Lloyd Bacon. Footlight Parade

The Swimming Pool: Swim or Sink. Summer Cinema

Lloyd Bacon, Footlight Parade [Desfile de candilejas], 1933, película

Lloyd Bacon, Footlight Parade [Desfile de candilejas], 1933, película

The swimming pool and dancing aquatic bodies as a place of reverie and fascination in the advent of Hollywood and the fledgling entertainment industry. A musical prior to the moralising Hays Code in which a visionary Busby Berkeley directs one of the most lavish mass-participation choreographies in the history of cinema. The main number is By a Waterfall, with a pool and hundreds of bathers front and centre. After observing this piece, Salvador Dalí considered Busby Berkeley an equal in his paranoid delirium and a major influence on his installations, for instance the work he made for the 1939 New York World’s Fair. 

The story follows a brilliant theatre director who dreams up grandiose musical numbers to be performed in cinemas before each screening, saving live performance from the rise of spoken film. Therefore, he throws himself into a race to show the world the three most lavish musicals ever imagined. Along with Honeymoon Hotel and Shanghai Lil, By a Waterfall stands out and is considered the most striking film choreography focused on the plastic possibilities of the swimming pool. Hundreds of swimmers turn their bodies into monumental, abstract geometric figures in a crescendo of surprise and wonder which builds the swimming pool into the essential architecture for a Hollywood conceived as a new factory of dreams. 

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Organised by

Museo Reina Sofía

Curatorship

Chema González, Dídac Humà and Alberto Moreno

Sponsored by

Estrella Damm

Accessible activity
This activity has two spaces reserved for people with reduced mobility  

Agenda

sábado 25 jul 2026 a las 22:00

Lloyd Bacon. Footlight Parade

USA, 1933, DA, black and white, sound, original version in English with Spanish subtitles, 103’

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Lloyd Bacon, Footlight Parade [Desfile de candilejas], 1933, película
Lloyd Bacon, Footlight Parade [Desfile de candilejas], 1933, película
Lloyd Bacon, Footlight Parade [Desfile de candilejas], 1933, película
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Activity within the program...

The Swimming Pool: Swim or Sink

Summer Cinema

This year, Museo Reina Sofía devotes its summer film series to the existential, symbolic imagery of the swimming pool. The series embraces the act of watching films communally in the Sabatini Building’s neoclassical garden, a recently restored, verdant oasis inhabited by the sculptures of Dan Graham, Eduardo Chillida, Alejandra Riera and Alexander Calder, complemented by the large cinema screen that operates as a further contemporary work. The series is free of charge and unfolds every Friday and Saturday across July and August. 

The programme, entitled The Swimming Pool: Swim or Sink, seeks to develop the existential ambiguity that characterises the swimming pool in its most diverse manifestations across the history of film. The pool imparts an exploration of ideas in the vicinity of summer identity: leisure, free time, hedonism, sensorial pleasure, extreme heat and bodily sensuality. Yet it is also associated with the verso of these emotions, for instance melancholy, the fleetingness of time and the search for something beyond reach, be it social status or unattainable desire, and their ill-fated outcomes. Therefore, it comes as no surprise that the swimming pool, the architecture of pleasure and enjoyment, is also the scene of shady, criminal activity. Sure enough, the pool, that middle-class extravagance that breaks a garden’s solidity, is much more than a sheltered space of summer hedonism: it is a symbolic threshold between reason and desire. Under its surface there is more than controlled water and an aquatic penchant for relaxation; there is an entire geography of desires at their most unrestrained.       

The contained, transparent water acts as a social display that reflects at once the innocence of childhood and the most unsettling desires of adulthood. It is the theatrical stage for the outsider’s gaze and the search for the other, a mirror of false calm under an idealised image. The act of submergence alters these rules: noise is dampened, gravity is suspended. With sinking returns the metaphor for introspection, to a space where the mind echoes, where it frees itself from external structures and allows identity to be inhabited. There, deep down, the abyss and intrigue surface. The Swimming Pool: Swim or Sink is an invitation to have a blast, or not.

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