Song Without End

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Song Without End
VHS cover
Directed byCharles Vidor
Written byOscar Millard
Produced byWilliam Goetz
StarringDirk Bogarde
Capucine
Geneviève Page
CinematographyJames Wong Howe
Edited byWilliam Lyon
Music byMorris Stoloff
Harry Sukman
Franz Liszt
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • August 11, 1960 (1960-08-11)
Running time
141 min.
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$3.5 million[1]
Box office$1,500,000 (US and Canada rentals)[2]

Song Without End, subtitled The Story of Franz Liszt, is a 1960 biographical film romance about Franz Liszt made by Columbia Pictures. It was directed by Charles Vidor, who died during the shooting of the film and was replaced by George Cukor. The film stars Dirk Bogarde, Capucine, and Geneviève Page.

Plot

Franz Liszt is living in Chamonix with Countess Marie D'Agoult, the mother of his children, when Frédéric Chopin and George Sand visit him. They tell him about all the things he has missed since he left Paris, and how a new piano virtuoso, Sigismond Thalberg, is captivating audiences. The Countess wants him to remain in seclusion and compose. She views performing as a tawdry occupation.

Liszt cannot stand the lack of an audience and agrees to a recital in Paris, which is a sensation. In the audience is Princess Carolyne Wittgenstein, and Liszt is smitten. He travels to Russia to perform for the Czar. He resumes his performing career and avoids the Countess while he pursues the married Princess.

Richard Wagner approaches Liszt after a performance with a score for Rienzi. Liszt brushes him off, but when he later hears a rehearsal of the overture, he becomes a champion of his music. He agrees to premiere Lohengrin for Wagner after the composer has to flee an arrest warrant. Liszt is shown conducting the finale of Tannhäuser.

The composer begins an affair with the Princess. She asks her husband for a divorce. After it is granted the couple are happily on the verge of marriage. When the Church discovers the Princess lied about her husband marrying her when she was underage, they prevent her divorce. Liszt wills his estate to his children and retreats to a monastery.

Cast

Production

The success in 1945 of Charles Vidor's A Song to Remember about Frédéric Chopin was the germ for a biopic about Franz Liszt. By 1946, Columbia had three spec scripts from musician Theodore Kolline, but serious production did not begin until studio head Harry Cohn announced the project in 1952. The film went through a kind of development hell for the next seven years as the script went from one writer to another and had to be edited extensively to please the censors.[3]

Cohn initially hired his friend Oscar Saul to write the screenplay and William Dieterle to direct. When the studio delayed going forward with the project due to production and casting issues for three years, Saul backed out, and Columbia announced in 1955 that Gottfried Reinhardt had been commissioned to write a new screenplay.[4] In 1958, veteran producer William Goetz took over the project with Oscar Millard as his screenwriter. Charles Vidor was finally assigned to direct using elements of all three screenwriters' scripts.[5] It was continuously revised even as filming was underway.[6]: 286 

On June 4, 1959, Charles Vidor died of a heart attack. Bogarde was initially relieved because he thought it meant the film would be cancelled. Everyone had been miserable, particularly Capucine who was acting for the first time. Vidor was extremely harsh towards her and difficult for everyone on set. George Cukor was flown in to finish the production. He set everyone at ease and made major changes to the entire film.[6] He replaced James Wong Howe with Charles Lang, changed the costumes, and even had Anna Lee dub Patricia Morrison's dialogue.[5]

Cukor also abandoned Liszt's famous long hair, opting to make Dirk Bogarde look more like Elvis Presley.[7][8] Despite the fact that Vidor only shot about 15% of the film, Cukor refused a directing credit.[5]

Music

As nearly 40 musical selections were heard in the film, Morris Stoloff, head of Columbia's music department, began immediate work on the soundtrack. After selecting the pieces to be played, he engaged piano virtuoso Jorge Bolet, the Roger Wagner Chorale, and the Los Angeles Philharmonic to perform the score. Harry Sukman was in charge of the music editing and adaptations that were required of the scores. Musicologist Abram Chasins was a musical consultant on the film.[9]

The piano pieces were recorded before filming so Bogarde could learn the finger movements necessary to make him appear to be realistically playing piano. Bogarde had never played one.

La Campanella.[6]
: 285 

Two soundtracks were released for the film.

Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra was conducted by Morris Stoloff. The album include works by Liszt, Paganini, Handel, and Wagner.[5]

Liberty Records released The Franz Liszt Story to showcase the arrangements Harry Sukman made for the film. Sukman plays the piano and leads the orchestra. Liszt's music is given alternative titles on several tracks.[10]

Reception

New York Times critic Bosley Crowther praised the music: “A little bit of everything reflective not only of the talent of Liszt but also of most of the great composers of his highly romantic age—Wagner, Paganini, Beethoven, Verdi, Chopin—artists whose work he respected, assisted, embellished and often played, is packed into this picture. And it is brilliantly and beautifully performed...” However, he observed that “the host of characters were brushed in so superficially that they carry little conviction or emotional strength, and the performances of the actors are, by necessity, more elaborate than they are deep... However, as we say, the music thunders; the settings and costumes are superb—such Viennese concert halls and palaces and lush romantic trappings have never been surpassed in a color film—and, indeed, the sheer posing of the actors by the late Charles Vidor and George Cukor is so suave that anyone moved by musical richness and pictorial splendor should go quite nutty over this film.”[11]

Song Without End has been praised as "among the finest biopics in terms of its musical content" because of its seamless incorporation of classical pieces throughout the film.[12]

Awards

The film won the

Golden Globe Award
for Best Motion Picture (Musical).

Both Bogarde and Capucine were nominated for Golden Globe Awards. Song Without End won Best Film - Musical at the 18th Golden Globe Awards.

See also

References

  1. ProQuest 167454385
    .
  2. ^ "Rental Potentials of 1960". Variety. 4 January 1961. p. 47. Retrieved 8 April 2019.
  3. ^ Tibbetts, John. Composers in the Movies: Studies in Musical Biography. Yale University Press, 2008. 77.
  4. ^ "Song Without End (1960)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2024-01-14.
  5. ^ a b c d Miller, Frank. "Song Without End". Turner Classic Movies. August 3, 2007.
  6. ^ a b c d Bogarde, Dirk. Dirk Bogarde: The Complete Autobiography. Octopus Books, 1988.
  7. ^ Mankiewicz, Ben. Introduction to The Song Without End. Turner Classic Movies. September 7, 2023.
  8. ^ Kitchen, Will. Romanticism and Film: Franz Liszt and Audio-Visual Explanation. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020. 139.
  9. ^ Chasins, Abram. "Song Without End", Colpix Records, 1960,(LP), Liner notes.
  10. ^ Goetz, William, The Franz Liszt Story. Liberty Records. LST-7151, 1960. (LP), Liner Notes
  11. ISSN 0362-4331
    . Retrieved 2021-02-23.
  12. ^ Mitchell, Charles P. The Great Composers Portrayed on Film, 1913 Through 2002. McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers, 2010. 114.

External links