Happy Thanksgiving!
This year, among the many things I have to be thankful for is making it through 'The Thief of Bagdad' last Tuesday night. I accompanied the film just hours after having a stent removed following last week's kidney stone surgery.
'Bagdad' had been scheduled for the Coolidge Corner's 'Sounds of Silents' series long before the kidney stone decided to make an appearance. It just worked out that the stent removal (a follow-up to the surgery itself) wound up getting scheduled for the same day as the film.
But the show must go on! So driving into Boston, I was already thinking ahead to places in the film where I could set up an atmospheric loop on the synthesizer, which would enable me to quickly escape to the men's room if needed.
Well, turns out I had no problems. Actually, I think getting absorbed in doing music for this sprawling, ambitious picture helped minimize any distracting pain or lingering discomfort, which is a phenomenon I've noticed before.
If I'm suffering, say, a bad cold, whatever symptoms I have seem to recede or disappear entirely when I'm accompanying a film. They'll return afterwards, but during the time I'm at the keyboard it's like a reprieve.
Some say laughter is the best medicine. I say it's creating live music for a silent film screening!
And I'll get to do it again on Sunday, Dec. 1 when I accompany 'So's Your Old Man' (1926) at the Town Hall Theatre in Wilton, N.H. More info is in the press release pasted in below.
It's a silent comedy starring W.C. Fields, so lucky me: I'll get the therapeutic benefits of both laughter and silent film accompaniment.
Happy Thanksgiving and see you at the movies!
* * *
MONDAY, NOV. 18, 2024 / FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact Jeff Rapsis • (603) 236-9237 • jeffrapsis@gmail.com
Town Hall Theatre to screen rare silent film starring comic icon W.C. Fields
'So's Your Old Man' shows legendary performer as younger man; program on Sunday, Dec. 1 accompanied by live music
WILTON, N.H.—He was a performer who could be recognized by just the nasal twang of his voice.
But prior to reaching iconic fame in talking pictures, W.C. Fields successfully starred in a popular series of silent feature films for Paramount Pictures and other studios in the 1920s.
Rediscover the non-talking W.C. Fields
in 'So's Your Old Man' (1926) one of his best silent pictures, in a
Thanksgiving Day weekend screening on Sunday, Dec. 1 at 2 p.m. at the Town Hall Theatre, 40 Main St., Wilton, N.H.
Live
musical scoring will
be provided by silent film accompanist Jeff Rapsis. Admission is free;
donations are accepted, with $10 per person suggested to defray
expenses.
In 'So's Your Old Man' (1926), Fields plays Sam Bisbee, inventor of a new shatter-proof windshield glass and regarded as a crackpot by the townsfolk.
The woman is
really Princess Lescaboura, member of a family of European royalty, who
later arrives in Bisbee's home town to thank him, upending Bisbee's
life and setting the small town aflame with gossip. The film includes a
version of Fields' famous "golf" routine.
The film was remade as a talkie in 1934, with W.C. Fields again starring, under the title 'You're Telling Me!' In 2008, 'So's Your Old Man' was added to the U.S. National Film Registry.
W.C. Fields
remains famous today for his comic persona as a misanthropic and
hard-drinking egotist with a snarling contempt for dogs, children and
women.
Although Fields achieved lasting
fame as a movie star in talking pictures of the 1930s, his long career
encompassed decades on the vaudeville stage as well as a series of
silent film roles in the 1920s.
"People find it hard to think of W.C. Fields in silent films, but he was actually quite successful," Rapsis said. "As a vaudeville performer and juggler, Fields cultivated a form of visual comedy and pantomime that transferred well to the silent screen.
"Also,
as a middle-aged man during the silent film era, he was able to play a
family father figure—the kind of role that wasn't open to younger comic
stars such as Charlie Chaplin or Buster Keaton," Rapsis said.
In all, Fields starred in 10 silent features in the mid-1920s. Several are lost; in those that survive, Fields sports a thick mustache, part of his vaudeville costume as a "vagabond juggler" which he dropped in later years.
The
film was made not in Hollywood, but at the Paramount studios in
Astoria, Queens, a popular production facility for New York-based stage
performers who also appeared in film.
For the music, Rapsis
improvises in real time, while the film is running, using a digital
synthesizer that allow him to recreate the "movie score" texture of a
full orchestra.
"Improvising a score live is a bit of a high-wire
act, but it allows me to follow and support the film a lot more
effectively than if I was buried in sheet music," Rapsis said.
"Instead,
I'm free to follow the film right in the moment. Each time it's
different, which lends a certain energy and immediacy and excitement to
the experience."
'So's Your Old Man,' a silent comedy starring W.C. Fields,
will be screened with live music
on Sunday, Dec. 1 at 2 p.m. at the Town Hall Theatre, 40 Main St., Wilton, N.H.
Admission is free; donations are accepted, with $10 per person suggested
to defray expenses. For more information, call the theater at (603)
654-3456.
No comments:
Post a Comment