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Re: [ARSCLIST] Oscar Levant-William Kernell Opera 'Carnival'



In the US, six Monogram(Allied) titles are issued by MGM singly and in a 'Chanthology' box set:
The Secret Service; The Chinese Cat; The Jade Mask; Meeting at Midnight; The Scarlet Clue; The Shanghai Cobra.
In the UK, six Fox titles are/about to be issued by Orbit Media, also offered singly and in a box:
Charlie Chan in London, Charlie Chan in Paris, Charlie Chan at the Opera, Charlie Chan at the Circus, Charlie Chan on Broadway,
Charlie Chan in Shanghai.
There is a "Platinum Edition" offered by a web source containing 42 films on 14 DVD-R's. I have not seen these, but would like to hear what the quality is from anyone who has them. I've a few early Charlie Chan films on bootleg VHS tapes, purchased many years ago. The transfers are execrable.
Best wishes, Thomas.



Robert Hodge wrote:


It's Warner Oland , please. Not Werner.
Not to be nit picky.

Is this one on DVD?

BH





mrichter@xxxxxxx 11/14/2005 2:03 PM >>>


Thomas Stern wrote:


This 'opera' composed for the film CHARLIE CHAN AT THE OPERA.
Can anyone identify who the actual singers in the film are?  Thanks.
Best wishes, Thomas.



Boris Karloff plays an opera baritone (singing dubbed by Rico Ricardi)

suffering from amnesia and a desire for revenge. He is suspected of a murdering a woman onstage but detective Charlie Chan (Werner Oland) has

his doubts. This was one of the best of the low-budget Chan films based

around the Honolulu detective created by Earl Derr Biggers. Oscar
Levant composed an imaginary opera called Carnival for this film including overture and arias. The libretto by William Kernell was created around
a Mephistopheles costume used by Lawrence Tibbett in Metropolitan. It was


given to the Chan picture to be worn on-stage by Chaney in the stabbing

scene. Levant discusses this opera in his autobiography A Smattering of

Ignorance and there is an analysis of it by Irene Hahn Atkins in Source

Music in Motion Pictures. H. Bruce Humberstone directed for 20th
Century Fox. Black and white. 66 minutes.


Copyright @ 1997 by Ken Wlaschin. All rights reserved.

Mike




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