| Benny Lee, Rosalie Crutchley, Kenneth
Colley, Arnold Yarrow, Lee Montague, Antonia Ellis, Ronald Pickup,
Michael Southgate, Robert Powell, Elaine Delmar
Director Ken Russell made a number of biographical films of composers'
lives including The Music Lovers, (about Tchaikovsky) and Lisztomania.
Russell embellished the other films with certain characteristic
flourishes, which include a focus on the composers' sexual obsessions,
poetically telling anachronisms, and scenes which show Richard Wagner
in a bad light. The story of Mahler is recounted in a much less
complex and flamboyant manner and is a relatively reverent study
of the life and work of Austrian composer Gustav Mahler, here played
by Robert Powell. The film tackles the touchy dilemma of Mahler's
Jewishness in the anti-Semitic atmosphere of 19th-century Vienna.
He converts to Christianity, which has no effect on his brilliant
musical output but which eats away at his physical and mental well-being.
Gustav Mahler (1860-1911) was a conductor and composer of the late
Romantic era and specialized in huge symphonic works. Though his
works were performed widely during his lifetime, they were less
and less-often played until Leonard Bernstein's active campaign
on their behalf brought him renewed recognition as a composer of
the first rank, every bit the peer of Brahms or Stravinsky. |