Sunday, January 26, 2025

Up next: Greta Garbo in 'Wild Orchids' on Wednesday, Jan. 29 in Manchester, N.H.

A photo showing the Alton Bay Ice Runway in 2015.

It's so cold in New Hampshire that for the first time in three years, the Alton Bay Ice Runway has opened!

That's right: the only FAA-approved ice runway in the lower 48 states—in an inlet of New Hampshire's Lake Winnipesaukee—was declared open last week when the ice reached the requisite 12 inches of thickness.

So it's been perfect weather for a screening 'Way Down East' (1920), the D.W. Griffith melodrama in which Lillian Gish winds up on ice floes in the Connecticut River—not that far from the Alton Bay Ice Runway, as the crow flies.

If the story was set a little later in the development of aviation, Richard Barthelmess could have rescued Ms. Gish by taking off from the ice runway in his trusty Sopwith Camel and swooping down to whisk her to safety.

Well, it's a thought.

At our screening on Sunday afternoon at the Town Hall Theatre in Wilton, N.H., 'Way Down East' proved once again Griffith's ability to lay out a story that pulls an audience along the same way the on-screen ice floes carry Lillian Gish to the edge of the mighty waterfall.

It's a fun film to accompany. It's such a hokey story, and yet the audience reaction in far-off 2025 was every bit as lively, I imagine, as audiences when the film was brand new. People of course cheered at the waterfall rescue, and the triple wedding that ends of the film produced genuine gales of laughter.

Looking ahead: a chance to warm up comes in the form of a screening of 'Wild Orchids' (1929), a steamy romantic thriller starring Greta Garbo that I'll accompany on Wednesday, Jan. 29 at 7 p.m. at the Rex Theatre, 23 Amherst St. in downtown Manchester, N.H. 

It's one of the last MGM silents, made long after the studio had otherwise converted to talkies. But execs were worried that Garbo's heavily accented voice would ruin her box office appeal, and so kept her silent for as long as possible. 

Well, surprise! Turns out Garbo's husky delivery actually added to her mystique, and her career sailed on uninterrupted. Until, that is, she started turning up in places like a David Letterman Top 10 List.

But the good thing about this was that we got a whole additional year's worth of silent pictures out of Garbo, made at a time when silent filmmaking was at its peak, technically speaking. 

See for yourself—and warm yourself up while you're at it— with a screening of 'Wild Orchids' this Wednesday night. More details in the press release below.

*    *    *

Greta Garbo and Nils Asther star in 'Wild Orchids' (1929).

MONDAY, JAN. 20, 2025 / FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact Jeff Rapsis • (603) 236-9237 • jeffrapsis@gmail.com

Greta Garbo stars in steamy silent film thriller on Wednesday, Jan. 29 at Rex Theatre

'Wild Orchids' (1929), one of MGM's final silent film releases, to be screened with live music at downtown Manchester, N.H. venue

MANCHESTER, N.H.—Chase away the mid-winter chill with a steamy movie featuring early Hollywood icon Greta Garbo.

Warm up with 'Wild Orchids' (1929), an intense romantic thriller starring Garbo, to be screened with live music at the Rex Theatre, 23 Amherst St., Manchester, N.H.

'Wild Orchids,' one of the last silent films of MGM studios, will be shown on Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025 at 7 p.m.

General admission is $10 per person; tickets are available at the door or online at www.palacetheatre.org.
 
Live music will be provided by silent film accompanist Jeff Rapsis.

A tale of forbidden romance, 'Wild Orchids' opens with an older businessman (John Lewis) taking his young wife (Greta Garbo) on a business trip to the South Pacific.

Aboard ship, she witnesses a wealthy passenger (Nils Asther) brutally whipping a servant. The violent man notices Garbo and resolves to meet her.

Things get complicated, however, when the man turns out to be a royal heir crucially important to the business affairs of Garbo's husband.

Emotions boil over in the tropical heat, leading to a dramatic showdown in the jungle over Garbo's ultimate fate.

An original trade publication ad promoting 'Wild Orchids' (1929).

Released during the movie industry's chaotic transition from silent film to synchronized dialogue, 'Wild Orchids' proved a hit.

The silent film earned $1.1 million, making it one of the year's top 10 box office attractions.

Although MGM was already releasing talking pictures, the studio kept starring Garbo in silent pictures due to concerns about her heavy accent.

Originally from Sweden, in Hollywood Garbo quickly rose to silent film stardom based on her acting ability and her unique look.

Garbo spoke English, but with a Scandinavian accent, causing concerns that the public would reject her in talking pictures.

When she finally spoke on-screen, Garbo's distinctive delivery and husky accent added to her popularity, to the great relief of studio bosses.

Nils Asther and Greta Garbo in a scene from 'Wild Orchids' (1929).

A live musical score for 'Wild Orchids' will be performed by silent film accompanist Jeff Rapsis.

Rapsis specializes in creating music to help silent films connect with modern-day audiences.

"As one of the last commercial silent films produced, 'Wild Orchids' shows how fluent Hollywood had become at telling stories visually, rather than through dialogue," Rapsis said.

"These films were intended to be seen on the big screen, with live music, and—most importantly—with an audience. Put it all back together, and films like 'Wild Orchids' really leap back to life."

'Wild Orchids' (1929) will be shown on Wednesday, Jan. 29 at 7 p.m. at the Rex Theatre, 23 Amherst St., Manchester, N.H.

General admission is $10 per person; tickets are available at the door or online at www.palacetheatre.org

For more information, call (603) 668-5588.

Monday, January 20, 2025

Report from Cleveland: 'The Lost World' (1925) highlights sci-fi marathon. Next up: 'Way Down East' on Sunday, Jan. 26 in Wilton, N.H.

Rules are posted prominently at the Case Western Reserve University Film Society's annual science-fiction marathon.

Cleveland may have the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame, but it also has the Case Western Reserve University Film Society. 

And Rock 'n' Roll may be about rebellion, but I'm here say that this past weekend, the real rebels in Cleveland attended the CWRU Film Society's annual Science Fiction Marathon—all 30 hours of it.

It being the event's 50th year, steps were taken to commemorate this remarkable milestone. One of those steps: including a silent film with live music in the line-up.

That's where I came in: on Saturday afternoon, after the 1951 sci-fi classic 'The Day The Earth Stood Still' (with its Bernard Herrmann score), I had the privilege of doing live music for 'The Lost World' (1925).

And let me tell you—nothing compares to the audience response of several hundred hardcore sci-fi buffs for this kind of film. Everyone supplying dinosaur noises was just the start. People reacted to everything and anything. Comments were shouted at the screen throughout the movie.

To a silent film accompanist, it's a special experience—one worth driving 700 miles one-way for, which is what I did this weekend. (What do silent film accompaniment and long-haul trucking have in common?)

I've scored silent films for previous editions of the marathon, so arrival and set-up followed a well-established pattern: driving onto the Case Western campus sidewalks to reach the back entrance of the Strosacker Auditorium; unloading my gear and staging it in a back hallway; waiting for the previous film to wrap, then helping attendees relocate their inflatable mattresses and whatever else might be in the way; setting up and plugging in all my stuff.

It takes about 15 minutes, and before I know it, the lights go down and off we go! First up was "Koko in 1999," an 'Out of the Inkwell' cartoon from 1927 that was a new one to me. In it, Koko the Clown gets chased by Father Time all the way to the far-off future year of 1999, where he experiences robotic barbering, a mechanized wedding, and futuristic marital strife. 

I used a modest pipe organ sound for Koko, but switched to full orchestra for 'The Lost World.' 

And it really was quite a ride. Right from the start, there was no shortage of marathon attendees ready to pile on with "witty" shouted commentary. And then there was the "dinosaur noises," which started with one person, but soon everyone was doing it. It never let up. 

Another thing was clapping. If I played using any kind of regular rhythmic pattern, people would start clapping. This happened during the opening titles, and for the remainder of the film I tried to avoid triggering a similar reaction.

It was all good-natured, of course—but then, what effect does the clapping and shouting have on the film, which itself is from "a lost world?"

Sometimes I say that I accompany an audience as much as the film on screen—that the audience influences how the music unfolds. But that definitely wasn't the case with 'The Lost World.' Because of the over-the-top audience reaction, I felt it was important to play the film straight, to plow through the  audience reactions, to give the film a fighting chance.

I think it worked. As the film progressed, you could tell that people were following it and buying it. The noise never quite let up, but it seemed to fade over time. To the film's credit, it does a solid job storytelling in a way that causes viewers to let it in, even after all these years.

So I tried hard to accompany the film without reference to the audience, and in the end everyone got a great experience: those at the marathon got to contribute dinosaur noises, while I was created a score that supported the film and kept things together.

Next up is the great D.W. Griffith melodrama, which I'm accompanying on Sunday, Jan. 26 at 2 p.m. at the Town Hall Theatre, Wilton, N.H.

Press release is pasted in below. Hope to see you at the movies!

Jeff R.

*     *     *

Original promotional art for 'Way Down East' (1920).

MONDAY, JAN. 6, 2025 / FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact Jeff Rapsis • (603) 236-9237 • jeffrapsis@gmail.com

Silent film classic 'Way Down East' at Town Hall Theatre on Sunday, Jan. 26

D.W. Griffith blockbuster starring Lillian Gish, filmed partly in New England, to be screened with live music

WILTON, N.H. — The iconic image of actress Lillian Gish trapped on an ice floe and headed straight for a waterfall will once again fill the big screen when 'Way Down East' (1920) is revived on Sunday, Jan. 26, 2025 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.

The movie, a blockbuster melodrama directed by D.W. Griffith, is set in old-time rural New England, and was partly filmed on location in New Hampshire and Vermont. It stars Gish in an acclaimed performance as a wronged woman trying to make her way in an unforgiving world. Can she find love and redemption, or will she ride to her doom on the raging river's ice floes?

In 'Way Down East,' Gish stars as a poor New England country girl who travels to Boston to visit her rich relatives in the hopes of getting financial help. While there, she's dazzled by upper class society and romanced by a rich womanizer (Lowell Sherman) who takes advantage of her innocence by tricking her into bed with a fake marriage ceremony.

Lillian Gish on the ice-bound Connecticut River in 'Way Down East' (1920).

Convinced she's found the husband of her dreams, Gish returns home to the country, only to be abandoned. She informs her faux husband she's pregnant; he orders her to get an abortion. Instead, Gish goes into exile to have the baby, finds herself persecuted for giving birth out of wedlock, and flees into the rural countryside to seek refuge. The film was noteworthy in its time for addressing such topics as abortion and women's rights.

Modern critics hail 'Way Down East' for Gish's performance, which continues to mesmerize audiences nearly a century after the film's release. "Gish provides an abject lesson in screen acting and brings home the importance and effectiveness of seeing a film in a theater with a crowd," wrote Paul Brenner on www.filmcritic.com in 2007. "If you are not moved at the scene of Gish baptizing her dead baby, then you should check the obituaries of your local paper to see if you are listed."

The film also stars silent era heartthrob Richard Barthelmess. In the film's climax, Barthelmess must dash to rescue Gish from being carried away on the ice floes.

Lillian Gish on location near White River Junction, Vt.

Much of the acclaimed ice floe sequence was filmed in March 1920 on location on the Connecticut River in New Hampshire and the White River in Vermont, as the winter pack ice was breaking up. No process shots or post-production special effects were available to filmmakers at the time, so Griffith and his crew had no choice but to stage and shoot it all on a real river, with the players out on the ice. To get the floes to break up and float down the river, Griffith's crew dynamited pack ice upstream.

Gish later said that she suffered frostbite by following director Griffith's command to always keep one hand in the water during the shooting.

Despite such hardships, 'Way Down East' cemented Gish's reputation as one of the silent era's major stars. Gish would continue to work in films and, later, television, until the 1980s. She died in 1993 at age 99.

Accompanist Jeff Rapsis specializes in creating music that bridges the gap between an older film and the expectations of today's audiences. Using a digital synthesizer that recreates the texture of a full orchestra, he improvises scores in real time as a movie unfolds, so that the music for no two screenings is the same.

"It's kind of a high wire act, but it helps create an emotional energy that's part of the silent film experience," Rapsis said. "It's easier to follow the emotional line of the movie and the audience's reaction when I'm able to follow what's on screen, rather than be buried in sheet music," he said.

Because silent films were designed to be shown to large audiences in theaters with live music, the best way to experience them is to recreate the conditions in which they were first shown, Rapsis said.

"Films such as 'Way Down East' were created to be shown on the big screen to large audiences as a communal experience," Rapsis said. "With an audience and live music, silent films come to life in the way their makers intended. Not only are they entertaining, but they give today's audiences a chance to understand what caused people to first fall in love with the movies."

D.W. Griffith (in bowler hat) directs the cast of his blockbuster melodrama 'Way Down East' (1920).

'Way Down East' was based on a popular stage drama, for which director Griffith paid the then-astounding sum of $175,000 to turn into a movie. The picture proved to be a huge moneymaker, taking in $4.5 million, making it the fourth-highest grossing movie of the silent film era. 

'Way Down East' would be the last of Griffith's great blockbusters; tastes changed as the 1920s rolled on and Griffith's Victorian style fell out of favor. Receipts from 'Way Down East' kept Griffith's studio afloat during a subsequent series of box office flops.

"This picture was a monster hit when it was released," Rapsis said, "and it still holds up well today. As a melodrama, it's a great film for an audience to cheer on the good folks and boo and hiss the bad guys. But there's an additional level of interest now because the film captured a way of life that's long since disappeared."

'Way Down East' will be shown with live music on Sunday, Jan. 26 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.







Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Off to Cleveland to accompany 'The Lost World' at Case Western Reserve's 50th annual sci-fi marathon; then 'Way Down East' in Wilton, N.H.

Original poster art for 'The Lost World' (1925).

This weekend takes me to the fair city of Cleveland, Ohio, where I'll accompany 'The Lost World' (1925) at this year's annual Sci-Fi Marathon at Case Western Reserve University.

It's the 50th annual edition of the Case Western Film Society's marathon, at which diehard movie buffs spend a mid-winter weekend watching sci-fi films of all types 30 to 36 hours non-stop.

And next month, I get to do music for a silent film at a similar event: the Boston Sci-Fi Marathon, also celebrating its 50th year on Presidents Day Weekend at the Somerville Theatre in Somerville, Mass.

The Boston folks have programmed an unusual title this time around: 'Algol: A Tragedy of Power' (1921), a German silent that I've never accompanied before.

I've done films at earlier editions of both marathons. What I love about them is that the audience is always so engaged. They may get into a "Mystery Science Theatre 3000" groove sometimes, but overall you won't find a more enthusiastic crowd than the sci-fi marathon audience.

If you're in the Cleveland area this weekend, I understand the Case Western marathon lets you buy tickets for individual screenings. 

Although I encourage you to take in the experience in its entirety, if you'd like to attend just 'The Lost World,' it's scheduled to run on Saturday, Jan. 18 at 3 p.m. (Start time subject to change due to the ebb and flow of the marathon schedule.)

For more information about attending, check out the marathon's webpage

Looking ahead: after a quiet start to 2025, things perk up with a cluster of screenings in late January and early February. 

I'm accompanying 'Way Down East' (1920) on Sunday, Jan. 26 in Wilton, N.H.; 'Wild Orchids' (1929) on Wednesday, Jan. 29 in Manchester, N.H.; 'Straight is the Way (1921) in Campton, N.H.; 'The Flying Ace' (1921) on Sunday, Feb. 2 in Somerville, Mass.; and 'Nanook of the North' (1922) on Monday, Feb. 3 in Greenfield, Mass.

Hoping for a good turnout for 'Way Down East,' as I've found a crowded theater always helps the Griffith films "click" with modern audiences.

Seen in isolation, the early pioneering features directed by D.W. Griffith really seem to drag. But shown with an audience, they spring to life. 

I think this has something to do with what Griffith did prior to the movies. For many years, he staged and directed melodramas for theatrical troupes that toured through small towns.

Back then, if you didn't entertain people, they'd throw things at you—or worse. So Griffith got very skilled at telling stories that would grab an audience early and then not let go. 

I believe that more than anything else, this was Griffith's superpower: to be able tell a story in such a way that an audience can't stop watching. 

Find out for yourself by being part of the experience when I accompany 'Way Down East' later this month at the Town Hall Theatre in Wilton, N.H. More details in the press release pasted in below.

*    *    *

Original promotional art for 'Way Down East' (1920).

MONDAY, JAN. 6, 2025 / FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact Jeff Rapsis • (603) 236-9237 • jeffrapsis@gmail.com

Silent film classic 'Way Down East' at Town Hall Theatre on Sunday, Jan. 26

D.W. Griffith blockbuster starring Lillian Gish, filmed partly in New England, to be screened with live music

WILTON, N.H. — The iconic image of actress Lillian Gish trapped on an ice floe and headed straight for a waterfall will once again fill the big screen when 'Way Down East' (1920) is revived on Sunday, Jan. 26, 2025 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.

The movie, a blockbuster melodrama directed by D.W. Griffith, is set in old-time rural New England, and was partly filmed on location in New Hampshire and Vermont. It stars Gish in an acclaimed performance as a wronged woman trying to make her way in an unforgiving world. Can she find love and redemption, or will she ride to her doom on the raging river's ice floes?

In 'Way Down East,' Gish stars as a poor New England country girl who travels to Boston to visit her rich relatives in the hopes of getting financial help. While there, she's dazzled by upper class society and romanced by a rich womanizer (Lowell Sherman) who takes advantage of her innocence by tricking her into bed with a fake marriage ceremony.

Lillian Gish on the ice-bound Connecticut River in 'Way Down East' (1920).

Convinced she's found the husband of her dreams, Gish returns home to the country, only to be abandoned. She informs her faux husband she's pregnant; he orders her to get an abortion. Instead, Gish goes into exile to have the baby, finds herself persecuted for giving birth out of wedlock, and flees into the rural countryside to seek refuge. The film was noteworthy in its time for addressing such topics as abortion and women's rights.

Modern critics hail 'Way Down East' for Gish's performance, which continues to mesmerize audiences nearly a century after the film's release. "Gish provides an abject lesson in screen acting and brings home the importance and effectiveness of seeing a film in a theater with a crowd," wrote Paul Brenner on www.filmcritic.com in 2007. "If you are not moved at the scene of Gish baptizing her dead baby, then you should check the obituaries of your local paper to see if you are listed."

The film also stars silent era heartthrob Richard Barthelmess. In the film's climax, Barthelmess must dash to rescue Gish from being carried away on the ice floes.

Lillian Gish on location near White River Junction, Vt.

Much of the acclaimed ice floe sequence was filmed in March 1920 on location on the Connecticut River in New Hampshire and the White River in Vermont, as the winter pack ice was breaking up. No process shots or post-production special effects were available to filmmakers at the time, so Griffith and his crew had no choice but to stage and shoot it all on a real river, with the players out on the ice. To get the floes to break up and float down the river, Griffith's crew dynamited pack ice upstream.

Gish later said that she suffered frostbite by following director Griffith's command to always keep one hand in the water during the shooting.

Despite such hardships, 'Way Down East' cemented Gish's reputation as one of the silent era's major stars. Gish would continue to work in films and, later, television, until the 1980s. She died in 1993 at age 99.

Accompanist Jeff Rapsis specializes in creating music that bridges the gap between an older film and the expectations of today's audiences. Using a digital synthesizer that recreates the texture of a full orchestra, he improvises scores in real time as a movie unfolds, so that the music for no two screenings is the same.

"It's kind of a high wire act, but it helps create an emotional energy that's part of the silent film experience," Rapsis said. "It's easier to follow the emotional line of the movie and the audience's reaction when I'm able to follow what's on screen, rather than be buried in sheet music," he said.

Because silent films were designed to be shown to large audiences in theaters with live music, the best way to experience them is to recreate the conditions in which they were first shown, Rapsis said.

"Films such as 'Way Down East' were created to be shown on the big screen to large audiences as a communal experience," Rapsis said. "With an audience and live music, silent films come to life in the way their makers intended. Not only are they entertaining, but they give today's audiences a chance to understand what caused people to first fall in love with the movies."

D.W. Griffith (in bowler hat) directs the cast of his blockbuster melodrama 'Way Down East' (1920).

'Way Down East' was based on a popular stage drama, for which director Griffith paid the then-astounding sum of $175,000 to turn into a movie. The picture proved to be a huge moneymaker, taking in $4.5 million, making it the fourth-highest grossing movie of the silent film era. 

'Way Down East' would be the last of Griffith's great blockbusters; tastes changed as the 1920s rolled on and Griffith's Victorian style fell out of favor. Receipts from 'Way Down East' kept Griffith's studio afloat during a subsequent series of box office flops.

"This picture was a monster hit when it was released," Rapsis said, "and it still holds up well today. As a melodrama, it's a great film for an audience to cheer on the good folks and boo and hiss the bad guys. But there's an additional level of interest now because the film captured a way of life that's long since disappeared."

'Way Down East' will be shown with live music on Sunday, Jan. 26 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.

Thursday, January 2, 2025

Thoughts about silent film music and life in 2025: Back to the start in more ways than one

Harry Langdon is over a barrel (actually, several of them) in 'The Strong Man' (1926).

The New Year in silent film accompaniment starts for me on Monday, Jan. 6, when I'll do music for Harry Langdon's great comedy 'The Strong Man' (1926) at the Garden Cinema in Greenfield, Mass. 

Details and more info about the screening are in the press release pasted below.

But before we plunge headlong into 2025, I'd like to pause to round up a few thoughts about where I am and where I'm going.

First: I didn't realize it until just now, but 2025 will mark the 20th year that I've been regularly accompanying silent film screenings.

After all this time and effort, I feel like I'm finally beginning to really know how to do it consistently and effectively. No joke!

One reason for this is that I've been devoting time to improving my keyboard technique. I've done this by regularly running through the old Hanon piano exercises, and then seriously working on actual concert pieces. 

So now, for the first time in my life, I can play (or rather plow through) all of Chopin's 'Heroic' Polonaise in A flat. It's a thrill to actually be able to play music I've loved all my life, and get to know it that much more thoroughly.

Although some sections are still pretty rough and slow going, and I've memorized only about 60 percent of it, I hope to have the whole thing under my fingers in the near future.

This helps with silent film accompaniment by giving me a more robust technique to call on when needed. It trains the hands to do more during improvisation, which is how I do music for most silent films.

Also, after 20 years and more than 1,500 screenings, I feel I've developed a fluency in the art of silent film accompaniment---a sense of what works, when to hold back, when to come on strong, and so many other elements that go into effective scoring.

In addition, I've forged my own personal musical language. I feel this enables me to bring a vintage film to life for today's audiences with music that's respectful of the films and the period, but still feels fresh and reflects today's notions of effective film scoring.

It's also an exciting time in general. I feel my life has been divided into separate but overlapping phases, and I feel I'm on the cusp of entering a new period in which I'll finally be able to devote time and energy to several writing projects I've had in mind for many years now.

Yes, writing. I was trained as a journalist, and that's what I did for a time after graduating from Fordham University in 1986. I thought that writing for newspapers would be a great way for me to get started on my own long-term writing ambitions. 

To write and get paid for it while learning about life---what could be better?

But after a few years of in-the-trenches reporting (which is very different from literary writing), I took an opportunity to jump into newspaper management, which eventually led to me getting an MBA and co-founding a publishing company. 

So I was doing as much writing as ever, but it was nearly all business-related. My own personal writing projects went into hibernation due to day-to-day priorities that seemed more immediate, and also perhaps because felt I wasn't quite ready.

So nothing happened, and for a long time it seemed like life had other plans for me. Just as the publishing company was becoming established, I also became caregiver for my mother as her health declined. This turned into pretty much another full-time job for the 10 years prior to her death in 2018.

During this time, the only writing-related activity on my part was to threaten to publish a pamphlet intended for caregivers of elderly parents. I would joke about the title: "Don't Expect A Thank You!" (Sorry, Mom. Just going for the laugh again.)

Following her death, I took on a new challenge---the management of a non-profit aviation museum that over the past six years has been yet another all-consuming crusade, as it had to be. 

Couldn't I do writing in my spare time? Not really, as that was filled with music.

All during this time, music was my off-the-clock release, therapy, salvation, and primal scream.

Going back to the beginning, I very serious about music at a young age. But I pretty much gave it up when I went into the word business, first as an English major at Fordham and then as a journalist.

But music didn't give up on me. Starting in 2000, I began singing in the chorus of a professional opera company based in New Hampshire, which was hugely rewarding and allowed me to get familiar with some of the classics of the genre.

I also began playing keyboard in pit orchestras for musicals such as 'Ragtime' and 'Titanic,' both performed at the time by a local community theater group. 

And then, after working with local filmmaker Bill Millios to create music for 'Dangerous Crosswinds' (2005), a drama he made here in New Hampshire, I began the silent film accompaniment activities that continue to this day.

In the process of all this frenetic activity, I've recently blown past age 60. (I'll actually hit 61 the week after next!)

And guess what? In the past year or so, I've felt a growing sense of finally being ready to go back to the start and do what I originally hoped to do a long time ago now. Write!

And that's good, as over the years I've accumulated ideas or premises or outlines for at least a dozen books I hope to eventually tackle. 

Really! So in 2025 I hope to begin pulling together material to shape into a book-length manuscript, and then do it again and again as I ransack the idea cupboard.

And I think all the experience in business and music has helped me get to this point. It's served to sharpen my sense of self and also how I view the world we inhabit. It's given me something to write about.

One reason for this transformation, I think, was a project I helped with this past year. Last summer, I had the privilege of reading a book-length manuscript about silent film by my accompanist colleague Ben Model. 

It was a great read, by the way, and I encourage you to pick up the book when it's published, which I believe will happen later this year. 

But it also opened my eyes to the idea of writing about silent film from my own perspective. There's so much that I want to say! It would be a way to answer the questions I often get asked at screenings. (And it would be totally different from what Ben did with his own book.)

Also in 2024, I worked on another manuscript for a local history book commissioned by the Aviation Museum of N.H., where I'm executive director. I collaborated with author Leah Dearborn on the book's overall organization as well as line-by-line editing as each section was drafted.

(The book, 'Grenier Air Base: A Beacon on the Home Front,' has since been published and has been very well received so far.)

So with all this book-related activity, it seemed like something was telling me that it was time to move ahead with my own writing.

And so I shall.

In the meantime, I invite you to join me on Monday, Jan. 6 at the Garden Cinemas in Greenfield, Mass. for Harry Langdon's 'The Strong Man' (1926)---the very first film directed by a very young Frank Capra.

Press release below. See you at the movies!

*     *     *

A trade ad promoting Harry Langdon in 'The Strong Man' (1926).

MONDAY, DEC. 16. 2024 / FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact Jeff Rapsis • (603) 236-9237 • jeffrapsis@gmail.com

Frank Capra's very first movie highlights Garden Cinema silent film program on Monday, Jan. 6

Screening features Harry Langdon's classic comedy 'The Strong Man' shown with live music; fun family activity suitable for all ages

GREENFIELD, Mass. — Silent film with live music returns to the Greenfield Garden Cinemas in January with the showing of an uproarious comedy starring Harry Langdon.

The screening of 'The Strong Man' on Monday, Jan. 6 at 6:30 p.m., gives families a chance to enjoy a fun activity suitable for all ages. The Garden Cinemas are located at 361 Main St., Greenfield, Mass..

Admission is $10.50 adults, $8:50 for children, seniors, and students. Tickets are available online or at the door.

The screening, the latest in the Garden Cinemas' silent film series, will feature live accompaniment by Jeff Rapsis, a New Hampshire-based composer who specializes in creating scores for silent films.

Directing 'The Strong Man' was young first-timer Frank Capra, who would later go on to create such Hollywood classics as 'Mr. Smith Goes to Washington' (1939) and 'It's a Wonderful Life' (1946).

'The Strong Man' tells the story of a World War I soldier (Langdon) who, following his discharge, finds work as assistant to a circus strong man. As the act travels the country, Langdon continually searches for a girl he corresponded with while stationed overseas in the military.

The search leads to a town controlled by Prohibition-era gangsters, which forces Harry to test the limits of his own inner strength even as he looks for his dream girl. Can Harry triumph over the bad guys? And is love more powerful than brute strength?

The feature-length film showcases the unique child-like personality of Langdon, who is largely forgotten today. For a brief time in the 1920s, however, he rivaled Charlie Chaplin as Hollywood's top movie clown.

Langdon's popularity, which grew quickly in the last years of the silent era, fizzled as the movie business abruptly switched to talkies starting in 1929.

'The Strong Man' was selected in 2007 for preservation in the U.S. National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."

In recent years, 'The Strong Man' has been recognized as a major achievement of the silent film era—a satisfying and timeless balance of emotion and comedy.

"A little tragedy and a lot of laughs can be seen in 1926's The Strong Man," wrote critic Richard von Busack in 2007. "Director Frank Capra's energy and sturdy plot sense counterpoint Langdon's wonderful strangeness."

'The Strong Man' will be accompanied by live music by Jeff Rapsis, a New Hampshire-based silent film accompanist who performs at venues across the region and beyond.

"These films were created to be shown on the big screen as a communal experience," Rapsis said. "With an audience and live music, they still come to life in the way their makers intended them to.

"The silent film screenings at the Garden Cinemas are a great chance for people to experience films that first caused people to first fall in love with the movies," he said.

Silent films with live music are screened at the Garden Cinemas the first Monday of each month. Upcoming titles include:

• Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, 6:30 p.m.: "Nanook of the North" (1922), directed by Robert Flaherty. Classic documentary tells the story of Inuit hunter struggling to survive in far-north Canada. Breakthrough film that used the motion picture camera to take audiences to far-away places ordinarily unreachable.

• Monday, March 3, 2025, 6:30 p.m.: "The Sheik" (1921) starring Rudolph Valentino. Paris-educated Sheik Ahmed Ben Hassan (Rudolph Valentino) provides brides for wealthy Arabs. The high-spirited Lady Diana Mayo (Agnes Ayres), learning that the sheik will be in the city of Biskra, Algeria, playfully decides to disguise herself as a dancing girl to become one of the prospective brides, leading to a torrid story of forbidden love.

• Monday, April 7, 2025, 6:30 p.m.: "The Lost World" (1925) starring Wallace Beery. First-ever movie adaptation of Arthur Conan Doyle's legendary tale of British explorers who discover pre-historic creatures still thriving atop a remote South American plateau. Great entertainment; ground-breaking special effects by the same team that later created 'King Kong' mesmerized early movie audiences and remain impressive today.

Frank Capra's 'The Strong Man' will be screened with live music on Monday, Jan. 6 at 6:30 p.m. at the Greenfield Garden Cinemas, 361 Main St., Greenfield, Mass.

Admission is $10.50 adults, $8.50 for children, seniors, and students. Tickets available at the door; advance tickets are available at www.gardencinemas.net. For more information, call the box office at (413) 774-4881.