent out letters to all the labels saying they were in a legal battle with me and don't dare sign her.
^Guinn & Perry 2005, p. 91: Film producers wouldn't return her calls… 'Casting people who once adored me now quickly escorted me out of their offices,' she says. 'Restaurants and hangout spots I frequented and felt comfortable in now looked at me with disdain.'
^Guinn & Perry 2005, p. 91: Rumors swirled mercilessly about rampant drug use, spreading the notion that, in her early twenties, this great talent already had been hollowed out.
^Guinn & Perry 2005, p. 92: After his Network Records began to founder, Coury went to work for the record label owned by David Geffen, one of the most powerful people in the entertainment business, and Cara became convinced that Coury had enlisted Geffen in his vendetta against her.
^Guinn & Perry 2005, p. 90: The phalanx of entertainment lawyers she hired decided not to make a case for fraud, arguing instead that Network was not a functioning label.
^Syndicat National de l'Édition Phonographique (SNEP). Fabrice Ferment (ed.). "TOP – 1983". 40 ans de tubes : 1960–2000 : les meilleures ventes de 45 tours & CD singles (in French). OCLC469523661. Archived from the original on August 18, 2017. Retrieved February 13, 2024 – via Top-France.fr.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
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Needham, Gary (2016), "Reaganite Cinema: What a Feeling!", in Molloy, Claire; Tzioumakis, Yannis (eds.), The Routledge Companion to Cinema and Politics, Taylor & Francis, ISBN978-1-31739-245-3
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