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giovedì 26 novembre 2020
Après le bal (le tub)/After the Ball ( F1897 film) by Georges Méliès
After the Ball (1897 film)
After the Ball (French: Après le bal (le tub)) is an 1897 French short silent film made by Georges Méliès. It was sold by Méliès's Star Film Company and numbered 128 in its catalogues.
Plot
A maidservant helps her lady get undressed (with nudity simulated by a body stocking). The maid helps the woman bathe, pouring water over her, and finally covers and dries her with a robe.
Production
Méliès was not the first filmmaker to include simulated nudity in a film; Eugène Pirou had already made a film along the same lines in late 1896, Le Bain de la Parisienne. (Méliès's film is sometimes also known by this title.) In Méliès's version, Jehanne d'Alcy is the bather, with Jane Brady, a music hall actress, as the chambermaid.
Méliès, d'Alcy, and Brady made After the Ball outdoors, with the backdrop spread on a peach-garden wall (a mur à pêches) on the Méliès family property. Méliès's first glass studio had already been built, but was not quite ready to use as the walls were still being reinforced. According to d'Alcy's recollections, as reported to her granddaughter Madeleine Malthête-Méliès, dark sand stood in for the "water" because d'Alcy was cold in her body stocking.
A surviving print of the film
Jack Nitzsche (April 22, 1937 – August 25, 2000) American musician, arranger, songwriter, composer
Jack Nitzsche
Bernard Alfred Nitzsche (April 22, 1937 – August 25, 2000), known professionally as Jack Nitzsche, was an American musician, arranger, songwriter, composer, and record producer. He first came to prominence in the early 1960s as the right-hand-man of producer Phil Spector and went on to work with the Rolling Stones and Neil Young, among others. He also worked extensively in film scores, notably for films such as Performance, The Exorcist and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. In 1983, he won the Academy Award for Best Original Song for co-writing "Up Where We Belong" with Buffy Sainte-Marie.
Life and career
Born in Chicago, Illinois, United States, and raised on a farm in Newaygo, Michigan, Nitzsche, son of German immigrants, moved to Los Angeles in 1955 with ambitions of becoming a jazz saxophonist. He was hired by Sonny Bono, who was at the time an A&R (artists and repertory) executive at Specialty Records, as a music copyist. While there, Nitzsche wrote a novelty hit titled "Bongo Bongo Bongo". Nitzsche wrote with Bono the song "Needles and Pins" for Jackie DeShannon, later recorded by the Searchers. His instrumental composition "The Lonely Surfer" entered the Cash Box top 100 on August 3, 1963, and reached No. 37.
He became arranger and conductor for producer Phil Spector, and orchestrated the Wall of Sound for the song "River Deep, Mountain High" by Ike and Tina Turner. Nitzsche worked with Earl Palmer, Leon Russell, Roy Caton, Glen Campbell, Carol Kaye and Hal Blaine in The Wrecking Crew, the backing band for many pop acts such as the Beach Boys and the Monkees. Nitzsche arranged the title song of Doris Day's film Move Over, Darling, which was a successful single on the pop charts of the time.
While organizing the music for the T.A.M.I. Show television special in 1964, he met the Rolling Stones and went on to play keyboards on their albums The Rolling Stones, Now! (The Rolling Stones No. 2 in the UK), Out of Our Heads, Aftermath and Between the Buttons as well as on their hit singles "Paint It, Black" and "Let's Spend the Night Together"; he also wrote the choral arrangements for "You Can't Always Get What You Want". In 1968 he introduced the band to slide guitarist Ry Cooder, a seminal influence on the band's 1969–1973 style.
On several Rolling Stones records, he was credited as player of the "Nitzsche-phone". In an obituary on Gadfly Online, former Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham explained the credit:
I made that up for the credits on those Stones albums—it was just a regular piano (or maybe an organ) mic'd differently. It was all part of this package that was created around the Stones. People believed it existed. The idea was meant to be: "My god, they've had to invent new instruments to capture this new sound they hear in their brains." And they were inventing fresh sounds with old toys—therefore, it deserved to be highlighted—it was the read-up of creation, of imagination—getting credit for a job well done.
He collaborated with Neil Young, beginning with producing "Expecting to Fly" by Buffalo Springfield. plus the song "On the Way Home". In 1968, Nitzsche and Cooder co-produced Young's eponymous solo debut with David Briggs. As he was moving from baroque to hard rock, Young hired Nitzsche for The Stray Gators, the session musicians behind Young on Harvest (1972) and Time Fades Away (1973).
Nitzsche played electric piano with Crazy Horse throughout 1970. Despite frequent clashes with Billy Talbot and Ralph Molina, Nitzsche remained with the band after Young left in 1970. Nitzsche produced the band's 1971 self-titled debut album and sang lead vocal on "Crow Jane Lady". He left Crazy Horse after the album's commercial failure.
While remaining prolific throughout the 1970s, he began to suffer from depression and problems connected to substance abuse. His relationship with Young began to deteriorate during the 1973 support tour for Harvest that yielded Time Fades Away. During rehearsals, drummer Kenneth Buttrey demanded a salary of $100,000 to compensate for lost session work, leading Nitzsche (with support from bassist Tim Drummond) to prevail upon the singer to extend this salary to the other band members. Although Young reluctantly agreed, Nitzsche thought Young never got over it. He frequently spewed obscenities into his vocal mike (leading Young's sound engineers to disconnect it) and often quarreled with David Crosby, who joined the tour's final dates to assist with vocal harmonies. After he publicly castigated Young in a 1974 interview, the two men became estranged for several years and collaborated only sporadically. Later that year, he was dropped from the Reprise roster after recording a song criticizing executive Mo Ostin. This period culminated in his arrest for allegedly breaking into the home of and then raping ex-girlfriend Carrie Snodgress, formerly Young's companion, with a gun barrel on June 29, 1979. Snodgress was treated at the hospital for a bone fracture, cuts and bruises and had 18 stitches. The charge of rape by instrumentation (which carries a five-year sentence) was dismissed.
In 1979, Nitzsche produced Graham Parker's album Squeezing Out Sparks. Nitzsche produced three Willy DeVille albums beginning in the late 1970s: Cabretta (1977), Return to Magenta (1978) and Coup de Grâce (1981). Nitzsche said DeVille was the best singer he had ever worked with.
Nitzsche began to concentrate more on film music rather than pop music in the mid-1970s, becoming one of the more prolific film orchestrators in Hollywood during the period. In 1983, he received the Academy Award for Best Song for co-writing "Up Where We Belong" (from the 1982 film An Officer and a Gentleman) with Will Jennings and Buffy Sainte-Marie. Nitzsche had also worked on film scores throughout his career, such as his contributions to the Monkees movie Head, the theme music from Village of the Giants (recycling an earlier single, "The Last Race") and the soundtracks for Performance (1970), The Exorcist (1973), One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975), Hardcore (1979), The Razor's Edge (1984) and Starman (also 1984). He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Score and a Grammy for his contributions to One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, his first of many studio projects with Scott Mathews.
In the mid-1990s, an inebriated Nitzsche was seen being arrested in Hollywood in an episode of the television show Cops after brandishing a gun at some youths who had stolen his hat. Attempting to explain himself to the arresting officers, he is heard exclaiming that he was an Academy Award winner. In 1997, he expressed interest in producing a comeback album for Link Wray, although this never materialized due to their mutually declining health.
In 2000, Nitzsche planned to work with Mercury Rev on All Is Dream. Nitzsche intended to produce and orchestrate the record, having praised the band's 1998 album Deserter's Songs, but he died before pre-production.
Personal life
Nitzsche met his first wife, singer Gracia Ann May, while he was working for Capitol Records. His second wife was Buffy Sainte-Marie, with whom he co-wrote Academy Award winning song for 1982, "Up Where We Belong." He also had a relationship with actress Carrie Snodgress.
Nitzsche suffered a stroke in 1998 which ended his career. He died in Hollywood's Queen of Angels - Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center in 2000 of cardiac arrest brought on by a recurring bronchial infection. His interment was at Hollywood Forever Cemetery. He was survived by one son.
Discography
- The Lonely Surfer (Reprise, 1963)
- Dance to the Hits of The Beatles (Reprise, 1964)
- Chopin '66 (Reprise, 1966)
- St. Giles Cripplegate (Reprise, 1972)
- OSR Blue Collar (MCA, 1978)
- OSR The Razor's Edge (Southern Cross, 1984)
- OSR The Hot Spot (Island, 1990)
- OSR The Indian Runner with David Lindley (Capitol, 1991)
- OSR Revenge (Silva America, 1995)
With Crazy Horse
- Crazy Horse (Reprise, 1971)
With The Rolling Stones
- The Rolling Stones No. 2 (Decca, 1965)
- Out of Our Heads (Decca, 1965)
- Aftermath (Decca, 1966)
- Between the Buttons (Decca, 1967)
- Let It Bleed [Decca (UK), London (US), 1969] (arranger only)
- Sticky Fingers (Rolling Stones, 1971)
- Emotional Rescue (Rolling Stones, 1980) (arranger only)
With Neil Young
- "Expecting to Fly" (from the Buffalo Springfield album Buffalo Springfield Again, Atco, 1967)
- Neil Young (Reprise, 1968)
- After the Gold Rush (Reprise, 1970)
- Harvest (Reprise, 1972)
- Time Fades Away (Reprise, 1973)
- Tonight's the Night (Reprise, 1975)
- Life (Geffen, 1987)
- Harvest Moon (Reprise, 1992) (arranger only)
- Live at the Fillmore East (Reprise, 2006, recorded 1970)
- Tuscaloosa (Reprise, 2019, recorded 1973)
Bernard Alfred "Jack" Nitzsche (Chicago, 22 aprile 1937 – Los Angeles, 25 agosto 2000) è stato un compositore statunitense di colonne sonore cinematografiche. Ricordato soprattutto per aver composto la colonna sonora di Qualcuno volò sul nido del cuculo e L'esorcista, ha anche collaborato a diversi LP del cantautore statunitense Neil Young (al piano elettrico, tastiere, voce) e all'incisione in studio di molti brani dei Rolling Stones.
Filmografia parziale
- Village of the Giants, regia di Bert I. Gordon (1965)
- Sadismo (Performance), regia di Donald Cammell (1970)
- L'esorcista (The Exorcist), regia di William Friedkin (1973)
- Qualcuno volò sul nido del cuculo (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest), regia di Miloš Forman (1975)
- Heroes, regia di Jeremy Kagan (1977)
- Tuta blu (Blue Collar), regia di Paul Schrader (1978)
- Hardcore, regia di Paul Schrader (1979)
- Cruising, regia di William Friedkin (1980)
- Ufficiale e gentiluomo (An Officer and a Gentleman), regia di Taylor Hackford (1982)
- Il filo del rasoio (The Razor's Edge), regia di John Byrum (1984)
- Starman, regia di John Carpenter (1984)
- Stand by Me - Ricordo di un'estate (Stand by Me), regia di Rob Reiner (1986)
- 9 settimane e ½ (9½ Weeks), regia di Adrian Lyne (1986)
- Vendetta trasversale (Next of Kin), regia di John Irvin (1989)
- Revenge - Vendetta (Revenge), regia di Tony Scott (1990)
- The Hot Spot - Il posto caldo (The Hot Spot), regia di Dennis Hopper (1990)
- Sirene (Mermaids), regia di Richard Benjamin (1990)
- Lupo solitario (The Indian Runner), regia di Sean Penn (1991)
- Blue Sky, regia di Tony Richardson (1994)
- Tre giorni per la verità (The Crossing Guard), regia di Sean Penn (1995)
- Grindhouse - A prova di morte (Death Proof), regia di Quentin Tarantino (2007)
Premi Oscar Miglior Colonna Sonora
Nomination
- Qualcuno volò sul nido del cuculo (1975)
- Ufficiale e gentiluomo (1983)
Premi Oscar Miglior Canzone
Vittorie
- Ufficiale e gentiluomo (1983)