Tag: Biopic

  • Liszt on Film: Richter, Bogarde, Daltrey & More

    Liszt on Film: Richter, Bogarde, Daltrey & More

    Lord knows, there have been plenty of eyerolling movies about classical musicians, especially classical music composers. How many times have I seen Liszt portrayed (by Dirk Bogarde, Henry Daniell, Julian Sands, Roger Daltrey, etc.)? Sometimes, these historical figures are played by actual musicians (Gustav Leonhardt as Bach, Gidon Kremer as Paganini; there was even talk at one point about Leonard Bernstein playing Tchaikovsky, with Greta Garbo as Nadezhda van Meck!), but can even the most skilled virtuoso, or maestro, as the case may be, ever live up to accrued legend?

    I know I’ve posted a link to the Leonhardt Bach film here in the past (“The Chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach,” 1968). Now, on the anniversary of the birth of Franz Liszt – the progenitor of the piano recital, the creator of the symphonic poem, and perhaps the greatest pianist in an era teeming with great pianists – is footage of one of his most renowned interpreters, Sviatoslav Richter, portraying Liszt in a Soviet film about Mikhail Glinka.

    Can even Richter live up to the legend? See for yourself in this clip from “The Composer Glinka” (1952).

    BONUS SECTION:

    Henry Daniell, one of Hollywood’s most supercilious villains, as Liszt in “Song of Love” (1947)

    Roger Daltrey as the Abbé Liszt, in cassock, having his blood sucked by vampire Wagner in Ken Russell’s “Lisztomania” (1975)

    Corny Hungarian peasant sequence with Dirk Bogarde as Liszt in “Song without End” (1960)

    Frustration of the day: only 60 seconds of Richter playing Liszt’s Piano Sonata in B minor

    Richter talks about the Liszt sonata, with more footage from the same read-through

    Richter playing the complete work in concert (audio only)

    Figurative laurels for Franz Liszt (1811-1886) on his birthday!

  • Malkovich as Celibidache? “The Yellow Tie” Biopic

    Haha! It looks like it’s actually on its way! A Sergiu Celibidache biopic starring who? Why, JOHN MALKOVICH, of course!

    I first shared news of this in 2021, assuming of course that the film, being produced in Romania, would never happen. Then again, if it weren’t being produced in Romania – Celibidache’s homeland – where would it be?

    Written and directed by the conductor’s son, Serge Ioan Celibidache, the title is “The Yellow Tie.” It’s not difficult to understand why they’re not calling it “Celibidache,” as it would have native English speakers everywhere trying to remember it and then grappling with the correct pronunciation (roughly “Cheh-lee-bee-DAH-keh.”).

    Celibidache, one-time conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic, gained notoriety for his uncompromising pursuit of “the transcendent moment,” his exhaustive rehearsals, and his refusal to record.

    Of course, the market is flooded with Celibidache recordings, many of them from his years in Munich, but these are all byproducts of actual live concerts. Few of them could be described as pedestrian.

    Equally, few would be described as “definitive.” When Celibidache was “on,” he could be like nobody else; but when he was “off” – again, he could be like nobody else.

    Last year, I posted about Malkovich conducting an orchestra before 4000 extras in Bucharest, reenacting a concert that Celibidache gave in Philadelphia with the Munich Philharmonic in 1989.

    Also in the film will be Sean Bean as (the younger) Celibidache’s father and Miranda Richardson as his wife, Ioana.

    The release date is yet to be announced. I missed this article about it, which ran in Variety in May:

    https://variety.com/2024/film/global/john-malkovich-celibidache-first-look-image-the-yellow-tie-1235996010/

    Of course, the most perfect title for John Malkovich fans would be “Being John Malkovich Being Sergiu Celibidache.”


    One of my earlier posts on the subject:

    Celi conducts Anton Bruckner’s Symphony No. 7

    Celi documentary, “The Garden of Celibidache”

    Malkovich interviewed on Romanian television

    Celibidache has a fever, and the only prescription is more viola!

  • Mahler in Hollywood Ken Russell’s Biopic

    Mahler in Hollywood Ken Russell’s Biopic

    If you ever thought Mahler sounds an awful lot like film music, well, a lot of composers of Hollywood’s Golden Age – Max Steiner and Erich Wolfgang Korngold spring to mind – were forged in Mahler’s Vienna. They shared his sensibility, to some extent, and boiled it down into a pop cultural gulasch when they settled in Hollywood.

    Ken Russell’s “Mahler” (1974) goes one step further in marrying Mahler’s actual music to the director’s poetic fancies and metaphorical musings about the composer and his life. So don’t look at it as strict biography, though there are certainly truths to be divined from it.

    Next to some of Russell’s other composer biopics (“Lisztomania,” for example), this one is positively restrained by comparison. Still, Russell being Russell, he couldn’t help but interpolate a Nazi dominatrix – presented as a silent movie parody, no less.

    Happy birthday (?), Gustav Mahler!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PGq7TFoxB4E

    Watch for Oliver Reed in a brief cameo as a train conductor. Allegedly, his payment was three bottles of Dom Perignon.

  • Scorsese’s New Biopic Byron Janis After Bernstein

    Scorsese’s New Biopic Byron Janis After Bernstein

    Only months after Martin Scorsese revealed he would be making a film about Leonard Bernstein, Variety announces a second project, with Scorsese producing – a biopic of pianist Byron Janis!

    http://variety.com/2016/film/news/martin-scorsese-producing-byron-janis-biopic-paramount-1201674748/

    Exciting news, but I’ve been burned before…

  • Vivaldi Biopic Danny Bonaduce?

    Vivaldi Biopic Danny Bonaduce?

    It’s probably too late for me to do anything about it at this point, so I may as well put it out there. I’m tossing away this cash cow for anyone who would care to milk it: a biopic of Antonio Vivaldi, starring Danny Bonaduce.

    What better choice to play the Red Priest than the former Danny Partridge? Imagine how much more powerful this could have been with Bonaduce:

    View his audition tape here:

    http://www.phillymag.com/files/html/bonaduce/bonaduce.swf

    Happy birthday, Antonio Vivaldi.

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