I think we may have just hit peak Pordenone and it’s only
Sunday. There are moments of submersion in the best of silent film with live
accompaniment and these happened repeatedly through the day whether it was Lyda
Borelli’s sublime movements in hand-coloured Rapsodia Satanica with
piano and harp accompaniment, a disturbing and impactful unknown film (for me)
from Uzbekistan about the plight of women in polygamous marriages or Lilian
Gish wasting away in operatic style with accompaniment featuring elements of La
Bohème itself. As if this wasn’t enough, we saw Paris menaced by a group of
runaway pumpkins… and, thankfully after Lilian, a group of boarding school women making
merry at Coney Island in 1905. Variety is the spice of le Giornate!
Rapsodia Satanica (IT 1917), with Stephen
Horne, Elizabeth-Jane Baldry
If Bertini is the thought, the determined intellect of
classic Italian Diva films then Lyda Borelli is the beating heart, the style, grace
and soul. Less naturalistic than her “sister” she was the one with the classic
theatrical training (Bertini being more purely “of the movies” although she did
theatre too) and was remarkably expressive whilst creating a natural intimacy
that compels the viewer still.
For me Borelli’s status as Primus Inter Divas are
perfectly exemplified by this odd and spectacularly colourful take on the Faustian
pact… A skilled melange of contemporary dance, art and literature, based on a
contemporary poem by Fausto Maria Martin and directed by Nino Oxilia in 1915 but
not released until the year of his death in the trenches of 1917.It looks divine
and the hand colourization gives it an uncanny charm that seemed to fill the
entire auditorium of the Teatro Verdi, touching its audience.
Lyda plays Alba d’ Oltrevita, an elderly society lady,
who has little life left and spends her days remembering her former beauty. She
wishes far too hard and from out of a painting pops the malevolent form of
Mephisto (zestfully realized by Ugo Bazzini) who offers to return her youth on
the condition that she destroys a small statuette of Cupid which will mean that
she will be restored but never again be able to feel love… We see her looking
at her reflection in a pond, surrounded by a veil of white silk that floats
around her upper body born aloft by her movement: this is youth and beauty in
motion and repose. She meets two brothers Tristano (Andrea Habay) and Sergio
(John Cini) and proceeds to enchant them both in playgrounds, parks and
parties.
The film is split into three parts with the first a
prologue setting up the rejuvenation, the second the tug of love with the
brothers and the third a dance of regret, desolation, hope and mortality.
Borelli dominates this sequence even more than the others and there is no end
of colourful moments as she wrestles with her turmoil.
Satanic Rhapsody is “operatic” and I doubt any
other actress in Britain or Hollywood could carry it off in quite the way La
Borelli does in her way. Angela Dalle Vacche – in the excellent Diva –
Defiance and Passion in Early Italian Cinema – points out the similarities
between Borelli’s rapturous dance and American performer Loie Fuller but then
Borelli was not only well-educated but also keen to express as much of her
influences as possible. This is the richest of cinema. Art in moving expression
with interpretation still sublimely elusive, just as the actress as she dances enfolded
in those iconic fabrics.
Stephen Horne’s piano, flute and accordion were
accompanied by Elizabeth Jane Baldry’s harp and their unique understanding
enabled them to accompany with the beauty and emotional subtlety the film
deserves. Tonally they are a two-person orchestra but they also know how to
create the most magical and uncanny worlds of their own. Transported we were
and the streets carried a weird vibration for hours afterwards…
La Bohème (1926) with Donald Sosin
“When Lillian Gish now appears, you know she is due for a beating. . . A Society for the Prevention of Screen Cruelty to Lillian Gish should be organized."
Herbert Howe, Picture Play Magazine
Did someone say opera? For an entirely different approach
on capturing the music and emotion on screen I give you Lillian Gish who made
something of an art form out of physical deprivation in her roles with Director
King Vidor fearful that he might lose his lead as well her character. To prepare
for the tragic ending of this story (c’mon it’s from the opera by Puccini,
what do you expect?) she visited sanitaria to study tuberculosis patients
in order to learn how to breath with minimal movement of the rib cage. Then she
starved herself of food and water for the three days before she shot the
ending…
It is genuinely shocking to watch her frail last moments
as she hauls herself across Paris to meet her lover for the last time. It could
be horribly melodramatic but she transcends this with conviction and incredible
physical bravery. Why was she doing this? Maybe she felt the need to make a
statement as in some quarters her characterisations were staring to be seen as
old hat. You might fault her style but never her courage and commitment. Gish also
picked the best rising talent she could to make this film after seeing early
cuts of King Vidor’s magnificent The Big Parade. Vidor directed with his
stars John Gilbert and Renée Adorée plus the likeable Karl Dane also involved.
The story is set in 1830 and shows the lives and loves of
a group of bohemians living in the service of their art in a tumbledown house
in the Latin Quarter. Gilbert plays the would-be playwright, Rodolphe, who, to
pay the rent writes stories about cats and dogs for a pet-fancier’s journal.
His roommates are also struggling artists, musicians and writer Colline (Edward
Everett Horton – yay!!). Their landlord constantly chases them for rent but they
just about make ends meet and their diet is enlivened by the occasional
windfalls of Marcel’s girlfriend Musette (Adorée) who lives downstairs in
rather more salubrious circumstances… the source of her income is more than
hinted at.
The film does allow Gish to act as a happy woman in love... and with Mr Gilbert too! |
Alongside the bohemian’s room is that of a lonely lace
maker and embroiderer, Mimi (Gish) who has only her pet bird for company. It’s
almost too pitiful but not in the hands of Gish who, even in her early thirties
could carry off “innocent battler”, she’s believable in this extended operatic universe.
The landlord wants her out and she is saved by the scheming Vicomte Paul (Roy
D’Arcy, relishing the in the villainy) who has more than her fabric in mind… He
starts to commission work from her just so he can stay close and work out a way
of having his evil way…
Mimi meets Rodolphe and the two fall in love. Mimi
encourages the writer to work on his first play and starts to sacrifice herself
for him especially after he loses his work at the journal and she has to work
nights to get the money to make him think he’s still employed… Nothing must
come in the way of his work but, obviously things will, pride, jealousy, the
Vicomte… nothing can compete with Mimi’s love though.
All of this was given exceptional musical force by Donald
Sosin’s accompaniment which quoted extensively from Puccini (I think?) and was
one of the most potent and powerful piano accompaniments I’ve seen in this
theatre. He met the film with operatic force pulling the sentiment into the
Verdi in ways that made me truly engage with a film that had left me slightly
cold on home DVD. Brava!!
Ra Messerer, The Second Wife |
The Second Wife (1927) with Gunter Buchwald and
Frank Bockius
To Uzbekistan and this extraordinary film from Mikhail
Devonov based on a story by Lolakhon Saifullina, a polish woman who married an
Uzbek man and converted to Islam. It’s a reflection of the enormity of the old
USSR and the challenged Moscow faced in co-ordinating so many diverse cultures into
one modernising state. Saifullina worked for the Sharq Yulduzi studio writing
scripts sensitive to the issues of Uzbeki women her along with former legal
consultant Valentina Sobberey. The result is a tale in which women and children
are exploited by old male custom and dominance.
Director Devonov does not lapse into bucolic orientalism
and focuses on the story and the depiction of prevalent practices of early
marriage and polygamy. Here a merchant Tadzhibai (Grigol Chechelashvili)’s first
wife Khadycha (Maria Griniova) cannot have children and so he has a second wife,
Adoliat (Ra Messerer) who can. A child
duly arrives and Khadycha tries to destroy her competitor. She is far from
alone in malevolence as his brother Sadiqbai (Mikhail Doronin), steals money
whilst his older brother is away and also preys on young boys being seen to go
through some form of marriage ceremony later in the story, as things escalate elsewhere.
At the same time there are two representatives of Russian
youth enjoying heartier endeavous, enjoying the benefits of education and
financial independence – emancipated by communism as their sisters (and
brothers) suffer medieval indignities. It’s propagandist but still shows the
harshness of unresolved “tradition” and male power. The tragedy continues in
many parts of the World.
Gunter Buchwald and Frank Bockius accompanied with their telepathic combinations of perfectly pitched themes and punctuations, musically at home in any part of the world as it was or will be.
Also on my silent film dance card for today was Anna May
Wong in a minor role in Driven from Home (1927) with John Sweeney on
accompaniment and Virginia Lee Corbin as a young woman who wanted to marry for
love not money as she frustrated her father. The family’s “sinister housekeeper”
engineered a deep rift that saw everyone estranged and, as mother slowly faded
away we wondered if anything would heal the rift. Anna May helped!
I watched the great Clara Kimbell Young in Trilby
(1915) accompanied by Philip Carli and directed by the even greater Maurice
Tourneur. Trilby was an adaptation of 1894 George du Maurie’s 1894 novel which
features the mystical abilities of Svengali (Wilton Lackaye) to hypnotise his
subject, Trilby O'Ferral (CKY) into being a great opera singer. I’d seen John
Barrymore doing the same thing to Marian Marsh in the 1931 talkie and so this
silent version struck me as rather slow (and more sober), but still fun.
After the opera we were also treated to some rare and
magnificent shorts in Feminist Fragments 1. No Work and All Play including
some Bubbles! (1904) and the street humour of Departure from the “La Sin
Bombo” Cigarette Factory something along the lines of Aladdin and the Forty
Thieves only in modern Argentina. A couple of short fantasies about housework
preceded our badly-behaved boarding schoolgirls who, really, just wanted to
have fun. And, they did! Accompanist Mauro Colombis made sure of it.
Ah yes, La course aux potirons (1908)!! |
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