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{{short description|1956 film by Anthony Mann}}
{{Infobox film
{{Infobox film
| name = Serenade
| name = Serenade
Line 5: Line 6:
| director = [[Anthony Mann]]
| director = [[Anthony Mann]]
| producer = Henry Blanke
| producer = Henry Blanke
| writer = [[Ivan Goff]]<br>[[Ben Roberts (writer)|Ben Roberts]]<br>[[John Twist]]
| based_on = {{based on|''[[Serenade (novel)|Serenade]]''<br>1937 novel|[[James M. Cain]]}}
| starring = [[Mario Lanza]]<br>[[Joan Fontaine]]<br>[[Sara Montiel]]<br>[[Vincent Price]]<br>[[Joseph Calleia]]<br>[[Vince Edwards]]<br>Harry Bellaver
| screenplay = [[Ivan Goff]]<br>[[Ben Roberts (writer)|Ben Roberts]]<br>[[John Twist]]
| starring = [[Mario Lanza]]<br>[[Joan Fontaine]]<br>[[Sara Montiel]]<br>[[Vincent Price]]<br>[[Joseph Calleia]]<br>[[Vince Edwards]]<br>[[Harry Bellaver]]
| music = [[Nicholas Brodszky]]
| music = [[Nicholas Brodszky]]
| cinematography = [[J. Peverell Marley]]
| cinematography = [[J. Peverell Marley]]
| editing = [[William H. Ziegler]]
| editing = [[William H. Ziegler]]
| distributor = [[Warner Bros.]]
| studio = [[Warner Bros.]]
| distributor = Warner Bros.
| released = {{Film date|1956|03|23}}
| released = {{Film date|1956|03|23}}
| runtime = 121 minutes
| runtime = 121 minutes
Line 18: Line 21:
| gross = $1,585,000 (US)<ref>'The Top Box-Office Hits of 1956', ''Variety Weekly'', January 2, 1957</ref>
| gross = $1,585,000 (US)<ref>'The Top Box-Office Hits of 1956', ''Variety Weekly'', January 2, 1957</ref>
}}
}}
'''''Serenade''''', a 1956 [[Warner Bros.]] release, was [[tenor]] [[Mario Lanza]]'s fifth film, and his first on-screen appearance in four years. Directed by [[Anthony Mann]] and based on the [[1937 in literature|1937]] novel of the same name by [[James M. Cain]], the film also stars [[Joan Fontaine]], [[Sara Montiel]] (billed as Sarita Montiel), and [[Vincent Price]].
'''''Serenade''''' is a 1956 American [[musical film|musical]] [[drama film]] directed by [[Anthony Mann]] and starring [[tenor]] [[Mario Lanza]], [[Joan Fontaine]], [[Sara Montiel]] (billed as Sarita Montiel), and [[Vincent Price]]. Based on the 1937 novel ''Serenade'' by [[James M. Cain]], the film was a [[Warner Bros.]] release, Lanza's fifth film, and his first on-screen appearance in four years.


==Plot==
==Plot==
''Serenade'' tells the story of poor vineyard worker Damon Vincenti (Mario Lanza), who becomes an operatic tenor, and is involved with two women &mdash; one a high society hostess, the other a Mexican bullfighter's daughter, Juana Montes (Sara Montiel). Highly melodramatic, the film features a great deal of operatic music, all of it sung by Lanza. Of note are the Act III Monologue from [[Verdi]]'s ''[[Otello]]'' and an extract from the duet "Dio Ti Giocondi" from the same opera featuring [[Metropolitan Opera]] soprano [[Licia Albanese]]. Reviewing the film in ''[[The New York Times]]'', A.H. Weiler wrote that, "Mr. Lanza, who was never in better voice, makes this a full and sometimes impressive musical entertainment."
''Serenade'' tells the story of poor vineyard worker Damon Vincenti (Mario Lanza), who becomes an operatic tenor, and is involved with two women &mdash; one a high society hostess, Kendall Hale (Joan Fontaine), the other a Mexican bullfighter's daughter, Juana Montes (Sara Montiel). The tenor has a breakdown because of his unrequited love for the society woman, but finds love (and a happy ending) with the Mexican girl. Highly melodramatic, the film features a great deal of operatic music, all of it sung by Lanza. Of note are the Act III Monologue from [[Verdi]]'s ''[[Otello]]'' and an extract from the duet "Dio ti giocondi" from the same opera featuring [[Metropolitan Opera]] soprano [[Licia Albanese]].

The movie differs greatly from the [[James M. Cain]] source novel. In the book, the male protagonist is John Howard Spring, a professional opera singer who has lost his voice and fled the United States to Mexico in a crisis of confidence after being sexually wooed (not unsuccessfully, though details are vague) by a male socialite and impresario. Juana Montes is a Mexican prostitute who sees Spring as gay and therefore a trouble-free partner to open a brothel with. But after having sex in a deserted church with Juana, Spring recovers his voice and his preferred sexual identity. The two lovers come into conflict with the local police and flee to Los Angeles, where Spring reestablishes his singing career, more successful than ever. But once they move to New York, the singer must struggle against the renewed blandishments of the gay impresario, whom Juana eventually murders with a torero's sword. As none of this material could be considered suitable for an American movie in 1956, the story becomes instead that of an opera singer torn between an overbearing, worldly but female patron of the arts (Joan Fontaine as Kendall Hale) and a Mexican bullfighter's virtuous daughter. The tenor has a breakdown because of his unrequited love for the society woman, but finds love (and a happy ending) with the Mexican girl.


==Cast==
==Cast==
Line 33: Line 34:
* [[Harry Bellaver]] as Tonio
* [[Harry Bellaver]] as Tonio
* [[Vince Edwards]] as Marco Roselli
* [[Vince Edwards]] as Marco Roselli
* [[Silvio Minciotti]] as Lardelli
* Silvio Minciotti as Lardelli
* [[Frank Puglia]] as Manuel Montes
* [[Frank Puglia]] as Manuel Montes
* [[Edward Platt]] as Everett Carter
* [[Edward Platt]] as Everett Carter
* [[Licia Albanese]] as Desdemona in 'Otello'
* [[Licia Albanese]] as Desdemona in ''Otello''
* [[Jean Fenn]] as Soprano in San Francisco
* [[Jean Fenn]] as Soprano in San Francisco

==Differences from the source novel==
The movie differs greatly from the [[James M. Cain]] source novel. In the book, the male protagonist is John Howard Sharp, a professional opera singer who has lost his voice and fled the United States to Mexico in a crisis of confidence after being sexually wooed (not unsuccessfully, though details are vague) by a male socialite and impresario. Juana Montes is a Mexican prostitute who sees Sharp as gay and therefore a trouble-free partner to open a brothel with. But after having sex in a deserted church with Juana, Sharp recovers his voice and his preferred sexual identity. The two lovers come into conflict with the local police and flee to Los Angeles, where Sharp reestablishes his singing career, more successful than ever. But once they move to New York, the singer must struggle against the renewed blandishments of the gay impresario, whom Juana eventually murders with a torero's sword. As none of this material could be considered suitable for an American movie in 1956, the story's male impresario becomes female instead and the Mexican prostitute becomes a Mexican bullfighter's daughter.


==Production==
==Production==
Film rights to the novel were bought in 1946 by the production company of [[Michael Curtiz]].<ref>2 FILMS ASSIGNED T0 MICHAEL CURTIZ: Head of New Production Unit for Warners Adds 'Serenade' and 'Winter Kill' to Schedule Of Local Origin
Film rights to the novel were bought in 1946 by the production company of [[Michael Curtiz]].<ref>{{cite news|title=2 FILMS ASSIGNED TO MICHAEL CURTIZ: Head of New Production Unit for Warners Adds 'Serenade' and 'Winter Kill' to Schedule Of Local Origin|date=Oct 28, 1946|work=New York Times|page=32}}</ref>

Special to THE NEW YORK TIMES.. New York Times (1923-Current file) [New York, N.Y] 28 Oct 1946: 32.</ref>
Anthony Mann got involved in the project through his agents, MCA, who also represented Mario Lanza. "They introduced me to him. I got to know him and I really liked the guy, even though everyone was kicking him down, saying he’d never make another film. And I
guess it was really more out of a stupid sentimentality, but I felt sorry for the guy...I knew it was going to be a terrible, terrible problem, because he was a compulsive eater and a compulsive drinker, but he was a marvellous, warm-hearted guy and I don’t think all the horrible things they said about him were true."<ref name="mann"/>

Mann was warned not to make a film with Lanza. "It was probably sentiment, but I decided I would. Terrible things happened, it was all very, very difficult, and the fact that I was able to finish it was a miracle. That’s the only miracle about it, because the film’s not good."<ref name="mann"/>

Mann liked some of the things about the movie. "I thought he did a couple of scenes quite well: his singing of OtheUo was very beautiful... It was one of those things for which I should never have approached, but I’m glad I did it in a way.... But we tried very hard to make something of it pictorially and went to some magnificent places in Mexico.... But its story was weak. How can you tell a story anyway when you’re singing arias all the time."<ref name="mann">{{cite magazine|title=Interviews with Anthony Mann|magazine=Screen|volume=10|date=July–October 1969| first1=Christopher|first2=Barrie|last2=Pattinson|last1=Wicking|url=https://archive.org/details/Screen_Volume_10_Issue_4-5/page/n31/mode/2up|pages=46–47}}</ref>

== Songs ==
* "[[Serenade (song from Serenade)|Serenade]]"
* "My Destiny"
* "[[Nessun dorma]]"

==Reception==
==Reception==
Reviewing the film in ''[[The New York Times]]'', A. H. Weiler wrote that Lanza, "who was never in better voice, makes this a full and sometimes impressive musical entertainment."<ref>{{cite web|title=Movie Review – Screen: Lanza Is Back; Appears in 'Serenade' at the Music Hall|url=https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=980CE3D61131E23BBC4B51DFB566838D649EDE|last=Weiler|first=A. H.|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=March 23, 1956}}</ref>
The film made a purported loss of $695,000.

The film suffered a purported loss of $695,000.


==See also==
==See also==
*[[List of American films of 1956]]
*[[List of American films of 1956]]

==Bibliography==
* Cesari, Armando. ''Mario Lanza: An American Tragedy.'' (Fort Worth: Baskerville 2004)


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
Cesari, Armando. ''Mario Lanza: An American Tragedy.'' (Fort Worth: Baskerville 2004)


== External links ==
== External links ==
* {{IMDb title|id=0049737|title=Serenade}}
* {{IMDb title|id=0049737|title=Serenade}}
* {{Amg movie|109488|Serenade}}
* {{AllMovie title|109488|Serenade}}
* {{tcmdb title|15970|Serenade}}
* {{TCMDb title|15970|Serenade}}
* {{AFI film|53658}}
* [http://www.mariolanzatenor.com/serenade-an-underrated-treasure.html "Serenade - An Underrated Treasure"], by Derek McGovern
* [http://www.mariolanzatenor.com/serenade-an-underrated-treasure.html "Serenade An Underrated Treasure"], by Derek McGovern

*[https://archive.org/details/variety202-1956-03/page/n69 Review] at Variety
{{Anthony Mann}}
{{Anthony Mann}}


[[Category:1956 films]]
[[Category:1956 films]]
[[Category:1950s musical films]]
[[Category:1950s musical drama films]]
[[Category:1950s romance films]]
[[Category:1956 romantic drama films]]
[[Category:1950s romantic musical films]]
[[Category:American musical drama films]]
[[Category:American musical drama films]]
[[Category:American films]]
[[Category:American romantic drama films]]
[[Category:American romantic drama films]]
[[Category:American romantic musical films]]
[[Category:American romantic musical films]]
[[Category:English-language films]]
[[Category:1950s English-language films]]
[[Category:Films based on works by James M. Cain]]
[[Category:Films based on works by James M. Cain]]
[[Category:Films directed by Anthony Mann]]
[[Category:Films directed by Anthony Mann]]
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[[Category:Warner Bros. films]]
[[Category:Warner Bros. films]]
[[Category:Films produced by Henry Blanke]]
[[Category:Films produced by Henry Blanke]]
[[Category:1950s American films]]

[[Category:Films scored by Nicholas Brodszky]]

[[Category:English-language musical drama films]]
{{romantic-musical-film-stub}}
[[Category:English-language romantic drama films]]
[[Category:English-language romantic musical films]]

Latest revision as of 06:01, 29 September 2024

Serenade
Original movie poster
Directed byAnthony Mann
Screenplay byIvan Goff
Ben Roberts
John Twist
Based onSerenade
1937 novel
by James M. Cain
Produced byHenry Blanke
StarringMario Lanza
Joan Fontaine
Sara Montiel
Vincent Price
Joseph Calleia
Vince Edwards
Harry Bellaver
CinematographyJ. Peverell Marley
Edited byWilliam H. Ziegler
Music byNicholas Brodszky
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • March 23, 1956 (1956-03-23)
Running time
121 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1,585,000 (US)[1]

Serenade is a 1956 American musical drama film directed by Anthony Mann and starring tenor Mario Lanza, Joan Fontaine, Sara Montiel (billed as Sarita Montiel), and Vincent Price. Based on the 1937 novel Serenade by James M. Cain, the film was a Warner Bros. release, Lanza's fifth film, and his first on-screen appearance in four years.

Plot

[edit]

Serenade tells the story of poor vineyard worker Damon Vincenti (Mario Lanza), who becomes an operatic tenor, and is involved with two women — one a high society hostess, Kendall Hale (Joan Fontaine), the other a Mexican bullfighter's daughter, Juana Montes (Sara Montiel). The tenor has a breakdown because of his unrequited love for the society woman, but finds love (and a happy ending) with the Mexican girl. Highly melodramatic, the film features a great deal of operatic music, all of it sung by Lanza. Of note are the Act III Monologue from Verdi's Otello and an extract from the duet "Dio ti giocondi" from the same opera featuring Metropolitan Opera soprano Licia Albanese.

Cast

[edit]

Differences from the source novel

[edit]

The movie differs greatly from the James M. Cain source novel. In the book, the male protagonist is John Howard Sharp, a professional opera singer who has lost his voice and fled the United States to Mexico in a crisis of confidence after being sexually wooed (not unsuccessfully, though details are vague) by a male socialite and impresario. Juana Montes is a Mexican prostitute who sees Sharp as gay and therefore a trouble-free partner to open a brothel with. But after having sex in a deserted church with Juana, Sharp recovers his voice and his preferred sexual identity. The two lovers come into conflict with the local police and flee to Los Angeles, where Sharp reestablishes his singing career, more successful than ever. But once they move to New York, the singer must struggle against the renewed blandishments of the gay impresario, whom Juana eventually murders with a torero's sword. As none of this material could be considered suitable for an American movie in 1956, the story's male impresario becomes female instead and the Mexican prostitute becomes a Mexican bullfighter's daughter.

Production

[edit]

Film rights to the novel were bought in 1946 by the production company of Michael Curtiz.[2]

Anthony Mann got involved in the project through his agents, MCA, who also represented Mario Lanza. "They introduced me to him. I got to know him and I really liked the guy, even though everyone was kicking him down, saying he’d never make another film. And I guess it was really more out of a stupid sentimentality, but I felt sorry for the guy...I knew it was going to be a terrible, terrible problem, because he was a compulsive eater and a compulsive drinker, but he was a marvellous, warm-hearted guy and I don’t think all the horrible things they said about him were true."[3]

Mann was warned not to make a film with Lanza. "It was probably sentiment, but I decided I would. Terrible things happened, it was all very, very difficult, and the fact that I was able to finish it was a miracle. That’s the only miracle about it, because the film’s not good."[3]

Mann liked some of the things about the movie. "I thought he did a couple of scenes quite well: his singing of OtheUo was very beautiful... It was one of those things for which I should never have approached, but I’m glad I did it in a way.... But we tried very hard to make something of it pictorially and went to some magnificent places in Mexico.... But its story was weak. How can you tell a story anyway when you’re singing arias all the time."[3]

Songs

[edit]

Reception

[edit]

Reviewing the film in The New York Times, A. H. Weiler wrote that Lanza, "who was never in better voice, makes this a full and sometimes impressive musical entertainment."[4]

The film suffered a purported loss of $695,000.

See also

[edit]

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Cesari, Armando. Mario Lanza: An American Tragedy. (Fort Worth: Baskerville 2004)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ 'The Top Box-Office Hits of 1956', Variety Weekly, January 2, 1957
  2. ^ "2 FILMS ASSIGNED TO MICHAEL CURTIZ: Head of New Production Unit for Warners Adds 'Serenade' and 'Winter Kill' to Schedule Of Local Origin". New York Times. Oct 28, 1946. p. 32.
  3. ^ a b c Wicking, Christopher; Pattinson, Barrie (July–October 1969). "Interviews with Anthony Mann". Screen. Vol. 10. pp. 46–47.
  4. ^ Weiler, A. H. (March 23, 1956). "Movie Review – Screen: Lanza Is Back; Appears in 'Serenade' at the Music Hall". The New York Times.
[edit]