Design for Dreaming

Design for Dreaming
Directed byVictor D. Solow
Written byJoseph March
Produced byVictor D. Solow
Starring
Cinematography
  • Victor D. Solow
  • Stanley Meredith
  • Rex C. Wimpy
Edited byReva Schlesinger
Music bySol Kaplan
Production
company
MPO Productions
Distributed byGeneral Motors
Release date
  • 1956 (1956)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Design for Dreaming

Design for Dreaming is a 1956 industrial short or sponsored film produced to accompany the General Motors Motorama show that year. A ballet with voiceover dialogue, it features a woman (danced by Tad Tadlock and voiced by Marjorie Gordon) who dreams about a masked man (danced by Marc Breaux and sung by Joseph Lautner) taking her to the Motorama at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel and to Frigidaire's "Kitchen of the Future".

The film begins in the woman's bedroom, with the masked man suddenly appearing. He then takes her to the Motorama. After looking at several cars including Buick, Chevrolet Corvette, Oldsmobile, and Cadillacs, she is taken to the "kitchen of the future", where she bakes a cake. She then goes back to the Motorama and dances the "dance of tomorrow". After looking at more cars, she and her masked man (who unmasks himself) travel on the "road of tomorrow" in the "Firebird II."

In the late 20th century the film emerged as a cult classic, appreciated as an epitome of mid-century corporate futurism.[1]

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference atlas was invoked but never defined (see the help page).