Showing posts with label Kurt Kasznar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kurt Kasznar. Show all posts

January 31, 2021

20,000 vinyl LPs 270: Mario Lanza ~ For the First Time

    ~       

vinyl LP front cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®


Today, January 31, is the birthday of the great Italian spinto tenor, Mario Lanza, who was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.        




Although he had a tenor voice that would rival any opera star, his career was primarily in films. For the First Time is a 1959 musical film directed by Rudolph Mate and starring Lanza, Johanna von Koczian, Kurt Kasznar and Zsa Zsa Gabor. It is the height of irony that, contrary to the title, this was Lanza's last film.             
 
 

I remember the first film he starred in that I saw, The Great Caruso. He was at the beginning of his weight problems (more on that later) in this film but a few years later I saw his earlier film, The Toast of New Orleans, when he was at the height of his masculine attraction and combined with his voice, he was stunning.    

The song Be My Love, written expressly for Lanza in 1950 by Nicholas Brodszky with lyrics by Sammy Cahn and recorded on June 27, 1950, was his first million-selling hit. The song was featured in The Toast of New Orleans in a duet with Kathryn Grayson (links to both below).   


vinyl LP back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®
 
 
Mario Lanza was referred to by some sources as the "new Caruso" after his "instant success" in Hollywood films, while MGM hoped he would become the movie studio's "singing Clark Gable" because of his good looks and powerful voice.       
 
Lanza was a big inspiration to fellow RCA Victor recording star Elvis Presley. A year after Lanza's death, Presley recorded an English translation of O Sole Mio, which was popularized by Lanza; the song, retitled, It's Now or Never, went on to be one of Presley's all time best selling songs (links below).      
      
Mario Lanza was the first RCA Victor Red Seal artist to win a gold disc and the first artist to sell 2-1/2 million albums.           
        
 
 
 Mario Lanza ~ For the First Time
vinyl LP back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®
 
 
For the First Time also starred Kurt Kasznar of Waiting for Godot, by Samuel Beckett, fame (link below) and Hungarian-American actress and socialite, Zsa Zsa Gabor who was in the John Huston, 1952 film, Moulin Rouge.   

 
 
 Mario Lanza ~ For the First Time
vinyl LP back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®
 
 
Mario Lanza was born as Alfredo Arnold Cocozza in 1921. He was exposed to classical singing at an early age by his Abruzzese-Molisan Italian parents. His mother Maria Lanza was from Tocco da Casauria, a town in the province of Pescara in the region of Abruzzo. His father Antonio Cocozza was from Filignano, a town in the province of Isernia in the region of Molise.       
 
By 16, his vocal talent had become apparent. Starting out in local operatic productions in Philadelphia for the YMCA Opera Company while still in his teens, he came to the attention of principal Boston Symphony conductor Serge Koussevitzky. In 1942, Koussevitzky provided young Cocozza with a full student scholarship to the Berkshire Music Center at Tanglewood, Massachusetts. Reportedly, Koussevitzky later told him "Yours is a voice such as is heard once in a hundred years."        
 
His voice was so powerful, so golden, so dazzling that Arturo Toscanini called it the "voice of the century". And in the opinion of Plácido Domingo, "one of the truly great natural tenor voices of the past century—a voice of beauty, passion, and power."   
 
He was also a highly influential artist. "If I’m an opera singer," José Carreras has said, "it’s thanks to Mario Lanza."           

Hollywood columnist Hedda Hopper wrote that “his smile, which was as big as his voice, was matched with the habits of a tiger cub, impossible to housebreak.” She added that he was the “last of the great romantic performers”. He replied, "I am the humble keeper of a great voice, the fortunate and unfortunate guy it passes through."       
 
A Gouache on board portrait of Lanza by Boris Chaliapin painted in 1951 hangs in the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery (link below).     


vinyl LP back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®




vinyl LP record label details
detail photos by Styrous®

  
Tracklist:

Side 1:

    Verdi: Rigoletto
A1 - Act I: Questa O Quella (The One Is As Fair As The Other), Composed By – Verdi*

   
A2 - Act II: La Donna È Mobile (Woman Is Fickle), Composed By – Verdi*

   
A3 - Act III: Parmi Veder Le Lagrime (Art Thou Weeping?), Composed By – Verdi*

   
    Puccini: Tosca
A4 - Act I: Recondita Armonia (Strange Harmony Of Contrasts), Composed By – Puccini*

Side 2:

B1 - Act III: E Lucevan Le Stelle (The Stars Were Brightly Shining), Composed By – Puccini*

   
    Donizetti: L'Elisir D'Amore
B2 - Act II: Una Furtiva Lagrima (A Furtive Tear), Composed By – Donizetti*

   
    Ponchielli: La Gioconda
B3 - Act II: Cielo E Mar! (Heaven And Ocean), Composed By – Ponchielli*

   
    Leoncavallo: Pagliacci
B4 - Act II: Vesti La Giubba (On With The Play),  Composed By – Leoncavallo*

Companies, etc.

    Pressed By – RCA Records Pressing Plant, Indianapolis

Credits:

    Conductor – Constantine Callinicos
    Orchestra – RCA Victor Orchestra*
    Sleeve Notes – Mari Yanofsky
    Tenor Vocals – Mario Lanza

Notes:
Front cover:
Printed in U.S.A.

Back cover:
Printed in U.S.A.
 
Barcode and Other Identifiers

    Matrix / Runout (Label side A): E0-LRC-4040
    Matrix / Runout (Label side B): E0-LRC-4041
    Matrix / Runout (Runout side A): E0 LRC 4040 12S I B1F L
    Matrix / Runout (Runout side B): E0 LRC 4041 9S I C1D L
    Other (Front Cover): Form 2S-4212
    Other (Back cover): Form 2S4411
 
Mario Lanza ‎– The Great Caruso
Label: RCA Victor Red Seal ‎– LM-1127, RCA Victor Red Seal ‎– LM 1127
Format: Vinyl, LP, Mono
Country: US
Released: 1950
Genre: Classical
Style: Vocal, Classical
 
   
         
Viewfinder links:        
        
Samuel Becket         
Sammy Cahn         
José Carreras         
Plácido Domingo         
Zsa Zsa Gabor         
Kathryn Grayson        
Hedda Hopper        
John Huston     
Kurt Kasznar        
Arturo Toscanini        

        
Net links:        
         
Fanfare ~ Mario Lanza    
Hollywood Walk of Fame ~ Mario Lanza       
IMBD ~ Mario Lanza bio        
Mario Lanza Institute ~ Biography       
Mario Lanza Tenor ~ Mario Lanza, 1921-1959 
LA Times ~ Mario Lanza         
Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery ~ Mario Lanza      
       
YouTube links:        
        
Music ~      
         
Sammy Cahn ~ Be My Love         
Sammy Cahn ~ Be My Love (duet with Kathryn Grayson)        
Donizetti ~ Una Furtiva Lagrima (L'Elisir D'Amore)         
Leoncavallo ~ Vesti La Giubba (Pagliacci)  
Ponchielli ~ Cielo E Mar! (La Gioconda)    
Puccini ~    
     E Lucevan le Stelle (Tosca)          
     Recondita Armonia (Tosca)         
Verdi ~    
     La donna e mobile (Rigoletto)        
     Questa O Quella (Rigoletto)        
         
Documentaries ~       
        
Jinx Falkenberg ~ The Story of Mario Lanza interview (17 mins.)  
        
         
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Sunday, January 31, 2021       
       
















January 15, 2021

Kurt Kasznar articles/mentions

 ~     
Samuel Beckett ~ Waiting for Godot  
           
mentions:     
Mario Lanza ~ For the First Time      
     
     
     
     
     
date & photographer unknown
     
     
     
      
     















January 9, 2015

20,000 Vinyl LPs 33: Waiting for Godot - Samuel Beckett

2 vinyl LP album
cover photographer unknown
photo of album cover by Styrous®

I started the Vinyl LP series because I have over 20,000 albums I am selling; each blog entry is about an album from my collection. Inquire for more information here.

~ ~ ~

A few days ago marked the 61st anniversary of the first performance of the ground-breaking existentialist play, Waiting for Godot, by Samuel Beckett. It premiered on the 5th of January, 1953, in Paris.

Although I was not one, I was in college in the late 50's and interested in the beatnik scene because of jazz (see: Beemer link below). The coffee houses and art galleries with their poetry readings and jazz in North beach, the jazz bars in the Tenderloin and the Fillmore, etc., drew me to them like a moth to a flame (I was under age at the time but somehow managed to get in to the Blackhawk nightclub once where I heard Take Five for the first time performed by Cal Tjader). It was through one of these venues I heard about the Beckett play and I was curious.

I discovered the play had been recorded and released in 1956 by Columbia Records. I bought the album and was transfixed by it's absurdist theme and dismal view of the hopelessness of life.

 2 vinyl LP album
cover photographer unknown
photo of album cover by Styrous®



Liner notes from the album:
“The play, Waiting for Godot, seems to have baffled many - critics and audiences alike. As a result, and as is usually the case in theses matters, there has already been written a greater number of words about Waiting for Godot than there are in the play.”

2 vinyl LP album back
photo of album cover back by Styrous®



Waiting for Godot (/ˈɡɒdoʊ/ GOD-oh[1]) is an absurdist play by Samuel Beckett, in which two characters, Vladimir and Estragon, wait endlessly and in vain for the arrival of someone named Godot. Godot's absence, as well as numerous other aspects of the play, have led to many different interpretations since the play's 1953 premiere. It was voted "the most significant English language play of the 20th century". Waiting for Godot is Beckett's translation of his own original French version, En attendant Godot, and is subtitled (in English only) "a tragicomedy in two acts". The original French text was composed between 9 October 1948 and 29 January 1949. The première was on 5 January 1953 in the Théâtre de Babylone, Paris. The production was directed by Roger Blin, who also played the role of Pozzo.


 vinyl LP album back detail 
detail photo by Styrous®





The album was produced by Goddard Lieberson. 

Goddard Lieberson
photographer unknown 
 vinyl LP album back detail 
detail photo by Styrous®


It featured an introduction by William Saroyan. 

William Saroyan
photographer unknown 
 vinyl LP album back detail 
detail photo by Styrous®




The recording featured Bert Lahr (yep, the Cowardly Lion), E. G. Marshall, Kurt Kasznar, Alvin Epstein and Luchino Solito De Solis. 
 
 vinyl LP album back detail 
detail photo by Styrous®







 vinyl LP
detail photo by Styrous®




 vinyl LP label 
detail photo by Styrous®


Label: Columbia Masterworks - O2L 238
Format: 2 × Vinyl, LP Box Set
Country: US
Released: 1956

Tracklist:

Side One:
A     Act I (Beginning)     30:40
B     Act I (Conclusion)     29:22

Side Two: 
C     Act II (Beginning)     22:15
D     Act II (Conclusion)     23:30



I didn't see Godot until the early 60's; it was at the Encore Theater in 1962 when the American Premier was produced by The San Francisco Actor's Workshop Guild. Needless to say, like MANY other people, I was completely blown away. I had never seen anything like it before and never anything like it since. The production used, "Sound Blocks" by Morton Subotnick; I was in heaven.

Waiting For Godot 1963 program 
The San Francisco Actor's Workshop Guild 
photo by Styrous® 






The complete Waiting for Godot play can be heard on YouTube 
Music by Morton Subotnick can be heard on YouTube   
Anna McMullan review on The Telegraph   
  
More info on Godot on the University of Texas/Austin website  
Beemer Memories Pt. 1 ~ the end & the beginning  
 


Styrous® ~ January 8, 2015