• “Blue Moon” Sings

    “Blue Moon” Sings

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    It’s got to be Oscar season. It’s rare for me to see two movies I liked – I mean, really enjoyed – in one week. (Read my impressions of Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein” from November 6.) I mean, I don’t generally make the trek to a theater to see anything I know is going to be trash anymore – unless it’s “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” (ouch!) or “Megalopolis.” “Blue Moon” is on a more intimate scale, but quietly thrilling in a way neither of those enormously-budgeted films were.

    Local hero Ethan Hawke, who grew up in West Windsor, NJ, and hung out in Princeton – where he attended the Hun School and gained early acting experience at McCarter Theatre – plays the acerbic, needy, soulful, brilliant lyricist Lorenz Hart, smarting from the fledgling success of his longtime creative partner, composer Richard Rodgers, on the opening night of “Oklahoma!” – Rodgers’ inaugural effort with Oscar Hammerstein II. Hart, the wound of rejection oozing like sour grapes through all the malbec and bourbon, delivers rapid-fire, barbed arias and elevated panegyrics to ineffable beauty – unsurprisingly, given his vocation, always lighting on the “mot juste.” He observes that any show that ends in an exclamation point isn’t worth seeing. He’s hard on “Oklahoma!’s” middlebrow success (and I can’t say that I disagree). He thirsts for art that’s more inventive, more challenging, one that takes creative chances. He bristles at facile lyrics such as corn that’s “as high as an elephant’s eye,” as all good folk should. Except, of course, the beauty of what Rodgers & Hammerstein achieved at their best also defies logic.

    Hart was no slouch either, if exasperatingly difficult to pin down. It’s made abundantly clear that he had to be a nightmare to work with, especially for someone as disciplined as Rodgers, with his regular work habits. By contrast, Hart enjoys the pleasures of distraction and dissipation, staying out after-hours and sleeping until noon. You couldn’t find a better example of clashing personalities sharing an inexplicable chemistry, although of course such bonds are abundant in the history of the creative arts. We’re reminded from the start that the Rodgers & Hart partnership yielded a thousand songs, including “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered,” “My Funny Valentine,” “Isn’t It Romantic,” “The Lady is a Tramp,” and the titular “Blue Moon.” The soundtrack is a juke box for admirers of the golden age of the American Songbook, with the soundtrack pretty much wall-to-wall Richard Rodgers, Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, and George Gershwin.

    There are running gags about “Casablanca,” as Hart banters with Eddie the bartender (Bobby Cannavale), an earthy but sympathetic foil, and in-jokes about Stephen Sondheim and “Stuart Little.” E.B. White (Patrick Kennedy) happens to be sitting in a corner booth. There’s also a plum role for Magaret Qualley, as the self-described “ambisexual” Hart’s statuesque, 20-year-old muse. There’s an extended conversation in a cloakroom that allows both actors to really shine.

    Hawke, who in life is 5’ 10” with a full head of hair, disappears into the character, made to appear physically diminutive, sporting a combover and double-breasted suit, and for much of the movie, swilling booze and chomping on a monstrous cigar. (In the old days, Hart could have been played by Lionel Stander.) The illusion is broken only in a couple of shots, when he’s shown wearing a hat in profile, which obscures the make-up, and we can’t help but notice that it is indeed Ethan Hawke. Otherwise, the magic is sustained for 100 mesmerizing minutes.

    The film is directed by Richard Linklater, who’s written and/or directed mostly modest yet persistently memorable movies, including “Slacker,” “Dazed and Confused,” and “School of Rock.” I’m not by any means a rocker, but I do have a soft spot for the Jack Black opus, which I still find myself quoting often. (I too have lived the legend of the rent.) Also, the trilogy of films starring Hawke and Judy Delpy that began with “Before Sunrise.” And the even more ambitious “Boyhood,” shot in installments over 12 years, so that the actors (including Hawke, but especially the young Ellar Coltrane, who plays his son) could age in real time.

    Despite taking place largely in one location (the legendary theatrical hangout, Sardi’s), “Blue Moon” is more rapid-fire, with enough dialogue for four or five movies, and I wouldn’t be the least bit surprised if it takes on a second life as a play. The screenplay is by Robert Kaplow, whose book, “Me and Orson Welles,” Linklater shepherded to the screen in 2008. The dialogue is very good – smart, often acrobatic, but always believable – and the actors stick every line.

    There’s a moment when Hart holds Rodgers (Andrew Scott, no less excellent) back from an upstairs reception and the two men – Rodgers now at the peak of his career and Hart sensing he is at the end of his – stand on a landing together, cycling through a gamut of emotions that color their complex personal relationship, with its shades of friction, annoyance, exasperation, and underlying affection. It is some finely tuned and nuanced work, those emotions flitting across their faces and reflected in their body language as subtly as wisps of cloud on a sunny day. Anyone who’s lived long enough has surely experienced similar moments with a complicated friend or family member. The movie is full of such touches, which stand in absorbing contrast to Hart’s alcohol-propelled bluster.

    I’ve been meaning to get around to seeing this, which I had been anticipating ever since I saw the trailer weeks ago, but I missed it in Princeton, where it had a very short run. But I was able to catch it up Route 206 at Montgomery Cinemas (where, by the way, “Frankenstein,” is also still playing). My stepfather saw it a week or two ago, and he brought it up during our most recent telephone conversation, knowing what a music guy I am. We always talk movies. We’ve done so our entire lives, and I know he gets a kick out of it, probably in large part because I still know who people like Lionel Stander are. He said he’d tell me what he thought of it once I had a chance to see it. He didn’t want to color my impressions of it, he said. To me, that suggests he was lukewarm on it. One of his most-hated experiences in a theater was viewing “My Dinner with André” (which I also really like), which is basically André Gregory and Wallace Shawn conversing at a table in a restaurant for two hours. I could see how, for him, this movie might have a touch of that, but I would think also that there are just so many period references – he’ll recognize Sardi’s and “Casablanca” and the American Songbook, even if he might not pick-up on E.B. White and Sondheim – he would at least got some enjoyment from it. I guess I’ll find out.

    Anyway, I wouldn’t be surprised if there are Academy Award nominations for Hawke, who’s come a long way from “Dead Poets Society,” and screenwriter Robert Kaplow.

    It’s the rare movie about music that I actually like. I feel like “Blue Moon” actually gets it right, largely because it avoids the Scylla and Charybdis of, on the one hand, attempting to portray the mystifying act of creation (a mostly internal, undramatic process), and on the other, attempting to define the ineffable (a word Hart really likes) essence of music.

    “Blue Moon” works as a character portrait of a fictionalized Hart, with just enough supporting players and good performances to make this pocket-dramedy sing.


  • Veteran Radio Host Jeannie Becker

    Veteran Radio Host Jeannie Becker

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    I was sorry to learn, only last week, a year and a half late, that WPRB Princeton’s long-time “Sunday Jazz” host, Jeannie Becker, died on April 28, 2023. She was a lovely woman, exuding positivity, always with a smile on her face, and sporting a smooth, mellifluous radio voice. I didn’t know her well, but we swapped chairs many times when I was doing Sunday morning classical there. Her build was slight and she moved carefully, and I gather she was not in the best of health, but she was always very well put-together, and she impressed me as being remarkably youthful.

    I had no idea of Jeannie’s service in the U.S. Navy or her career at the Pentagon. Over the years, I’ve shared the airwaves with several colleagues who served in our armed forces (Ralph Collier and Bliss Michelson, among them), but to my knowledge, Jeannie is the only one who is buried in Arlington National Cemetery. She lived quite a life, and I think a fulfilling one. Thinking of her on this Veterans Day.

    https://www.lewisfuneralhomemoorestown.com/obituaries/Jeannie-Becker/#!/Obituary


  • Morricone’s Fistful of Felines

    Morricone’s Fistful of Felines

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    The insanely prolific Ennio Morricone composed some 500 film and television scores. Remembering him on his birthday with this lesser-known gem, his theme for “The Cat” (1977), a giallo-comedy – not to be confused with the straight giallo “The Cat o’ Nine Tails” (1971) or the comedy “Eye of the Cat” (1975), which features a cat named Wolfgang Amadeus! – both of which he also scored.

    “The Cat,” produced by Sergio Leone, with whom Morricone galloped to international fame with “A Fistful Full of Dollars,” “For a Few Dollars More,” and “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,” was one of 11 movies he scored in 1977.

    Be forewarned: once listened to, “The Cat” will be with you for the rest of the day.

    Happy birthday, Ennio Morricone!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jGBxzofJo7c&t

    ———

    PHOTO: Morricone recording “The Exorcist II: The Heretic,” also 1977


  • Fantasia on a Phantasy by Vaughan Williams

    Fantasia on a Phantasy by Vaughan Williams

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    It’s a mercurial November Sunday here in Princeton, one hour overcast and gloomy, the next blue sky and amorphous clouds, with perhaps an interlude of rain expected this afternoon. Optimal conditions for a pilgrimage to Solebury, PA (outside New Hope), at 3 p.m. to hear Concordia Chamber Players perform Ralph Vaughan Williams’ “Phantasy Quintet.”

    It’s not that Vaughan Williams didn’t know how to spell “fantasy.” His “Phantasy” was one of a number of works commissioned from England’s great composers by Walter Wilson Cobbett. Cobbett was a businessman and amateur violinist whose dual passions were chamber music and music of the Elizabethan era. The “phantasy” was Cobbett’s musical folly, an eccentric answer to the fancies and fantasias of Byrd, Gibbons, and Purcell.

    Cobbett’s phantasies are short and sweet at around 12 minutes in length. Personally, I could listen to Vaughan Williams all day, but the Concordia concert will also include Johannes Brahms’ String Quintet in G major, Op. 111. Very cool.

    The program will open with a rare bit of chamber music by a composer who liked to think big – Anton Bruckner. Bruckner composed his String Quintet in F major in 1878-79, between his Symphonies Nos. 5 and 6. This is civilized and beautiful music. In 1884, the Viennese critic Theodor Helm wrote: “While the finale of the Bruckner Quintet – at least the effect of first-time listening – is in doubt, the three remaining movements are of the highest interest, especially in the happy and original invention of the motives. …But the pearl of the quintet is the Adagio (in G-flat major), one of the noblest, most enlightened, tenderest and most beautiful in sound, written in modern times […]. What an exceedingly deep, flowing in a truly ‘infinite’ stream of emotion! This adagio looks rather as if it were a play, only now found in Beethoven’s estate, from the last time of the master and animated by his fullest inspiration. This is probably the highest praise that can be said about the composition of a living sound artist, and we are not afraid to say it.”

    The entire quintet runs to some 43 minutes. Concordia will perform the sublime Adagio, around 14 minutes in length.

    The venue is the hill-top, timber-trussed Trinity Episcopal Church, located at 6587 Upper York Rd., again, in Solebury, PA. I can’t think of a cheerier venue for a concert of this kind. Anticipating a phantastic afternoon!

    For more information, visit concordiaplayers.org.


  • Unbowed Strings on “Sweetness and Light”

    Unbowed Strings on “Sweetness and Light”

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    This week on “Sweetness and Light,” it’s an hour of “unbowed strings.” All of these string instruments will be plucked, struck, or strummed, with not a bow in sight. We’ll hear works for zither, guitar, cimbalom, harp, and mandolin, by composers Anton Karas, Ferdinando Carulli, Zoltán Kodály, Reinhold Gliere, and Samuel Siegel. We forgo the bow, but strings are the thing on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST, exclusively on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!

    Stream it, wherever you are, at the link kwax.uoregon.edu and soon here at rossamico.com/radio!


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