CARNEGIE HALL
The poster for Edgar G. Ulmer’s Carnegie Hall boasts the following: “Never before … never again … so magnificent an array of artists on one screen
Benny Goodman at Carnegie Hall 1938 show video here Opera singers
Nora embodies the American dream of self-betterment and upward mobility. Not only does she love music passionately, she takes to underwriting scholarships for poor students to train as musicians
At the heart of the story is the burning question of whether it is indeed true that classical music is for everybody, and if in turn anybody can be a classical musician. This is the ideal that the film clearly wants to espouse, but it does so carefully-as if merely assuming such things are too much to expect. The film does not show the audience in the theater because their uniformly privileged appearances would belie that ideal-the film Carnegie Hall preserves and packages a vital cultural experience not otherwise available to the masses and makes it popularly accessible. The decision to include a linking story was a savvy commercial decision that makes Carnegie Ball a true movie. It was a choice that helped make Carnegie Hall accessible to people who would not frequent the real Carnegie Hall
CARNEGIE HALL, screen play by Karl Kamb, from a story by Seena Owen; directed by Edgar G. Ulmer; produced by Boris Morros and William LeBaron for United Artists release. At the Winter Garden and Park Avenue.
Nora Ryan . . . . . Marsha Hunt
Tony Salerno Jr. . . . . . William Prince
John Donovan . . . . . Frank McHugh
Ruth Haines . . . . . Martha O'Driscoll
Tony Salerno Sr. . . . . . Hans Yaray
Anton Tribik . . . . . Joseph Buloff
Henry . . . . . Emile Boreo
Katinka . . . . . Eola Galli
Olin Downes . . . . . Himself
Tchaikovsky . . . . . Alfonso D'Artega
Walter Damrosch . . . . . Himself
Mr. Damrosch (1891) . . . . . Harold Dyrenforth
and
New York Philharmonic Quintet
Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra of New York
Bruno Walter
Lily Pons
Gregor Piatigorsky
Rise Stevens
Artur Rodzinski
Artur Rubinstein
Jan Peerce
Ezio Pinza
Vaughan Monroe and his orchestra
Jascha Heifetz
Fritz Reiner
Leopold stokowski
Harry James
Leopold Stokowski conducts the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra in part of the slow movement from Tchaikovsky's 5th Symphony in the 1947 movie Carnegie Hall
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