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Film & History: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Film and Television Studies | 2005

Musical Biography and Film: John Tibbetts Interviewed by Jim Welsh

John C. Tibbetts; Jim Welsh

Prologue: This interview marks the publication of Composers in the Movies: Studies in Musical Biography, just published by Yale University Press, written by John C. Tibbetts of the University of Kansas. Dr. Tibbetts was interviewed by Jim Welsh for Film & History. Welsh recently retired as the co-founding editor of Literature/Film Quarterly. JW: Would you explain the genesis of your book? JCT: A personal note is in order. As a boy growing up in a small Kansas town, Leavenworth, I was greatly impressed by a late-night telecast of Charles Vidors A Song to Remember (1944), a life of the Polish pianist/composer, Frederic Chopin. Its vivid hues, heightened drama, and exciting musical presentation were unforgettable. That splash of Technicolor blood on the white piano keys during Chopins (Cornel Wilde) fateful concert tour (surely the best remembered, albeit most notorious moment in the entire oeuvre) was particularly startling. I hungrily watched the newspapers for re-runs. For years thereafter I embarked on a search for more information about Chopin. I attended concerts and haunted record stores trying to identify the music I had heard. I even fell upon James Hunekers biography of Chopin and eagerly devoured its overheated effusions (which rivaled those of the film). As the years passed, I encountered more composer biopics and was similarly stunned by the delirious waltz sequences of Julien Duviviers The Great Waltz (1938); James Cagneys recreation of George M. Cohans Give My Regards to Broadway routine in Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942); the paralyzed Frederick Delius (Max Adrian) musical dictation to his amanuensis Eric Fenby in Ken Russells Song of Summer, Mozarts (Tom Hulce) last gasps of the confutatus maledictus to Antonio Salieri (F. Murray Abraham) near the end of Amadeus; and Joseph Stalins gigantic statue looming over the pathetic, shuffling figure of Dmitry Shostakovich (Ben Kingsley) in Tony Palmers Testimony (1987). I am unabashed in my affection (and in some cases, guilty pleasures) for such films. And even in the most wretched of them, say, the Schubert biopic, New Wine (1940), I can find points worth talking about. JW: Do you consider the composer biopic as a distinct genre? If so, what specific rules does the formula follow? JCT: The better question is, are BIOPICS in general a distinct genre? I would prefer to see them as a subset of the GENRE OF HISTORICAL FILMS, i.e., those which mandate at least a casual adherence to the historical record and to real-life historical figures. Further, within the subset of BIOPICS we have the ARTIST BIOPICS, which are distinguished by their preoccupation with creative agency and artistic invention. The remaining question is, should we then separate the COMPOSER biopics from other ARTIST BIOPICS about painters, writers, sculptors, dancers, etc. Do the COMPOSER BIOPICS audio-visual depiction of musical creativity differ from the depiction of literary, painterly, and other creative activities? I, for one, hesitate to keep breaking down these films into ever diminishing subsets. However, I do feel there has not been enough discussion of biopics in general as either a genre or a part of a genre. As for a formula of the general category of biopics, I offer the following: They reveal the following commonly held agendas: 1. They adapt and rewrite the narrative structures and formulas common to romantic melodramas, musicals, westerns, horror films, etc. 2. They normalize and contain the artists life-depicting him or her, on the one hand, as a somewhat marginalized individual struggling against stifling societal conformism; and, on the other, as a citizen striving to compose a song of the people that reflects and confirms the communitys own commonly held experiences. 3. They tailor the artists life to the prevailing screen images of the actors that appear in the cast. 4. They cater to the prestige ambitions of the studio producers. …


Literature-film Quarterly | 1997

Postmodern Shakespeare: Strictly Romeo

Jim Welsh


Literature-film Quarterly | 1997

Branagh's Enlarged Hamlet

Jim Welsh


Literature-film Quarterly | 1995

Classic Folly: The Scarlet Letter

Jim Welsh


Literature-film Quarterly | 2011

Dr. Thomas Leonard Erskine (1939-2011): The Founder, Remembered

Jim Welsh


Literature-film Quarterly | 2010

A Letter from Coventry: Cormac McCarthy in Warwickshire

Jim Welsh


Film & History: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Film and Television Studies | 2009

Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired (review)

Jim Welsh


Literature-film Quarterly | 2008

Clint Eastwood, Riding Westward

Jim Welsh


Literature-film Quarterly | 2005

Spectacular Utah, Spectacular Shakespeare! How about a Conference in Paradise, Pilgrim?

Jim Welsh


Literature-film Quarterly | 2005

A Brakhage Festschrift

Jim Welsh

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