"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying the cross."
-- Sinclair Lewis
Sunday, December 27, 2009
Sunday Classics: The younger Prokofiev could be quite a cut-up
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Thanks to poster AlecGuinnessFan, it's possible to see the whole of The Horse's Mouth, Ronald Neame's 1958 adaptation of Joyce Cary's 1944 novel, for which Guinness wrote the screenplay as well as starring as the desperately and rather despicably struggling artist Gully Jimson. The film makes spectacular use of Prokofiev's Lt. Kijé music, in particular "Kijé's Wedding" and the "Troika."
by Ken
One thing about creative geniuses is that they tend to be unpredictable. It's possible to be extremely talented and concoct highly satisfying creations that don't really surprise anyone. But at the genius level, not only the audience but the creator often doesn't know what's coming next.
I think of the great Alfred Hitchcock, so well known to us as the supreme film master of psychological mayhem. Who would expect among so many spine-tingling chillers to find a comic masterpiece like The Trouble with Harry, a sweetly autumnal (literally -- it's steeped in the colors of a New England autumn) romance that centers around an inconvenient corpse that keeps turning up in the most distressing places and situations. You see, Harry's "problem" -- and I have to risk spoiling it in case you didn't already know -- is that he's dead. Unmourned, but just so damned inconveniently so.
Lieutenant Kijé, in Yury Tynyanov's satirical novel (1927), set in the reign of Tsar Paul I (1796-1801), and Alesander Faintsimmer's film adaptation (1934) has a possibly even more existentially distressing problem: He doesn't exist. I confess that I've never read the book or seen the film, but Kij&eactue; is a central part of my imaginative reality, thanks to an incontestably brilliant decision Faintsimmer made: having Sergei Prokofiev (1891-1953) composer the film score.
As usual, Prokofiev was averse to letting music he'd written go to waste, and he soon created the "symphonic suite" that remains one of his most-loved works, which I offered as a prime example of "musical funny business," along with another beautiful and witty orchestral suite with which it was often, and happily, paired on LP, Zoltán Kodály's Háry János (drawn from a theatrical piece that is somewhere between a play with lots of incidental music and an opera). We've already taken a closer look at Háry János; today we return to Kijé.
Naturally I thought of The Horse's Mouth, for which Prokofiev's Kijé score. Am I the only one who's wondered whether the picture would be even watchable without the brilliantly used music?
Wikipedia offers a usable synopsis of the Kijé Suite:
The suite, in five movements broadly follows the plot:
1. "Kijé's Birth." Emperor Paul, listening to a report, mishears a phrase and concludes that the lieutenant exists. He demands that "Kijé" be promoted to his elite guard. It is an offence to contradict the Tsar, so the palace administrators must invent someone of that name.
2. "Romance." The fictional lieutenant falls in love.
3. "Kijé's Wedding." Since the Tsar prefers his heroic soldiers to be married, the administrators concoct a fake wedding. The vodka that the Tsar approves for this event is very real.
4. "Troika." [A troika is both "a sled or carriage drawn by three horses harnessed side-by-side" and a folk dance.]
5. "Kijé's Burial." The administrators finally rid themselves of the non-existent lieutenant by saying he has died. The Tsar expresses his sadness, and the civil servants heave a sigh of relief.
Here then is the whole of the brilliant performance we've sampled by Klaus Tennstedt.
2 Comments:
Why not watch the original film? You can watch it here or download it here, with English subtitles.
I never cease to be delighted by the things our readers know! Thanks for the tip and info, Anon!
Considering how much I've got stockpiled to listen to and watch, I don't know how quickly I'll get to it, but this is great information.
Best,
Ken
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