
Bagdad Cafe is a comedy-drama set in a remote
truck stop and
motel in the
Mojave Desert in
California. A real cafe was used in the film, the Sidewinder Cafe, now – unsurprisingly renamed the
Bagdad Cafe – on the famed old
Route 66, between the east and west off-ramps of I-40,
Newberry Springs, east of
Barstow, on Highway 40 in the
Mojave Desert,
California.
Bagdad Cafe
The film is based on the
Carson McCullers novella,
The Ballad of the Sad Café
(1951), and centers on two women who have recently separated from
their husbands, and the friendship that that develops between them.
Photograph: Pelemele Film
The
casting for the film was brilliant (
link below)! None of the actors, with one
exception, were well-known, "established" American performers. That
exception was
Jack Palance as Rudi Cox, an ex-
Hollywood set-painter, and he was sensational! Before this film I had always considered him an actor
typecast as a rouge or
swashbuckler
of one kind or another. He was definitely not so in this case; his
gentle, romantic side and his comedic talent glittered like
diamonds!
Marianne Sägebrecht as Jasmin Münchgstettner, the abandoned
German wife, was absolutely perfect in the role as was
C. C. H. Pounder, who portrayed Brenda the owner of the cafe.
The
customers of the cafe
and the
denizens inhabiting the motel attached to it were amazing and
delightful (a tattoo aritst, etc.); there was one just surprise after
another (
link below).

The score for the film was by
Bob Telson and his
song,
Calling You, sung by
Jevetta Steele, is one of the most unique tunes ever written for a film (
link below). Telson also recorded an instrumental version; both versions are on the movie
soundtrack. The song was nominated for the
Academy Award for Best Original Song at the
61st Academy Awards.
Unfortunately,
Let the River Run from
Working Girl, with music and lyrics by
Carly Simon, won the award.
Celine Dion covered
Calling You during her live performances between 1990 and 1996. The 1994 performance by her recorded at the
Olympia in
Paris was included on the
À l'Olympia live album and released as the first and only single in December, 1994, which peaked on the
French Top 100 Singles Chart in the last week of 1994, reaching number seventy-five. It left the chart after five weeks
(
link below). The
Olympia was the same venue where
Édith Piaf achieved great acclaim giving several series of recitals from January 1955 until October 1962,
and where she recorded her famous album,
Piaf at the Olympia
(
link below).
George Michael of
Wham! fame also did a cover of
Calling You with a female singer singing the chorus during his 1991 "
Cover to Cover tour"
(
link below).
During the film, Darron Flagg (Salomo, Brenda's son) brilliantly performs the preludes from Book I of the
Bach The Well-Tempered Clavier: the C major, no. 1,
BWV 845; the C minor,
BWV 846, no. 2; and the D major, no. 5,
BWV 850.
Bagdad Cafe was released on November 12, 1987, in
Europe
and on April 22, 1988, in the United States. The film was successful at
the box office, with a US gross of $3.59 million.
In 1990,
Bagdad Café was adapted as a
TV series, with
Whoopi Goldberg as the owner – a role she had refused for the film.
Viewfinder link:
YouTube links:
“The film is a kind of a fairytale . . .
I wanted it to look like a Salvador Dalí painting.”
~ Percy Adlon
Styrous® ~ Thursday, November 12, 2018