LESS TALK MORE STYLE SERGIO LEONE'S SPAGHETTI LEGACY CELEBRATED AT THE AUTRY.Byline: Steve Rosen Correspondent It would be fitting if the Autry National Center The Autry National Center, is a western heritage center made up of three Museums and the Institute for the Education of the American West. Located in Griffith Park in the City of Los Angeles, California. called itself the Museum With No Name. Right now it's being overshadowed by its exhibit - ``Once Upon a Time in Italy - The Westerns of Sergio Leone.'' Italian film director Leone is most famous for transforming TV actor Clint Eastwood into the enduringly mythic Man With No Name in a series of three mid-1960s ``spaghetti Westerns'': ``A Fistful fist·ful n. pl. fist·fuls The amount that a fist can hold. Noun 1. fistful - the quantity that can be held in the hand handful containerful - the quantity that a container will hold of Dollars,'' ``For a Few Dollars More'' and ``The Good, the Bad and the Ugly'' (which are available on DVD DVD: see digital versatile disc. DVD in full digital video disc or digital versatile disc Type of optical disc. The DVD represents the second generation of compact-disc (CD) technology. from MGM MGM in full Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc. U.S. corporation and film studio. It was formed when the film distributor Marcus Loew, who bought Metro Pictures in 1920, merged it with the Goldwyn production company in 1924 and with Louis B. Mayer Pictures in 1925. ). The history and impact of those films, as well as of Leone's artistry, are the subjects of this innovative and surprising multimedia exhibit at the Autry's Museum of the American West in Griffith Park Griffith Park is a large public park at the eastern end of the Santa Monica Mountains. It is situated in the Los Feliz neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. The park covers 4,210 acres (17 km²) of land, making it one of the largest urban parks in North America. through Jan. 22. Leone changed the very nature of Westerns, as well as notions of movie heroism/antiheroism in his Eastwood movies and his subsequent epic, 1968's ``Once Upon a Time in the West'' (available on DVD from Paramount). Leone saved the movie Western, which had lost its audience to TV cowboy shows in the early 1960s, by making it cool and new for boomer-era teens. ``We focus on his Westerns because the West is the mission of this museum,'' says the Autry's Estella Chung, the show's co-curator. ``And the work he did with Westerns is groundbreaking.'' Eastwood biographer and Time magazine film critic Richard Schickel recalls, ``Clint said to me, 'I didn't think that the American Western, at that time, was in very good shape. I thought it needed some kind of jolt of some sort.' ``Leone provided that, primarily through stylistic devices,'' Schickel adds. ``One of the things I like about Leone's Westerns is that he'll spend a very long time on the preliminaries to a gunfight. But then, once they exchange shots, it's very quick, much quicker than the typical walk-down in an American Western. All of that preparation is fabulous. It's kind of funny, and it's very suspenseful.'' The accomplishment of creating the Man With No Name persona is so great that it's trumpeted by a rare 1966 poster at the entranceway to this show. It has neither the film's name nor the star's on it. Rather, it contains three illustrations of a rather disreputable-looking, shadowy character. One can't tell whether it's Eastwood. With each picture is a slogan: ``This short cigar belongs to a man with no name.'' ``This long gun belongs to a man with no name.'' ``This poncho belongs to a man with no name.'' And then, the kicker Kicker A right, warrant, or some other feature added to a debt instrument to make it more desirable to potential investors. Notes: The ability to trade a bond or other debt instrument in for stock may entice investors, if they feel the stock will appreciate. : ``He's going to trigger a whole new style in adventure.'' Thus were movie history and pop-cultural mythos my·thos n. pl. my·thoi 1. Myth. 2. Mythology. 3. The pattern of basic values and attitudes of a people, characteristically transmitted through myths and the arts. changed. But as Chung explains, Leone didn't plan it that way. An original Italian-language script on display in the show reveals that Eastwood's character at first was named ``Ray.'' But that got dropped as unnecessary exposition. The Eastwood films were made cheaply in Spain and released in Italy between 1964 and 1966, where ``Spaghetti Westerns'' were such a radical new idea that Leone at first tried to pretend he was American. An early Italian film poster here lists the first film's director as ``Bob Robertson Robertson, who batted and threw right-handed, played for the Pittsburgh Pirates (1967-76), Seattle Mariners (1978) and Toronto Blue Jays (1979). ,'' an alias. But the films became hits, despite the fact the casts were polyglots of various nationalities. Yet when a studio was getting ready to release them in the U.S. in 1967, it was stymied from a marketing standpoint. Why would Americans want to see an Italian-made Western? So it decided to hype the lead character's lack of a name. It worked. ``That mystique was a marketing ploy,'' Chung says. This is not only the largest-ever exhibit devoted to Leone, who died in 1989 of a heart attack at just age 60, but Chung says it's also the biggest devoted to a motion-picture director, period. The show was co-curated by Sir Christopher Frayling Sir Christopher John Frayling (born 25 December 1946) is a British educationalist and writer, known for his study of popular culture. He read history at Churchill College, Cambridge and gained a PhD in the study of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. , a Leone biographer as well as the chairman of Arts Council England Arts Council England was formed in 1994 when the Arts Council of Great Britain was divided into three separate bodies for England, Scotland and Wales. It is an Executive Agency of the Department of Culture, Media and Sport. . Objects were loaned by Leone's collaborators on his films, including Eastwood. The actor also serves on a star-studded Leone Film Arts Committee created by the Autry for this show. And there is far more than movie posters here. ``We made a decision to only bring in material that had maintained its original look since used in his films,'' Chung says. ``And we were lucky to find so much.'' Plentiful background material, including old photos and comic books, show how Leone, the son of a director and silent-film actress, grew up in Italy fascinated by American pulp fiction. In 1946, he entered the busy Italian film industry and worked on many English-language sword-and-sandal movies being filmed at Rome's Cinecitta studios, including ``Ben-Hur.'' In 1960, he directed his first movie, ``The Colossus of Rhodes Colossus of Rhodes (kəlŏs`əs), large statue of Helios, the sun god, destroyed by an earthquake in antiquity. Consider one of the Seven Wonders of the World by the ancients, it was built in part by Chares of Lindus (Rhodes) between 292 and .'' In 1963, he saw Japanese director Akira Kurosawa's samurai-warrior film ``Yojimbo'' and was impressed with its loner loner Psychiatry A single young man estranged from society and family, who suffers from psychogenic pain, and tends to live 'on the edge', vacillating between aggression and depression; loners often have unrealistic goals, but are unable to work towards those goals , man-of-few-words star. ``He said if you got rid of the swords and put a cowboy hat on the guy, you'd have a terrific Western,'' Chung says. This exhibit is at its best in showing how Leone made the choice of Eastwood as his lead. On a video monitor, it plays a scene from a 1961 episode of the TV series ``Rawhide Rawhide series depicting cowboys as cattle-punchers along the Santa Fe trail. [TV: Terrace, II, 235] See : Wild West ,'' in which Eastwood played Rowdy Yates. Called ``Incident of the Black Sheep black sheep n. 1. A sheep with black fleece. 2. A member of a family or other group who is considered undesirable or disreputable. ,'' it shows a quiet Eastwood exuding authority. ``This is where he thought Clint Eastwood could be a star,'' Chung says. ``The myth is that he took a picture of Eastwood, drew some stubble, and put a cigarillo cig·a·ril·lo n. pl. cig·a·ril·los A small narrow cigar. [Spanish cigarrillo, diminutive of cigarro, cigar; see cigar.] Noun 1. in his mouth to see if he made a star.'' The exhibit features original set-design illustrations and costumes worn by actors in ``Once Upon a Time in the West'' and a later Leone Western from the early 1970s, ``Duck You Sucker.'' (A gangster film that Leone made in the 1980s, ``Once Upon a Time in America,'' is not part of this show's reach.) The most famous object here is probably Eastwood's trademark poncho (with sewn-up bullet holes). It's in a case. ``A lot of fans are curious about the origins of the poncho,'' Chung says. ``In the original script, he'd taken the poncho from a man taking a bath by the side of a river. But that scene was never shot. So we have the script explaining it all - in Italian.'' Another illuminating artifact A distortion in an image or sound caused by a limitation or malfunction in the hardware or software. Artifacts may or may not be easily detectable. Under intense inspection, one might find artifacts all the time, but a few pixels out of balance or a few milliseconds of abnormal sound is a script bearing the terms ``primo piano'' and ``primissimo piano'' as well as ``P.P.'' and ``P.P.P.'' Those mean ``close-up'' and ``extreme close-up,'' hallmarks of the groundbreaking way Leone chose to shoot gunfights to extend tension. Those brief notations represent five long minutes of actual screen time. To re-create the proper environment for ``Once Upon a Time in the West'' artifacts artifacts see specimen artifacts. and film clips, the museum commissioned a life-size fiberglass sculpture of that film's memorable opening scene in which three gunmen wait at a train station for the arrival of Harmonica harmonica. 1 The simplest of the musical instruments employing free reeds, known also as the mouth organ or French harp. It was probably invented in 1829 by Friedrich Buschmann of Berlin, who called his instrument the Mundäoline. (Charles Bronson
Charles Bronson (born Charles Dennis Buchinsky, November 3, 1921 – August 30, 2003) was an American actor of "tough guy" roles. ). That sequence, itself, plays on a screen with its eloquently eerie, famous soundtrack of just background noises, except for Bronson ``talking'' through his harmonica. That was the idea of Leone's musical collaborator, Ennio Morricone, whose quirky, eccentric work also is very much part of this exhibit. ``Morricone had written music for that scene, but then he went to a concert of 'incidental sounds,' where all sound plays a part in the definition of music,'' Chung says. ``In this case, it was of a man moving a ladder on stage and making a creaking creak intr.v. creaked, creak·ing, creaks 1. To make a grating or squeaking sound. 2. To move with a creaking sound. n. A grating or squeaking sound. sound. So he told Leone about it, and they decided to do that approach in the film.'' From such disparate and unusual sources was an American cultural legacy made. Film writer Bob Strauss contributed to this story. ONCE UPON A TIME IN ITALY - THE WESTERNS OF SERGIO LEONE Where: The Autry National Center's Museum of the American West, 4700 Western Heritage Way in Griffith Park. When: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday (until 8 p.m. Thursday), but open on Monday for Labor Day Labor Day, holiday celebrated in the United States and Canada on the first Monday in September to honor the laborer. It was inaugurated by the Knights of Labor in 1882 and made a national holiday by the U.S. Congress in 1894. ; through Jan. 22. Tickets: $7.50 adults, $5 students 13 and up and seniors 60 and up, $3 for children 2 to 12; free 4-8 p.m. Thursdays. (323) 667-2000; autrynationalcenter.org. MOVIES UNDER THE STARS Where: The Autry National Center's South Lawn, which turns into an outdoor movie theater. When: ``For a Few Dollars More'' - 8 p.m. Saturday; ``The Good, the Bad and the Ugly'' - 8 p.m. Sept. 10; ``Once Upon a Time in the West'' - 8 p.m. Sept 17. Admission: Free. CAPTION(S): 4 photos Photo: (1 -- cover -- color) How the Western was won Sergio Leone's spaghetti legacy celebrated at the Autry (2) Clint Eastwood stars as a gritty, no-nonsense cowboy who was more than a bit mysterious in Sergio Leone's ``For a Few Dollars More.'' (3) The dress worn by Claudia Cardinale in ``Once Upon a Time in the West'' is part of the Autry's Leone exhibit. (4) no caption (Sergio Leone) |
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