"The actor needs to feel like a musician," she said. "They need to be able to read some music and understand the mind-set of a musician in order to look realistic."
Mr. Duris admits that most of the Bach toccata would be impossible for him."They gave me the beginning of the fugue," he said. "But to play the part that comes 30 seconds later, I'd need 10 years of training."
In the film, Thomas repeatedly watches a black-and-white video clip showing the fingers of Vladimir Horowitz curling down the piano in a long run.
The fingers must be strengthened by hours and hours of exercises - scales, chord progressions and the ubiquitous drills designed by the French composer Charles-Louis Hanon, whose 1873 book, "The Virtuoso Pianist in 60 Exercises," is still the most widely used hand workout in print.
The gist of it:So what? Some movie actors spent months learning three measures of a chopin waltz or one hand of Bach for a film role? Unimpressive - they usually sound ****y and toneless anyway (movie audiences generally don't have musical taste).I especially liked this part - he's learning hand posture from HOROWITZ? And this paragraph made my stomach sick:
She'll teach you some real fingering.
Is it just me, or does she look like Betty Middler? And here are two related threads:https://pianoforum.net/smf/index.php/topic,3659.msg32880.html#msg32880(actors who actually can play the piano)https://pianoforum.net/smf/index.php/topic,3454.msg30662.html#msg30662(pianos in movies)Best wishes,Bernhard.
Is it just me, or does she look like Betty Middler?
I think she does look like Betty.
You guys mean Bette Midler? She'd love it. Betty. https://www.bettemidler.com/index_nf.html