Korngold is King in “Kings Row”

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12 responses
The settings of the two films couldn’t be more different – “Kings Row’s” struggle of decency against sinister impulses takes place in a small Midwestern town – but Korngold’s opulently orchestrated music brims with romance and heroism. Check out that opening fanfare!
Although he was one of the great musical prodigies – celebrated in Vienna in his teens and 20s, especially for his operas – Korngold’s name was kept alive for decades after his death largely because of his work on a number of classic Warner Bros. films of the 1930s and ’40s. His music for the Errol Flynn swashbucklers has been particularly well-loved.
He had already written music for “Captain Blood,” “The Prince and the Pauper,” “The Adventures of Robin Hood,” “The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex,” and “The Sea Hawk” by the time he was offered work on “Kings Row.” Without knowing anything more about the project than the title, he commenced writing the main theme, on the assumption that the film would be yet another historical adventure. In reality, it was a turn-of-the-century soap opera based in America’s heartland.
Korngold’s approach couldn’t have been more fortuitous, since it led him to compose one of his grandest motifs. It punctuates the action of the film as if it were a cinematic “Ein Heldenleben” – which should come as little surprise, since Korngold actually knew Richard Strauss.
“Kings Row” was based on the bestselling novel by Henry Bellamann. The book reveals a kind of dark underbelly to the civility of small-town American life. The subject matter was ahead of its time, laying the groundwork for the novel “Peyton Place,” the film “Blue Velvet,” and television series such as “Twin Peaks” and “Desperate Housewives.” Yet at its core is the fundamental decency of its protagonist, Parris Mitchell, and his circle of friends. It is Mitchell’s ambition to become a doctor, and he heads to Vienna to study a new branch of science known as psychology.
Mitchell was played in the film by Robert Cummings, his best friend Drake by Ronald Reagan, and Randy, a former tomboy from a family of railroad workers, by Ann Sheridan, who received top billing. The studio filled out the cast with a superb ensemble, including Claude Rains, Judith Anderson, Charles Coburn, Harry Davenport, and even Maria Ouspenskaya, best known as Maleva the gypsy woman from “The Wolf Man.”
It’s a grand piece of entertainment, if you can get into the spirit of it, depending on your tolerance for incest, sadism, involuntary amputation, wrongful commitment to an insane asylum and suicide. This is the film in which Reagan exclaims the immortal line, “Where’s the rest of me?”
Thanks to the Hays Code, the screen adaptation was considerably toned down from – and more upbeat than – the novel. The emphasis is on Mitchell’s idealism in the face of a cruel, and at times horrifying, world. Along the way, there are several amusing (from our perspective) explanations of that mysterious new discipline, the study of the mind.
I hope you’ll join me for an hour of music from “Kings Row,” by the King of Film Composers, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, on “Picture Perfect,” music from the movies, now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!
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Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:
PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST
SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – Saturday at 11:00 AM EST/8:00 AM PST
THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST
Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!
https://kwax.uoregon.edu/
Comments
12 responses to “Korngold is King in “Kings Row””
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King’s Row is a magnificent score! Williams also derived a motif for Superman from it.
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Mather Pfeiffenberger It’s really the heroic “sound” more than anything that Williams emulates. But yes, I know the passage you’re speaking of.
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King’s Row, both in the book and in the movie, one scene with Ronald Reagan remains shocking to this day.
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Charmaine Rehg That book was such a downer. They did a really great job in adapting it to film in striking a balance and somehow finding ways to give it these interludes of uplift. In fact, I love the movie, even though there have been some, I am sure, who have thought me peculiar for doing so. It is a pretty perverse film! I’ve written about it and the book’s author, Henry Bellamann (who was a music guy, briefly dean of the Curtis Institute of Music), a number of times over the years.
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Classic Ross Amico , I will look into some information about Henry Bellamann, perhaps something you’ve written hopefully.
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Charmaine Rehg I don’t know if this link will work or not, but here’s a post I wrote about Bellamann from last year.
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Classic Ross Amico , thank you for the wonderful information. I didn’t know about the Fulton, Missouri connection. I’ll have to talk to some friends about it when I’m back visiting in St.Louis, my hometown.
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No wonder I could not stand Williams’ film scoring.
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Zlat Zlat 🙄
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Ann Sheridan was great and, shock of shocks, Reagan gave a good performance. Even he couldn’t ruin that line. All bound together by that beautiful score.
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Rosemary Turunc Really fine production. Classic Hollywood. Cummings is good too, genuinely likable, if you can shut out thoughts of his later television series, “Beach Blanket Bingo,” and his turbulent personal life. It’s best to avoid any show or movie in which he’s identified as “Bob.”
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One of my all-time favorite movies and an unforgettable score.
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