Considering his godhead
status in the world of musical theater, composer/lyricist Stephen Sondheim has
been strangely unrepresented in movies. Although most of his major plays have
been telecast in some form or another, to date only six have become feature
films: West Side Story (1961), Gypsy (1962), A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1966), A Little Night Music (1977), Sweeney Todd (2007), and Into the Woods (2014). The 30-year gap
between A Little Night Music and Sweeney Todd is partially attributable
to musicals going out of fashion, and it’s fair to say that West Side Story is, to date, the only
unqualified smash Sondheim movie adaptation. Still, a talent of Sondheim’s
stature surely deserves better in general—and better, specifically, than the
middling film version of A Little Night
Music.
Adapted from the Ingmar Bergman movie Smiles of a Summer Night (1955), which also inspired Woody Allen’s A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy (1982), A Little Night Music premiered onstage
in 1973, introducing the bittersweet ballad “Send in the Clowns.” Cover
versions by Frank Sinatra and Judy Collins popularized the tune. Like many of
Sondheim’s musicals, A Little
Night Music is a sophisticated collage of intricate musicality and rigorous
wordplay, to say nothing of complex plotting, so it was hardly a natural for a
mainstream adaptation. Indeed, the movie version was financed by a German
company and distributed in the U.S. by, off all entities, Roger Corman’s New
World Pictures.
Elizabeth Taylor, far from the apex of her box-office power but
still a formidable presence, leads a cast including Len Cariou, Lesley-Anne
Down, and Diana Rigg. Set in turn-of-the-century Austria, A Little
Night Music tracks the romantic travails of a group of wealthy but lonely
people. For instance, middle-aged lawyer Fredrik (Cariou) has recently married
his second wife, 18-year-old beauty Anne (Down), though he carries a torch for
middle-aged actress Desiree (Taylor). Meanwhile, Fredrik’s son,
priest-in-training Erich (Christopher Guard), wrestles with sexual longing and
family friend Countess Charlotte (Rigg) laments the passage of time.
The movie
opens with the characters performing onstage as the song “Night Waltz” presents
rarified central themes (one lyric states that “love is a lecture on how to
correct your mistakes”). After a graceful transition to location
photography, the movie winds through its narrative, and most numbers are staged
as intimate dramatic scenes. As always, Sondheim’s language is dazzling. Anne
assures the sex-crazed Erich that “my lap isn’t one of the devil’s snares,” and
Fredrik offers the following observation: “I’m afraid being young in itself is
a trifle ridiculous.” In one of A Little
Night Music’s nimblest numbers, “Soon,” Fredrik contemplates ravaging his
wife, who remains a virgin nearly a year into their marriage (“I still want and/or love you,” Fredrik sings). Although Broadway veteran Cariou has a strong voice, the best performance actually comes from Rigg,
who imbues “Every Day a Little Death” with hard-won wisdom. Conversely, Taylor
fails to impress when she delivers “Send in the Clowns.” In fact, Taylor is the
film’s biggest weak spot, thanks to her distracting cleavage and flamboyant acting
and weak singing.
Yet the ultimate blame for the mediocre nature of this film
must fall on Harold Prince, who directed the original Broadway production as
well as the movie, and on Sondheim. Prince’s filmmaking is humorless and
mechanical, failing to translate the elegance of the material into cinematic
fluidity. And for all their intelligence and sophistication, Sondheim’s songs
are frequently cumbersome and pretentious. The film version of A Little Night Music contains many fine
elements, but if it served as any viewer’s first introduction to Sondheim, the viewer might be perplexed as to what the fuss over the Grammy-, Oscar-, Pulitzer- and
Tony-winning songsmith is all about.
A Little Night Music: FUNKY
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