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07-18-2023, 01:34 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2016
Location: Boston, MA
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Great Performances
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I've always gotten such pleasure from threads started here that compile lists of favorite movies, books, poetry, songs, etc.
One thing I'd enjoy is a compilation of great performances by artists of any genre — music performances, clips from live theatre, movie scenes, or anything that qualifies in your mind as being a great performance.
I'll start and hope others will contribute.
This extraordinary performance by Aretha Franklin: "Natural Woman" live from the Kennedy Center.
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07-18-2023, 03:31 PM
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Join Date: May 2008
Location: Columbus, OH
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Honestly, the first thing that comes to mind is J. K. Simmons's award-winning turn in Whiplash from 2014. Probably the most intense movie I have ever seen. Simmons plays a prestigious music college bandleader (jazz), who is downright sadistic in squeezing the best out of his pupils. Here's a representative scene, though be forewarned that it is absolutely rife with foul language and epithets...
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07-19-2023, 02:34 AM
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Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Sunnyvale, CA
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I've never understood how to compare performances. Maybe I can learn from those of you who don't share my blindness.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jim Moonan
This extraordinary performance by Aretha Franklin: "Natural Woman" live from the Kennedy Center.
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Why prefer Ms. Franklin's performance of this song to, say, Ms. King's performance on the original recording? (I can hear, of course, that they're different.)
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07-19-2023, 04:49 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: San Diego, CA, USA
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A friend's daughter being the most badass bride ever in 2015, performing with her Taiko group as the sun sets behind Scripps Pier:
https://www.facebook.com/731388774/v...3299326088775/
I love San Diego.
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07-19-2023, 09:10 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2016
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Julie Steiner
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I agree! To be there would have been an unforgettable experience.
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07-19-2023, 10:25 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2016
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Perhaps it’s the modernity of it, but I never truly felt the desperation and the depth of Hamlet's soliloquy until I heard it delivered by David Tennant here. Acting genius. Great camera work.
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07-20-2023, 01:05 AM
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Join Date: Sep 2004
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jim Moonan
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Perhaps it’s the modernity of it, but I never truly felt the desperation and the depth of Hamlet's soliloquy until I heard it delivered by David Tennant here. Acting genius. Great camera work.
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That's a great Hamlet! Directed by Gregory Doran, based on his 2008 production. Theater directing is the one interpretive art that I feel I get, because it's made up of choices I can experience (particularly when the play is a familiar one, so I can compare the choices to those of other productions). In this Hamlet, time and time again lines mean something different than I'd ever heard them mean before, and not giving the impression that Doran and his cast were trying to be clever, but making me feel "Oh that's what Shakespeare meant!" That I can't think of a specific example shows me it's time to rewatch this. Thanks for bringing it up, Jim.
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07-19-2023, 09:02 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2016
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Max Goodman
I've never understood how to compare performances. Maybe I can learn from those of you who don't share my blindness.
Why prefer Ms. Franklin's performance of this song to, say, Ms. King's performance on the original recording? (I can hear, of course, that they're different.)
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It's strictly subjective, Max. What makes AF's performance great for me was the context (it's a Carole King composition and she's being honored for her lifetime achievements. She —Carole King — appears overwhelmed with gratitude and doesn't hold back), the fact that this might have been one of her last public performances, her drop-dead swagger as she moves from the piano to centerstage, the shedding of the fur coat (who wears a fur coat under the hot lights?!?) and then of course her astonishing, electrifying voice. In my mind, Carole King owns the copyright to the song, but Aretha Franklin owns the best performance of the song.
Funny thing is, I'm not a big fan of her. But this transcends my preference for musical styles, etc. and I am genuinely moved by her performance/prescence in this. It is clear, too, that every single member of the audience is moved. Carole is ecstatic.
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