Wednesday, October 14, 2015

#SymphonyofHorror The Boston Pops and the Berklee College of Music team up to give Nosferatu (1922) a new score



What: Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror  #SymphonyofHorror
Where: Symphony Hall in Boston, MA
Who: Keith Lockhart, The Boston Pops and eight student composers from Berklee College of Music
When: October 30th, 2015 at 8 PM (blood drive from 2-7 PM)
How: Tickets available at Bostonpops.org. $37-$47

The Boston area is no stranger to Halloween screenings of F.W. Murnau’s silent horror film Nosferatu (1922). There at least one or two a year held locally with live musical accompaniment. What makes this particular event special? A new score. And not just any new score! One created by eight composers, Berklee College of Music students from all over the world, in collaboration with Keith Lockhart of the Boston Pops.

Years ago I attended a screening of Sunrise (1927) at the Coolidge Corner Theatre in Brookline, MA. It was a similar to the Nosferatu event. Eight student composers from the Berklee College of Music composed a section of the score, conducted their individual pieces as an orchestra performed the final overall score in accompaniment to Murnau’s classic film. Not only was it one of the best classic film screenings I have ever been to, in my original review I called it “one of the most fantastic experiences of my life.”

Needless to say I have high hopes for Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror! Here are some of the highlights of the event:

1 – Diverse group of student film composers from all over the world.
2 – Score created under the direction of Professor of Film Scoring Sheldon Mirowitz and Keith Lockhart of the Boston Pops.
3 – The renowned Boston Pops Orchestra will be performing the score, conducted by Keith Lockhart.
4 – The score was fine-tuned with the Symphony Hall acoustics in mind.
5 – The event will be turned into a short documentary called “The Making of Nosferatu”.
6 – This will be first time the Boston Pops Orchestra has ever accompanied a full-length silent film. It’s also the longest piece they’ve eve performed.
7 – Nosferatu will be screened from a HD digital transfer with 4K Christie projectors. The film is from the best source material from the Murnau estate.
8 – Brigham and Women’s Hospital will be hosting a blood drive from 2-7 PM at Symphony Hall before the event.
9 – Attendees are encouraged to dress up in Halloween costumes.

Below is the full press release of the event with more detail. I will be there to cover this event so expect to hear more from me soon! Follow hashtag #SymphonyofHorror on Twitter too.

There is another great screening of Nosferatu (1922) with my friend Jeff Rapsis who will be accompanying the film at the Somerville Mudflat Studio on October 24th !



From the Boston Pops Press Release:

“Over Halloween weekend, on Friday, October 30, at 8 p.m., the Boston Pops and conductor Keith Lockhart, in collaboration with Berklee College of Music, will bring the classic 1922 silent horror film Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror to the Symphony Hall stage, with an entirely new full symphonic score composed by Berklee’s finest student film composers. Nosferatu on Halloween is a groundbreaking, unprecedented collaborative project in which eight of Berklee’s finest student film composers will write a full-length symphonic score, under the direction of Professor of Film Scoring Sheldon Mirowitz, for what is widely considered the greatest silent honor film of all time, F.W. Murnau’s Nosferatu (1922). The Boston Pops, under the direction of Keith Lockhart, will perform the score live-to-picture the night before Halloween. Tickets for Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror, ranging from $37 to $47, are available at www.bostonpops.org or by calling 888-266-1200. Performance starts at 8 p.m.

The eight composers featured in the Nosferatu project are among the very best Film Scoring majors studying at Berklee College of Music today; they are students in college’s Scoring Silent Films course taught by Sheldon Mirowitz (Outside Providence, Missing in America): Amit Cohen (Israel), Wani Han (South Korea), Emily Joseph (United States), Victor Kong (Malaysia), Matthew Morris (Canada), Hyunsoo Nam (South Korea), Elena Nezhelskaya (Russia), and Joy Ngiaw Jing Yi (Malaysia). The student composers have worked closely with their teacher/adviser, Mr. Mirowitz, who began the project by composing the basic themes and superstructure for the work; each student composer then uses these themes to compose the music for the section of the movie they have been assigned (seven sections in all, each about 12-15 minutes in length). This approach—with all the sections (written by eight different composers) sharing the same themes—is how the score has coherence and integrity and comes across as a unified film score.

Video clip highlights of the October 30 performance will be featured on www.bostonpops.org shortly after the performance takes place. In addition, Berklee College of Music is creating a short documentary entitled “The Making of Nosferatu,” which will include excerpts from the rehearsal and performance and will be featured at www.berklee.edu.

Keith Lockhart (Source: Boston Pops)
QUOTE FROM KEITH LOCKHART, BOSTON POPS CONDUCTOR

“Nosferatu is universally acknowledged not only as the greatest silent horror film, but also as one of the most influential films of all time, so creating a new full symphonic score to this iconic cinematic masterpiece is definitely a daunting undertaking,” said Boston Pops Conductor Keith Lockhart. “We at the Boston Pops are excited to embark on this new collaboration with Berklee College of Music and are thrilled that it represents the most significant project in Boston Pops history in the area of presenting student-composed work.

Our hope is to offer a new dimension to the film for fans of Nosferatu and to introduce this amazing motion picture to movie lovers who might not otherwise be aficionados of the silent film genre. The project will also put a spotlight on the special role a film score plays in the silent movie genre--reinforcing how the music conveys not just mood and atmosphere, but supports the entire narrative of the film, making the score feel even more essential than in modern day film. And the timing couldn’t be better … setting the mood for a perfectly fantastic Halloween in 2015.”

FURTHER DETAILS ON THE BOSTON POPS/BERKLEE NOSFERATU PROJECT

The October 30 concert presentation of Nosferatu will present a new take on a relatively recent Boston Pops tradition of presenting movies at Symphony Hall with lush soundtracks performed live by the virtuosic musicians of the Boston Pops Orchestra; this is the first time in the history of the Boston Pops that the orchestra will accompany the presentation of a full-length silent film. The new score to Nosferatu will be the longest, continuous piece of music the Pops has ever performed. It is certainly the most extensive performance of a student-composed work by the Pops in its history. The presentation is part of Berklee’s Signature Series of concerts, in addition to being a featured event on the Boston Pops calendar.

Most major Silent Films had original scores performed live by an orchestra at their premiers, and Nosferatu is not exception—Hans Erdmann's has been lost and what remains now is a modern reconstitution of his score. But, with all Silent Films, the attraction for composers is great to compose new scores for these classic films, and over the decades many composers and musicians have written or improvised their own soundtracks to accompany Nosferatu. Few, however, have harnessed the power of a full symphonic orchestra to accomplish this task, much less augmented it with the signature sounds of classic electronic instruments like the Theremin and the Moog Modular Synthesizer, and brought the whole experience to the concert hall. The film being used for the Boston Pops/Berklee collaboration is a recent, high-definition digital transfer of the best source material, from the Murnau estate. It will be projected by two of the finest 4K Christie projectors available.

FROM BERKLEE COLLEGE OF MUSIC: WHY SILENT FILMS?

Silent film presentation, whether by collaboration with the Boston Pops, or in a performance by the Berklee Silent Film Orchestra, is the most direct, visceral means of experiencing the power of the film composer’s craft. Silent film is the ultimate challenge for a film composer. A silent film score must, in concert with the actors and staging, convey the narrative and emotional messages of the film. Scoring for silent film exercises and builds the film composer’s skills in a way that exceeds the task of composing for projects that employ dialogue and other sound. These are some of the greatest films of any era, whether sound or silent. The act of composing and performing a new score reinterprets and renews these classics for each succeeding generation. The computer technology employed in composing, and performing them live-to-picture, is completely up-to-the-minute. The only thing old about the art form of silent film music presentation is the date on the film. As a learning exercise, silent films, and Berklee’s Scoring Silent Films course, represent a rigorous and demanding test of those who would compose for film, television, video games, or any other long-form film/video form. It is superb means of explaining and demonstrating to young musicians the film composer’s task, while showing the heft of Berklee’s own film composition program.”

Monday, October 12, 2015

Hollywood's Hispanic Heritage Blogathon: Cesar Romero



“I’ve had a long career in this town. Hasn’t been the greatest but it’s been good and it’s been steady. And I owe a lot to this business.” –  Cesar Romero circa 1986

Imagine Hollywood in the late 1930s. A young starlet has been invited to a glamorous party but she has no one to go with. A tall, debonaire Latin man, a fellow actor, comes to her rescue. This man is Cesar Romero. He's the perfect escort and the ladies of Hollywood know it. Romero is well-dressed, good looking, has excellent manners and lifelong talent for dancing. He's an expert schmoozer and knows how to work the crowd. He is dependable and desirable, composed but still fun to be around. Romero loves parties and they loved him right back.

Cesar Romero and Joan Crawford

Romero was the escort for many actresses including Joan Crawford (they were lifelong friends and possibly more), Carole Lombard, Barbara Stanwyck, Loretta Young, Virginia Bruce, Marlene Dietrich, Agnes Moorehead and more.

Affectionately referred to as the Latin from Manhattan or Butch (a silly nickname given to him by George Murphy), Cesar Romero had a long career on the big and small screens. And wouldn't you know, it all started because he was really good at working parties.

Cesar Julio Romero Jr. was born in New York City in 1907. His father Cesar Julio Romero Sr. was a sugar broker (some accounts say he was born in Italy, others say Spain) and his mother Maria Mantilla was a Cuban-American socialite. It's said that his grandfather was Cuban national hero Jose Marti. Publicly Marti was Maria's godfather but privately he was her father, whether the connection was biological or not we'll never know. The Romero family was very affluent. They went to all the best parties, had loads of servants and little Cesar Romero went to the finest boarding schools. This all changed in the 1920s when the sugar crash left Romero Sr. without the means to provide for his family. They were able to cruise by on the patriarch's savings but this eventually ran out.

Cesar Romero and his parents. Source

There are two really important things you must know about Cesar Romero. First, he was fiercely loyal to his family and felt obligated to take care of them financially. This would go on for the rest of his life and was the driving force behind his long career in the industry. Second, he had a natural talent for dancing, acting and entertaining in general and this was boosted by his fine social skills and his knack for meeting the right people at the right time.

When his father could no longer provide for his family, Romero got a job as a courier for First National Bank in New York City. It was a soul-crushing job and he quickly looked for a way out. When he was six years old he learned how to dance, courtesy of lessons given to him by a family maid, and over the years perfected his skills. He took advantage of this during the Roaring Twenties when you could be paid to dance at supper clubs and speakeasies. Romero became one half of the Lisbeth and Romero: Aristocrats of the Dance dancing duo with partner Lisbeth Higgins. His career as a professional dancer helped keep his family afloat. Romero sought every opportunity he could. He would crash parties, hang out at speakeasies and dance with the creme de la creme.

Cesar Romero and Lisbeth Higgins (Source)
Opportunities would arise and he'd take advantage of every one of them. Theater led to Broadway and Broadway led a one year contract at MGM. Romero was off to Hollywood! And his family would follow soon after.

His first film role was as a gigolo in The Thin Man (1934). MGM didn't really know what to do with him and let his contract go. Romero however had been making lots of good connections, one of those was studio executive Darryl Zanuck. Thanks to that working relationship Romero was contracted by Universal, 20th Century and then Fox when it merged to become 20th Century Fox.

Romero was never really typecast. He didn't have a thick accent and his exotic looks could translate into multiple ethnicities. He could play the Latin lover but he was flexible enough to play a variety of roles. He could play villains, love interests and found ways to showcase his comedic skills and his dancing talents on screen. His early filmography includes The Devil is a Woman (1935), with Marlene Dietrich, Wee Willie Winkie (1937), My Lucky Star (1938), Week-End in Havana (1941) as well as the Cisco Kid films of the 1930s and 1940s. He worked in films through the '50s, '60s, '70s and '80s. My favorite of his roles was as Duke Santos in Ocean's 11 (1960). He's charming and mischievous and you want to hate him for throwing a monkey wrench into the works but you just can't.

Cesar Romero, silver fox

Cesar Romero never became a huge star yet he was consistent, dependable, flexible and got along with everybody. This made him an asset in the business. It didn't hurt that he aged beautifully and embraced TV when he couldn't find many film roles. Romero's second career in TV won him a different kind of celebrity when he played the Joker on The Batman series in the late 1960s.

“A lot of people knock the old studio system, but I thought it was wonderful. You had such great security.” – Cesar Romero

Romero thrived in the studio era and mourned the loss of it. As time progressed and as many of his fellow actors and actresses passed away he looked back fondly at a time when elegance reigned supreme, everyone had a contract and even though you might work at different studios you all knew each other intimately because of the plethora of private Hollywood parties. Although Romero thrived on TV, he missed his motion picture colony of old.

“I never considered myself a Latin actor. I was born in New York City my mother was born in Brooklyn.” –  Cesar Romero circa 1986

Romero never truly embraced his Latino culture although he never denied it either. He didn't express interest in exploring the history or writings of his revolutionary grandfather Jose Marti. Even when he was invited to Cuban cultural events in Florida, he would politely participate with modest interest. He spoke Spanish, not fluently but enough to get by. Romero did inherit a very strong belief in the importance of family thanks to his Latino upbringing. He took care of his parents, brother, two sisters, nieces and nephews and some of them even lived with him on his estate. Romero never married and while this led to rumors about his sexuality, friends claim that he was too busy socializing, working and taking care of his family to settle down.

Tyrone Power and Cesar Romero

Interesting fact about Cesar Romero: he was best friends with fellow actor Tyrone Power. They once took a 10 week trip through Central and South America and back up through the United States. Power and Romero were neighbors and Power's untimely death 1958 really crushed Romero.

There is lots more to discuss about Romero. His trademark mustache, his time in the US Coast Guard during WWII, his chain of men's clothing stores called Cesar Romero Ltd, that one time he was on The Golden Girls TV show. But there isn't enough time to cover it all. Romero lived a good life; a long and interesting one.

Cesar Romero's charm didn't just come from being a good looking entertainer. He was an affable man who loved his work, loved his family and loved life. Romero died in 1994 leaving behind a body of work as varied and as entertaining as the man himself.

This post is my contribution to the Hollywood's Hispanic Heritage Blogathon hosted by Aurora of Once Upon a Screen



Thursday, October 8, 2015

#30in30FavoriteStars

During the month of September I did a series on Twitter called 30 in 30 Favorite Stars. Each day I shared a photo of one of my favorite stars and used the hashtag #30in30FavoriteStars so folks could follow along. I encouraged other classic film fans to participate and it got a great response! I had so much fun with it that I'm contemplating doing more with different themes. Are you on Twitter? Follow me on my movie/personal account @QuelleLove and my general account for film bloggers @ClassicFilmRead. Below is a snapshot of the Twitter series as well as the full list with photos of the 30 stars I chose for my own list. Enjoy!





Robert Mitchum


Susan Peters

Eli Wallach

Eve Arden

Edward G. Robinson


James Garner

Joan Blondell

Jack Klugman

Ginger Rogers

George Sanders

Akim Tamiroff

Bette Davis

Doris Day

Cesar Romero

Ann-Margret

Ann Blyth

Marsha Hunt

Louis Calhern

Lewis Stone

Kirk Douglas

S.Z. Sakall

Ruby Keeler

Norman Lloyd

Norma Shearer

Sandra Dee

Sidney Poitier

Sterling Hayden
Bonita Granville


William Powell
This one was my most popular! TCM re-tweeted the image which didn't hurt.

Thelma Todd


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