Category: Daily Dispatch

  • TCM Pirate Movies All June Long Arrr!

    TCM Pirate Movies All June Long Arrr!

    All right, I know I already posted today, but Turner Classic Movies: TCM is showing pirate movies every Friday night in June. No Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., alas, though tonight offers the rare opportunity to see the original silent version of “The Sea Hawk” (8 p.m. ET), which hews much closer to the Rafael Sabatini novel than the classic version with Errol Flynn.

    Next Friday offers a smiley, bare-chested Burt Lancaster as “The Crimson Pirate” (also 8 p.m.). Lancaster’s equally toothy, mute sidekick is none other than Nick Cravat, who he’d met as a boy at summer camp. The two literally ran away and joined the circus, creating an acrobatic act called Lang and Cravat in 1930s. Cravat later appeared in nine of Lancaster’s films. He also played the gremlin in the classic “Twilight Zone” episode, “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet.”

    June 20 is all-Flynn, at least until 3:45 a.m., which means I will finally get a chance to see “Against All Flags” (8 p.m.) Doubtful that it is one of Flynn’s better vehicles, though it does offer the opportunity to see Maureen O’Hara in pirate garb.

    I’m also curious to see “The Boy and the Pirates” (June 27, 10 p.m.), directed by B-movie sci-fi/horror maestro Bert I. Gordon. Gordon’s house composer, Albert Glasser, though very much on a budget, clearly attempts to channel Erich Wolfgang Korngold’s pirate scores of the classic era.

    I may have to do something on “Picture Perfect” soon!

    AAAAAAAARRRRRRRRGGGGGHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Princeton Festival Presents Porgy and Bess

    Princeton Festival Presents Porgy and Bess

    It’s that time of year again. The Princeton Festival begins this weekend. The opera this time around is “Porgy and Bess,” with performances on June 22, 27 and 29. Read more about it in my overview in today’s Trenton Times. (More in-depth “Porgy” coverage in two weeks.)

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2014/06/princeton_festival_kicks_off_1.html

    PHOTO: George and Ira Gershwin flank “Porgy” novelist DuBose Heyward

  • Aaron Copland’s Hollywood Battles & Brilliance

    Aaron Copland’s Hollywood Battles & Brilliance

    If you want to work in Hollywood, you’ve got to expect once in a while somebody’s going to mess with your things – even if you’re a Pulitzer Prize winner, lauded as the “Dean of American composers.”

    Aaron Copland was not very happy when his music for “The Heiress” was chopped to ribbons, dialed down and rescored without his approval.

    William Wyler (“Wuthering Heights,” “Friendly Persuasion,” “The Big Country,” “Ben-Hur”) was a brilliant director, but he had a tin ear. His films consistently sported the best scores of their era, and yet he mostly underappreciated, if not outright disliked them.

    “The Heiress” was made fresh off Wyler’s runaway success with “The Best Years of Our Lives.” The film, based on Henry James’ “Washington Square,” was nominated for eight Academy Awards, winning four, including Oscars for Olivia De Havilland and for Copland’s score, which is so strong it manages to maintain its integrity despite all of the studio tinkering.

    Wyler insisted Copland work the song “Plaisir d’Amour” into the fabric of his music, which he artfully did in three cues. But that wasn’t good enough. Without his knowledge, the main title was replaced with a garish arrangement of “Plaisir,” which was also looped in for some of the love music. André Previn, in 1949 already one of Hollywood’s bright young talents, likened the return of Copland’s original thoughts following the interpolations to “suddenly finding a diamond in a can of Heinz beans.”

    When Copland’s contribution was recognized by the Academy, it was the only instance up to that time of a score being honored after being shorn of its main title, the part of a score that generally makes the biggest impression. Copland never bothered to collect his award. “The Heiress” would be the last time he would work in Hollywood.

    He did compose one more film score, however, for the 1961 independent film, “Something Wild,” which contains some of his most insistently non-commercial music. Occasionally brutal and often thrilling, its character is worlds away from the pastoral tranquility of “Appalachian Spring.” It’s a brilliant piece of work, yet it did not receive a commercial release until 2003.

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll sample music from “The Heiress” and “Something Wild,” as well as from the controversial pro-Soviet film “The North Star,” and even a little bit from the 1939 World’s Fair documentary “The City.”

    Join me for the film music of Aaron Copland, this Friday evening at 6 ET, or catch the show later as a webcast, at http://www.wwfm.org.

  • Owl Jolson Richard Strauss Oops

    Owl Jolson Richard Strauss Oops

    Don’t you hate when you write a time-sensitive Facebook post, and then you realize that you had your days mixed up and that you’re actually a week off? That’s precisely what happened to me when writing my appreciation of Richard Strauss to mark the 150th anniversary of his birth on June 11. This is a hazard of working in radio and as a journalist. Everything always has to be ahead.

    Anyway, since I’ve already wasted enough time this morning, here’s Owl Jolson.

    http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2ijkn_i-love-to-singa_shortfilms

    He loves to sing-a about the moon-a and the June-a and the spring-a.

  • Rediscovering a Lost Baroque Genius

    Rediscovering a Lost Baroque Genius

    The greatest of neglected Baroque composers?

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