Sidney Poitier
By Roger House
With the recent passing of Sidney Poitier, it may be an opportune time to revisit a neglected film from his long legacy, “Paris Blues.” The 1961 movie featured novel questions of race, music, and romance that reviewers failed to appreciate at the time – but that stand out as progressive today.
Paris Blues was a 1961 jazz drama that explored personal relationships, race relations, and dedication to jazz culture. Reviewers back then considered it a flawed product based on a sentimental novel by Harold Flender, a New York Jewish writer enamored with the centrality of jazz in the cosmopolitan scene of 1950s Paris.
The city was a haven for musicians, artists, and writers in the decades after the world wars. Pioneer Black American expats left an imprint in the culture including soprano saxophonist Sidney Bechet, novelist Richard Wright, and entertainer Josephine Baker – recently the first Black woman inducted into the French Pantheon.
Filmed on location, the cast included Sidney Poitier as a saxophonist in a combo with Paul Newman, a trombonist. They play expatriate musicians in the cellar club house band and find a community with an assortment of jazz hounds, groupies and artists.
In adapting the novel to film, screenwriter Walter Bernstein, reinstated from the Hollywood blacklist for his views on communism, recreates the bohemian subculture of a cellar club. In its better moments, the film offers jazz scenes memorable on a number of levels, including a few cameo gems. Most notably, it contrasts episodes of romance in Black and white with a rare sense of equity.
The novice filmmakers were producer Sam Shaw, a photographer best known for the iconic image of Marilyn Monroe standing over a subway grate, and Martin Ritt in the early stage of his career as a director of social realism stories like “Sounder” and “Norma Rae.”
Musically, « Paris Blues » featured a soundtrack by the Duke Ellington Orchestra – including compositions like “Take the A Train,” “Mood Indigo,” and “Paris Blues” – and was nominated for an Academy Award but lost out to West Side Story. It also included robust scenes with Louis Armstrong as a jazz deity touring the city.
			  
			
Commentaires récents