Originally posted by Petrushka
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BaL 24.09.22 - Strauss, J II: Die Fledermaus
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Anyone watched: "Oh Rosalinda!" Film 1955?
Any good?
"Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger revisit the world of music once more in their comedy adaptation of Johan Strauss's Die Fledermaus, updated to post-war Vienna. A scintillating, light-hearted musical, it features memorable performances from Michael Redgrave, Mel Ferrer, Anthony Quayle, Anton Walbrook and prima ballerina Ludmilla Tcherina as the titular Rosalinda."
Inexpensive to hire on Amazon Prime.
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Originally posted by Mal View PostAnyone watched: "Oh Rosalinda!" Film 1955?
Any good?
"Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger revisit the world of music once more in their comedy adaptation of Johan Strauss's Die Fledermaus, updated to post-war Vienna. A scintillating, light-hearted musical, it features memorable performances from Michael Redgrave, Mel Ferrer, Anthony Quayle, Anton Walbrook and prima ballerina Ludmilla Tcherina as the titular Rosalinda."
Inexpensive to hire on Amazon Prime.
Great performances from Anton Walbrook (as a not-too subtly gay Falke, finally voiced by Walter Berry), Quayle (the very funny, tight-lipped Russian Orlovsky) and Anneliese Rothenberger (doing her own English dialogue as a classic Adele). Tcherina is gorgeous, too. Only Redgrave seriously disappoints as Eisenstein, ill at ease and singing appallingly. But the whole thing is bright, tight, visually amazing and musically fun too, despite big cuts - notably Roselinda's Czardas.Last edited by Master Jacques; 24-09-22, 14:21.
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Originally posted by Mal View PostAnyone watched: "Oh Rosalinda!" Film 1955?
Any good?
"Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger revisit the world of music once more in their comedy adaptation of Johan Strauss's Die Fledermaus, updated to post-war Vienna. A scintillating, light-hearted musical, it features memorable performances from Michael Redgrave, Mel Ferrer, Anthony Quayle, Anton Walbrook and prima ballerina Ludmilla Tcherina as the titular Rosalinda."
Inexpensive to hire on Amazon Prime.By Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger. "Die Fledermaus" (The Bat) is the pseudonym adopted by Dr. Falke (Anton Walbrook). Floating on the buoyant waltzes of Strauss, this Viennese romp is sure to please. Disguises, tricks, and every kind of deception combine to reveal a would-be cheat in hot pursuit of his own wife, much to his chagrin. Silly, charming, always entertaining, always fun. This is a movie version of "Die Fledermaus" set in post-war Vienna with the main protagonists of Dr. Falke represented by the three occupying powers. This is not just a movie of a staged production, but a truly filmic version of the operetta. (Steve Crook, IMDb)
Enjoy.
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Originally posted by Dermot View Post
When it's Powell and Pressburger, nothing less than the best visuals will do, I think.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostHmm. I don't think the film can be fairly judged, if watched in a washed-out, old video print on a pirate Russian site...
"Nearly all of the most popular illegal film and TV pirate websites contain malware or credit card scams..."
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I suppose it’s a huge credit to our very own reviewer, an indication of complete acceptance of his views, that no one has posted anything at all about yesterday’s BaL. I would query giving the gold medal to a recording that’s in mono and nearly three quarters of a century old. But I can also see that everything since has areas justifying some serious reservations. I suspect Kleiber’s DVD may well be the happy medium for me.
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I missed the broadcast, driving back home after a week in the Lake District. However, I caught up last night, and found it to be a refreshingly honest review of Die Fledermaus recordings.
I found myself fully in agreement with most of the judgements, with two fine recommendations: Krauss and Karajan (both Decca).
…and the dismissal of Harnoncourt, whose conducting of J. Strauss always gives the impression that the conductor hates it.
But I’m still not convinced about Schwarzkopf’s singing in the 1955 Karajan. The odd ugly-sounding syllable can ruin a good musical line.
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My wife and I watched 'Oh Rosalinda' on Tv last year. It was of course a very polished , brilliant production, well filmed and acted, but, perhaps because of my liking for the original operetta, it wasn't to my taste. My O.H. whose name is Rosalind and who doesn't know 'Fledermaus' enjoyed it very much.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostMy wife and I watched 'Oh Rosalinda' on Tv last year. It was of course a very polished , brilliant production, well filmed and acted, but, perhaps because of my liking for the original operetta, it wasn't to my taste. My O.H. whose name is Rosalind and who doesn't know 'Fledermaus' enjoyed it very much.
I admire the operetta too, but you're right in saying that we need to clear it out of our minds to fully enjoy Oh ... Rosalinda - that's the probable reason they didn't call it Die Fledermaus, to help audiences dislocate themselves from the original. In the event, it was a huge flop anyway, pleasing neither opera lovers nor film fans, for very different reasons!
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Originally posted by Goon525 View PostI suppose it’s a huge credit to our very own reviewer, an indication of complete acceptance of his views, that no one has posted anything at all about yesterday’s BaL. I would query giving the gold medal to a recording that’s in mono and nearly three quarters of a century old. But I can also see that everything since has areas justifying some serious reservations. I suspect Kleiber’s DVD may well be the happy medium for me.
I wonder if the reason that there has been so few comments posted about yesterday’s BaL is because nobody was listening. Everybody was either out shopping or doing other things, caught out by the change of time slot.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostI admire the operetta too, but you're right in saying that we need to clear it out of our minds to fully enjoy Oh ... Rosalinda - that's the probable reason they didn't call it Die Fledermaus, to help audiences dislocate themselves from the original. In the event, it was a huge flop anyway, pleasing neither opera lovers nor film fans, for very different reasons!
The Vienna Symphony (VSO) has a proud tradition, but its fame reminds me of the ‘Seem-Giant’ Tur-Tur in Michael Ende’s “Jim Button” books: The further away you are, the bigger he seems; the closer you get, the less imposing he becomes; when you meet him – if you haven’t been [...]
"in the middle of Giulini’s tenure, which began in 1973, things went quite wrong, squabbles broke out and – not unrelated to issues of the orchestra’s (not Giulini’s!) inflated self-importance (not uncommon in the Arts and especially not uncommon in Vienna) – Giulini left in a kerfuffle and the orchestra self-destructed not to properly recover for decades."
Sounds like it would make a good film...
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Oops!
Alois Melichar
"He also had a part in propaganda films of the Nazis.
After 1945, Melichar tried to hide his role in the Nazi period."
Alois Melichar (Vienna, 18.04.1896 - Munich, 09.04.1976): Austrian conductor, composer and music critic. Studied in Vienna and Berlin, among others with...
"As a music critic, Alois Melichar acquired notoriety by his intemperate attacks on better composers than himself."
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Originally posted by Wolfram View PostNothing in the entire history of recorded music is as annoying as Ivan Rebroff on the Kleiber recording.
In this review, it was like an Antipodean comedy sketch - Dame Kiri de Kanawa at her most beautiful, followed by Dame Edna Everidge as Orlofski.
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