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Sweet and Lowdown
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=== Development === After his 1969 directing debut ''[[Take the Money and Run (film)|Take the Money and Run]]'', Allen signed a contract to direct a series of films with [[United Artists]]. Told to "write what you want to write," Allen, a clarinetist and avid jazz enthusiast, wrote ''The Jazz Baby'', a drama screenplay about a jazz musician set in the 1930s. Allen said later that the United Artists executives were "stunned ... because they had expected a comedy. [They] were very worried and told me, 'We realize that we signed a contract with you and you can do anything you want. But we want to tell you that we really don't like this.'"{{sfn|Bjorkman|2005|p=36-37}} Allen went along with United Artists, writing and directing ''[[Bananas (film)|Bananas]]'' instead. In 1995, he dismissed ''The Jazz Baby'' as having been "probably too ambitious."{{sfn|Bjorkman|2005|p=36-37}} In 1998, Allen returned to the project, rewriting the script and changing its name to ''Sweet and Lowdown''. Allen had originally planned to play Ray himself, but eventually cast [[Sean Penn]]. Allen also considered [[Johnny Depp]], but Depp was busy at the time.{{sfn|Bjorkman|2005|p=347-356}} Penn had a reputation for being difficult to work with, but Allen later said, "I had no problem with him whatsoever ... He gave it his all and took direction and made contributions himself ... a tremendous actor."{{sfn|Bjorkman|2005|p=347-356}} Allen, in a retrospective, said that he told Samantha Morton to "play [her] part like [[Harpo Marx]]. And she said, 'Who is Harpo Marx?' and I realized how young she was. Then I told her about him [and] she went back and saw the films."{{sfn|Bjorkman|2005|p=347-356}}
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