Tag: The Crimson Pirate

  • Alwyn Michelle Kwan’s Olympic Composer

    Alwyn Michelle Kwan’s Olympic Composer

    What composer helped spur Michelle Kwan to Olympic excellence? Kwan skated to William Alwyn’s harp concerto, “Lyra Angelica,” during her legendary free skate at the 1998 Winter Olympics.

    Polyglot, poet, artist and especially musician, Alwyn played flute for a time with the London Symphony Orchestra. He taught composition at the Royal Academy of Music from 1926 to 1955. He was a composer of symphonies, operas, concertos, string quartets and film scores.

    My personal favorite of the symphonies is No. 4. Dig that cascading scherzo of a second movement! Then feel your heart tug at the third.



    His Symphony No. 3 may be the most structurally amazing, with the first movement generated from an 8-note theme, the second from a 4-note fragment, and the last a combination of the two. By golly, that’s all twelve notes of the chromatic scale – twelve-tone music! Then why is it so damned beautiful?



    Of course, there is much to be said for the simple pleasures of his music for “The Crimson Pirate.”

    Another fun fact: Alwyn was a cousin of Gary Cooper!

    Happy birthday, William Alwyn (1905-1985)!

  • 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!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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