Humoresque

Sunday, March 24 @ 11:30 AM / Music Box Theatre — 3733 N Southport Ave
Tickets: $12 at the door or purchase in advance

HUMORESQUE
Directed by Frank Borzage • 1920
Publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst founded Cosmopolitan Productions to boost the screen career of his mistress Marion Davies, but the studio found its first major critical and commercial success with Humoresque, a heart-tugging drama about a Jewish family with no role for comedienne Davies. (The film was adapted by Frances Marion from a Fannie Hurst story that first ran in Hearst’s Cosmopolitan Magazine, so corporate efficiency won out regardless.) Set in New York’s Lower East Side ghetto, where kids wrestle on the sidewalk for used cigarette butts and junkmen peddle dubious antiques, Humoresque follows the Kantors, a Russian émigré family dominated by the original Yiddishe Momme (Vera Gordon, a stage actress from Yekaterinoslav) who dotes on her son Leon. He grows up and becomes an acclaimed violinist (Gaston Glass) whose talent serves as a ticket to upward mobility for the Kantor clan — until World War I interrupts the march of assimilation. (“When there is talk in the press of Jewish radicals and bolshevists,” observed Educational Film Magazine, “it is good to see a strong photoplay featuring the patriotism of a Jewish youth in whose grasp was fame and fortune but who deliberately gave it all up to fight for his Uncle Sam.”) Voted the best film of 1920 by readers of PhotoplayHumoresque announced Frank Borzage as a master of urban melodrama and launched a legion of sentimental imitators. The film was loosely remade in 1946, with the violinist’s shiksa girlfriend Joan Crawford taking top billing and engineering an over-the-top exit scored to Tristan and Isolde, but it’s the original that leaves us verklempt. (KW)
75 min • Cosmopolitan Productions • 35mm from UCLA Film & Television Archive

Preceded by: “The Boy Friend” (Fred Guiol, 1928) – 20 min – 35mm from UCLA Film & Television Archive

Live musical accompaniment by David Drazin!

NEXT UP: TOKYO POP on Wednesday, March 27 at NEIU