The Orlando Consort to Accompany THE PASSION OF JOAN OF ARC Screening at VPAC, 1/17
The Passion of Joan of Arc (Carl Theodor Dreyer, 1928) is widely regarded as not only one of the most important films from the silent era but a movie that proved film could also be art. On Sunday, January 17 at 7:30pm the cult-classic will be screened in VPAC's Great Hall, accompanied by The Orlando Consort's period medieval music-much of which was composed during Joan of Arc's lifetime--for a unique evening blending silent film with live music that bring the story of Saint Joan to life onstage.
"As one of Los Angeles' premier presenter/producers of multi-disciplinary work, I am making a long-term commitment to silent films performed with live music," says Thor Steingraber, Executive Director of VPAC. "Programming two of the most epic and visually stunning masterpieces, The Passion of Joan of Arc and Ben Hur, was an important way to launch a series that will continue into future seasons. As a concert venue, music finds its highest and most diverse representation with an exquisite choral ensemble for Joan of Arc, and the extraordinary pop/rock star Stewart Copeland for Ben Hur." On March 16, VPAC will present the 1925 epic Ben-Hur with an original score by Stewart Copeland, a perfect silent film pairing with Dreyer's The Passion of Joan of Arc. Stewart Copeland, founding member of The Police, has since spent three decades as an acclaimed film composer, filmmaker and creator of opera, ballet and chamber music. His current muse, the 1925 film Ben Hur: A Tale of The Christ remains the most expensive silent film ever made, with an enormous cast and breathtaking visuals. Nearly a century later, the film's chariot race remains one of the most influential scenes in cinema history. The evening will feature composer Copeland on drum set and percussion, fronting a full symphony orchestra.The Orlando Consort, formed in 1988 by the Early Music Network of Great Britain, rapidly achieved a reputation as one of Europe's most expert and consistently challenging groups performing repertoire from the years 1050 to 1550. Their work successfully combines captivating entertainment and fresh scholarly insight; the unique imagination and originality of their programming together with their superb vocal skills has marked the Consort out as the outstanding leaders of their field.
Carl Theodor Dreyer's The Passion of Joan of Arc is celebrated today as one of the great works of cinematic art. The late film critic Roger Ebert said, "You cannot know the history of silent films unless you know the face of Renee Maria Falconetti." Time Out said, "Dreyer's most universally acclaimed masterpieces remains one of the most staggeringly intense films ever made." "In their day, silent films were usually accompanied by live music," notes Orlando Consort's Donald Greig. "We don't know what Dreyer thought of the two different scores that accompanied the 1928 premieres but in the 1950's, in a letter to a French film distributor, he complained that no-one had tried adding music from the period in Joan of Arc's brief life. Experiencing film with live music is such a powerful feeling in any case, and this authentic score adds an appropriate and affecting dimension to an already extraordinary movie."
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