Tag: Hollywood

  • Lauren Bacall Remembered Hollywood Legend

    Lauren Bacall Remembered Hollywood Legend

    With the world still reeling in disbelief at the sudden death of Robin Williams, news of the passing of Lauren Bacall got pushed way down the page. I barely noticed it last night before I shut off my computer. This morning, there isn’t even a mention on my home page. Of course, there are plenty of links to gossip about trash celebrities, a good number of whom I’ve never even heard of, save in that capacity. I think it’s time to finally change my home page.

    Bacall died yesterday, one month shy of her 90th birthday. Of course, her love affair with Humphrey Bogart is legendary. It’s easy to see in “To Have and Have Not,” her film debut, exactly what Bogie saw in her. At only 19, she was sultry and magnetic. Bogart was 44 and unhappily married. He tried to tough it out, but it couldn’t be helped. For once in his life, he wound up playing the sap. Fortunately Bacall was more femme than fatale, and the two lived happily ever after – or at least until 1957, when Bogart finally succumbed to cancer.

    Bacall, born Betty Joan Perske, enjoyed a long and enviable career. Only this year, she provided one of the voices for the English language release of the French-Belgian animated film, “Ernest & Celestine.”

    It’s always sobering for me to realize, having seen all those television commercials for “Woman of the Year” back in 1981, that this siren of the Golden Age of Hollywood was still in her 50s. Bacall would receive her second Tony Award for her performance. Earlier, she had been honored with a Tony for “Applause,” in 1970.

    In 1997, Bacall was nominated for an Academy Award for her work opposite Barbra Streisand in “The Mirror Has Two Faces.” She received an honorary Oscar in 2009.

    Following her star-making turn in “To Have and Have Not,” Bacall would go on to appear with Bogart in three more films – “The Big Sleep” (1946), “Dark Passage”(1947) , and “Key Largo” (1948) – and Max Steiner was there most of the way. (Franz Waxman scored “Dark Passage.”) Here’ s Steiner’s haunting love music for “The Big Sleep”:

    “You know how to whistle, don’t you…?”

    “Why don’t you shave, and we’ll try it again.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhW9l-N77U0

    So long, Slim.

  • Erich Wolfgang Korngold: Hollywood’s Prodigy

    Erich Wolfgang Korngold: Hollywood’s Prodigy

    Today is the birthday of one of my favorite composers, Erich Wolfgang Korngold (1897-1957). I don’t know, maybe it has something to do with watching those Errol Flynn movies on television as a kid – you know, the ones that inspire you to take down the curtain rods and start dueling around the house.

    Korngold was one of music’s great child prodigies. His ballet-pantomime “Der Schneemann” (“The Snowman”), composed at the age of 11, was performed at the Vienna Court Opera before Emperor Franz Josef. His early piano and chamber works were picked up by Artur Schnabel. His “Sinfonietta” (a full-scale symphony in all but name) was performed by Felix Weingartner and the Vienna Philharmonic when he was 15. At one performance, Korngold shared a box with Richard Strauss.

    Several of his operas are knock-outs. The double premiere in Hamburg and Cologne of “Die tote Stadt” (“The Dead City”) in 1920 made Korngold, at the age of 23, one of the leading opera composers of his time.

    Several factors contributed to an enormous shake-up in Korngold’s reputation. One was the fact that his musical language never really developed. His earliest works are as finely crafted and as fully realized as those written at the end of his life – most impressive, except that what seemed strikingly modern when he was a teen later seemed hopelessly romantic and passé.

    Another was that Korngold followed theatrical impresario Max Reinhardt to Hollywood for a big screen adaptation of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” This led to further offers from Warner Brothers, under terms he couldn’t refuse. In the meantime, the Nazis rolled into Austria, effectively sealing off his return home.

    For decades, Korngold’s reputation among “serious” music aficionados suffered. His Violin Concerto was famously derided by one critic as “more Korn than Gold.” But that all began to change in the 1970s, with the issue of an album on the RCA label, featuring music from Flynn’s “The Sea Hawk,” “Captain Blood” and “The Adventures of Robin Hood,” that proved there was indeed a market for classic film music. Ironically, the very projects that had dragged him down in the eyes of some served to jumpstart his posthumous revival.

    With the advent of compact disc, with labels searching for worthwhile though underexposed repertoire to lure consumers who had already replaced their entire record collections, Korngold’s reputation again began to soar. While he will never be regarded as the next Mahler or even Richard Strauss, it’s fairly obvious at this point that his place in “serious music” is secure.

    Still it is with affection that many remember his film scores, which he regarded as operas without words. It was Korngold who brought Old World opulence to New World popular culture. His efforts earned him two Academy Awards.

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll have two scores by Korngold as part of our second installment celebrating the films of 1939, which film historians frequently refer to as “Hollywood’s greatest year.” The first installment aired in February, and featured music from “The Wizard of Oz,” (Harold Arlen & Herbert Stothart) “Of Mice and Men” (Aaron Copland), “Gunga Din” (Alfred Newman) and “Goodbye, Mr. Chips” (Richard Addinsell).

    This week’s episode will include Korngold’s “Juarez,” an historical drama about Mexican resistance against the French army of Napoleon III, which starred Paul Muni, Bette Davis and Claude Rains, and “The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex,” with Davis and Errol Flynn, as Elizabeth I and Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, respectively. The latter features plenty of Korngold’s signature pageantry.

    The show will also include two scores by Alfred Newman, for “Wuthering Heights” and “The Hunchback of Notre Dame.”

    A third installment, focusing on the indefatigable Max Steiner – who worked on 13 films in 1939 – will air in the fall. So no more brickbats from you “Gone With the Wind” fans, please!

    Join us on the second leg of our journey to celebrate the 75th anniversary of “Hollywood’s greatest year,” on “Picture Perfect,” Friday evening at 6, or enjoy it later as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.

    PHOTO: Erich Wolfgang Korngold (right) works with a score mixer laying down the tracks for “Juarez.” That’s Paul Muni onscreen.

  • Passover Korngold’s Hollywood Psalm

    Passover Korngold’s Hollywood Psalm

    The Jewish celebration of Passover begins at sunset. One of my favorite composers, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, wrote this “Passover Psalm” in 1941, on a commission from Rabbi Jacob Sonderling. Sonderling, rabbi of Fairfax Temple in Los Angeles, which he founded, invited a number of prominent composers to write music for the synagogue.

    Korngold, who was one of the most celebrated opera composers of his youth, lived out the war years in Hollywood, where he revolutionized the art of film scoring. He was the recipient of two Academy Awards, for his music to “Anthony Adverse” (1936) and “The Adventures of Robin Hood” (1938).

    The “Passover Psalm” and “Prayer,” both written for Sonderling, are the only sacred works Korngold ever composed.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5cpvsi4TFto

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