William H. Daniels, with Greta Garbo, on the set of Romance (1930). |
The best time I’ve had at the movies so far this year was watching Image Makers: The Adventures of America’s Pioneer Cinematographers, which TCM ran over the weekend. It’s catnip for film buffs. Written by film critic Michael Sragow and directed and edited by Daniel Raim, Image Makers zeroes in on seven groundbreaking artists – Billy Bitzer, Rollie Totheroh, Charles Rosher, William Daniels, Karl Struss, Gregg Toland and James Wong Howe. It combines historical and biographical material; precise, razor-sharp film analysis; interviews with a crew of extraordinarily knowledgeable scholars, a few contemporary DPs and a couple of relations; invaluable voice interviews conducted at the American Society of Cinematographers while Rosher and Daniels were still alive; brightly-colored comic-strip frames (by Patrick Mate) to illustrate some of the stories; and, naturally, clips from these men’s movies and in some cases the ones that influenced them.
Bitzer, who learned his craft from the horse’s mouth, so to speak – he was trained by W.K. Dickson, the official cinematographer for the Edison Company, where the first American camera was invented – teamed up with D.W. Griffith, the man who invented the art of filmmaking, at the outset of Griffith’s career, in 1908; it was he who got Griffith to see the connection between this dazzling new medium and the Victorian melodramas he grew up on and loved. Totheroh, most of whose story is related by his adoring grandson David Totheroh, was a one-time baseball player who moved from shooting westerns for Broncho Billy Anderson to collaborating with Charlie Chaplin. Rosher and Daniels were perhaps the most gifted of the “glamor photographers” whose work with iconic movie actresses – Rosher shot all of Mary Pickford’s silent from 1917 on while Daniels, who had been second cameraman on Erich von Stroheim’s 1924 masterpiece Greed, was behind the camera on every one of Greta Garbo’s MGM pictures except for her last, the disastrous Two-Faced Woman – defined Hollywood’s approach to lighting stars for the entirety of the big-studio era. In the mid-twenties Rosher was invited by Germany’s celebrated studio UFA, home base for the German Expressionists, to give a demonstration of glamor lighting and stayed to serve as a consultant on F.W. Murnau’s Faust (1926); when Murnau emigrated to Hollywood the next year, his comrades-in-arms on Sunrise – one of the most exquisite, visually inventive and enduring films of the silent era (and one of the last) – were Rosher and Karl Struss. Gregg Toland is forever associated with the introduction to American movies of the deep focus lens, which permits the shooting of all three planes of the image, foreground, middle ground and background, with equal clarity. He was Orson Welles’s DP on Citizen Kane in 1941 and a repeat collaborator with William Wyler. What I never knew until seeing Image Makers was that James Wong Howe, whose career began in 1923 and spanned more than half a century, was the actual inventor of deep focus, which he tried out on some tests for the 1931 Transatlantic. Howe was also one of the pioneers of three-strip Technicolor and, much later, CinemaScope. (He was also godfather to Toland’s daughter Lothian, a rugged western beauty who shows up briefly but memorably in the documentary.)
The subtitle The Adventures of America’s Pioneer Cinematographers prepares
us for the tone of the movie, a joyous mix of wide-eyed discovery and the
best sort of egghead fascination. If you’ve read Sragow’s wonderful
critical biography Victor Fleming: An American Movie Master you’ll
recognize the fleet yet dense style of the writing and the approach he
takes in the narration (read by Michael McKean), which is to present
remarkably detailed material with the wonder of a science nerd who’s
happened upon the most exciting laboratory ever built. He and Raim located
the ideal team of experts to explicate what the narration doesn’t. All of
them, from David Totheroh (who can’t stop grinning as he talks about the
stories his “grandpop” passed down to him – except when, alluding to the
final scene of Chaplin’s City Lights (1931), he gets teary-eyed) and Steve
Gainer, curator of the ASC Camera Museum, to Leonard Maltin (author of The
Art of the Cinematographer and many other volumes) and Matt Severson, the
director of the Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ Margaret Herrick Library,
conveys their tales and observations as if they’d been waiting decades for
the right audience. If there’s a master guide in this journey, though, it’s
the great British silent-movie historian and preservationist Kevin
Brownlow, who turned eighty last year. Everything he shows and tells us is
fresh, like the early occasion of a camera moving into a close-up in a 1904
short called Photographing a Female Crook and the way Bitzer lit Griffith’s
most staggering film, the 1916 three-and-a-quarter-hour Intolerance, before
arc lights had been invented. It’s a magical narrative, all right, like an
inspired episode in a boys’ adventure serial – and big-eared Brownlow, clad
in a tie and baseball cap, with his twee English accent, is such a goofy,
outsize gnome of a fellow that he looks like he was born to tell it. And
he’s so much in thrall to Griffith’s picture that he chokes up when he
describes it. “When you’ve gone through Intolerance, you feel unhinged,” he
proclaims – and indeed yes, it’s the maddest masterpiece ever put on
screen.
A scene from Erich von Stroheim’s 1924 masterpiece Greed. |
My second favorite expert is the modern-day Missouri-born cinematographer John Bailey, whom I recall with fondness from Visions of Light, a highly enjoyable doc from 1992 that, with broad strokes, covers the entire history of movie lighting, and from the film noir episode of the terrific 1995 TV limited series American Cinema, where he explained the “Venetian blind effect” and other visual trademarks of forties and fifties noirs. Here he is, still tall and imposing at seventy-seven (he looks maybe sixty-two), demonstrating how Struss and a handful of other proactive DPs “unchained” the camera after the early sound pictures had immobilized it by showing and explicating the opening sequence of Rouben Mamoulian’s 1931 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Even more fun is the moment when Raim splits the screen to show us a still of Murnau directing Sunrise on the left side while Raim unspools an excerpt from the amazing big-city sequence, with its breathtaking use of superimposition, on the right. (Here, too, Bailey explains how Struss and Rosher shot it.) Raim and Sragow wisely choose to place Bailey’s rich reading of the last scene of Martin Ritt’s 1963 Hud close to the end of the documentary; Bailey theorizes that changing the locale from inside the house (as it appears in all three versions of the screenplay he’s managed to track down) to its exterior was the idea of the cinematographer, James Wong Howe. Watching this scene made me excited to see the movie again.
Image Makers packs in so much that’s wonderful in an hour and forty minutes
that it’s hard to select all my favorite parts. I loved Brownlow’s
revelation that a shot from Greed anticipates the way Welles and Toland got
their low-angle shots in Citizen Kane as well as a still of the two men
shooting from a trap cut into the floor of the set. A blue-tinted clip from
The Hoodlum, one of Rosher’s Pickford films, and Howe’s use of color in the
1938 The Adventures of Tom Sawyer put those movies at the top of my must-see
list. The narration is sprinkled with insights that turned my head around,
like the fact that Pickford’s 1929 talkie Coquette – which Rosher refused
to light and Struss did but then regretted it because it enslaved him to
the chained camera – is shot like a multi-camera TV show; and that when
Pickford collapses in Little Annie Rooney (1925) after learning that her
father is dead, Rosher takes the light off her curls to show that the life
has gone out of her. And because I’m a Gregg Toland devotee, I ate up the
section on his work. The narration claims that Welles and Toland believed
deep focus imitates the movement of the human eye; what it doesn’t point
out is the irony of that statement, since what they did in Kane with deep
focus (which Renoir had already been using in France and Wyler, in league
with Toland, had tried out in the 1939 Wuthering Heights) was to turn it
from the best realist tool ever thought up to an expressionist visual
device. (That’s why Welles has often been hailed for pioneering deep focus
in Kane – because he used it in a strikingly weird manner.) Severson
explains how Toland employed it – once more for realism – in a scene from
Wyler’s crowning achievement The Best Years of Our Lives (1946).
In Image Makers, the contemporary DP Rachel Morrison says that
cinematographers “dance with the actors” and Sam Peckinpah, quoted in the
narration, scoffs at the idea that the camera is a mere machine when “it is
the most marvelous piece of divinity ever invented.” This joyous
documentary piles on the evidence for both of these charming descriptives.
Mhlekazi Andy Mosiea in The Magic Flute. (Photo: Keith Pattison) |
The notion of The Magic Flute adapted to the style and instrumentation of a South African company sounded irresistible, so I’d been looking eagerly forward to the production by the Cape Town-based Isango Ensemble, which ArtsEmerson programmed last week. (I’d missed it during its previous engagements.) And it was definitely a kick to hear the famous Mozart overture played on drums and marimbas. But the show doesn’t have a concept, the staging (by Mark Dornford-May, who also adapted the opera) is fairly static and sticks to straight lines, and Lungelo Ngamlana’s choreography is, frankly, amateurish – a lot of marching up and down and swaying of hips. Presumably the point of translating the material is to suggest that the librettist Schikaneder’s loony fable – with its fairy-tale lovers, Tamino and Pamina, and their low-comic counterparts, Papageno and Papagena, the demonic-harpy Queen of the Night and her opposite number, the warm, paternal priest Sarastro, and his Masonic cult – could be reconceived as an African story. But Dornford-May hasn’t come up with any cultural equivalents for the characters or the visual elements of the libretto, settling instead for a generalized African vibe. It isn’t even especially colorful, which strikes me as a huge missed opportunity. (No costume designer is listed in the program.)
During the first aria, Tamino’s cry for help as he’s being pursued by a
dragon (Dornford-May does almost nothing with this scenario), I was put off
by the musical performance, but I figured that I would get used to the
pared-down, percussion-dominated arrangement, and certainly part of the
problem seemed to be the lackluster singing of Masakana Sotayisi. (He does
improve in the second act, but he’s the weakest singer in the cast.) But I
never did get comfortable with it, though a couple of the duets – Papageno
(Zamile Gantana) with Pamina (Nombongo Fatyi) and the always-welcome
meeting of Papageno and his Papagena (the singer in this role isn’t
identified in the press material) just before the end – are very enjoyable,
and I loved the idea that when Tamino goes to work on his magic flute, the
sound that emerges is a trumpet, played by the conductor, Mandisi Dyantyis.
(Dyantyis also arranged the music and he and Paulina Malefane directed it.)
The problem, for me, at least, is that even when the singers are at their
finest – Fatyi and Ayanda Tikolo, the Sarastro, have the most impressive
vocal instruments – you miss the melodic richness and depth of the Mozart
music when their voices are set against so thin a sound.
The production is tedious (a word I don’t think I’ve ever employed to refer
to The Magic Flute), especially the second act, though it’s only about
forty minutes long. And perhaps the ArtsEmerson folks could include some
more information in the program? The performers are listed but not by role,
and it’s a little shocking to see no credit to either Mozart nor
Schikaneder. They did write the damn thing.
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