RIP Sir Christopher Lee

Discuss the passing of various Welles colleagues
Wellesnet
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RIP Sir Christopher Lee

Postby Wellesnet » Mon Jun 22, 2015 11:05 pm

Appeared in Welles's "Moby Dick Rehearsed". 2009 interview:
http://www.wellesnet.com/sir-christophe ... moby-dick/

tonyw
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Re: RIP Sir Christopher Lee

Postby tonyw » Fri May 04, 2018 12:08 pm

On the recent UK Arrow DVD release of CITY OF THE DEAD, Sir Christopher supplies an interesting interview that begins with his experiences working on MOBY DICK REHEARSED and his explicit statement that it was filmed.

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RayKelly
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Re: RIP Sir Christopher Lee

Postby RayKelly » Mon May 07, 2018 5:41 pm

From a piece I wrote nearly 2 years ago:

Welles filmed between 40 and 75 minutes of the production with much of the original cast at the Hackney Empire and Scala theaters in London. (Christopher Lee was brought in to sub for Peter Sallis as Stage Manager/Flask.). Welles hoped to sell the finished product to CBS' Omnibus, which had presented a live abridged version of King Lear directed by Peter Brooks and starring Welles in 1953. However, Welles was unhappy with the initial results and quickly abandoned the idea.

"We shot for three days and it was obvious it wasn't going to be any good, so we stopped," Welles told biographer Barbara Leaming. "There was no film made at all. We only did one and a half scenes. I said, 'Let's not go on and waste our money, because it's not going to be any good.'"

In his autobiography, Kenneth Williams said the dim atmospheric stage lighting rendered some of the footage shot by Welles unusable.

"It was to be a film of the play and from the outset Orson was at loggerheads with the lighting cameraman who vainly protested that theatrical arclamps were insufficient for filming. 'You're not Rembrandt painting with light,' he was told. 'Shoot the scene'. When the rushes revealed stygian gloom, it had to be filmed all over again."

However, fellow co-star Patrick McGoohan in 1986 recalled watching 40 minutes of rushes three decades earlier and being impressed with what he saw.

There have been online reports that a badly decomposed copy exists at the Munich Film Museum by those who misunderstood remarks made by Jonathan Rosenbaum. The noted film scholar told Wellesnet in 2003 that some film cans marked Moby Dick Rehearsed were in the museum's possession, but that the contents were not from the 1955 stage show.

But that did not curb hopes – or stop rumors– that the London footage may exist somewhere in the Munich archive. Sadly, museum director Stefan Drössler assured us that is not the case.

"You can be assured that if we would have any of the footage of the 1950s version, I would have preserved it somehow and presented in Welles conferences or retrospectives. I had some conversations with Christopher Lee about it and followed unsuccessfully several tracks. At the Locarno festival (in 2005) and in some of the Welles centenary retrospectives, I presented a detailed lecture about Orson and Moby Dick. During the shooting in July 1955, Orson didn’t film his own scenes. He wanted to do it later. The filmed material was supposed to be shipped to Italy. Anyway, at a certain point it seems to have been chopped by the customs. There is no record or hint that Orson ever continued the shooting or worked on the editing. Only a few photos from the shooting in London survive."


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