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1 Faust | Overture Center Duck Soup Cinema Faust starring Gösta Ekman Written by Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Gerhart Hauptmann, Hans Kayser Directed by F.W. Murnau CAST (1926) GRAND BARTON ORGAN OTHER MUSIC Dennis James Mark Goldstein SAT, MAR 16, 2013, 8PM | Capitol Theater Funding provided by Madison Stagehands and Projectionists Union, I.A.T.S.E Local 251, and contributions to Overture Center for the Arts. Learn how you can support Duck Soup by becoming a member at overturecenter.com/contribute. Gösta Ekman ...................................................................................................................... Faust Emil Jannings................................................................................................................Mephisto Camilla Horn................................................................................................................ Gretchen Frieda Richard................................................................................................ Gretchen’s Mother William Dieterle...............................................................................Valentin, Gretchen’s Brother Yvette Guilbert ................................................................ Marthe Schwerdtlein, Gretchen’s Aunt Eric Barclay ......................................................................... Herzog von Parma (Duke of Parma) Hanna Ralph ................................................................Herzogin von Parma (Duchess of Parma) Werner Fuetterer ....................................................................................... Erzengel (Archangel) featuring

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1Faust | Overture Center

Duck Soup CinemaFaust

starring Gösta EkmanWritten by Johann Wolfgang Goethe,

Gerhart Hauptmann, Hans Kayser

Directed by F.W. Murnau

CAST (1926)

GRAND BARTON ORGAN OTHER MUSIC Dennis James Mark Goldstein

SAT, MAR 16, 2013, 8PM | Capitol Theater

Funding provided by Madison Stagehands and Projectionists Union, I.A.T.S.E Local 251, and contributions to Overture Center for the Arts. Learn how you can support Duck Soup by becoming a member at overturecenter.com/contribute.

Gösta Ekman ...................................................................................................................... FaustEmil Jannings ................................................................................................................MephistoCamilla Horn ................................................................................................................ GretchenFrieda Richard ................................................................................................ Gretchen’s MotherWilliam Dieterle ...............................................................................Valentin, Gretchen’s BrotherYvette Guilbert ................................................................Marthe Schwerdtlein, Gretchen’s AuntEric Barclay ......................................................................... Herzog von Parma (Duke of Parma)Hanna Ralph ................................................................Herzogin von Parma (Duchess of Parma)Werner Fuetterer ....................................................................................... Erzengel (Archangel)

featuring

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3Faust | Overture Center

GÖSTA EKMAN

Generally spoken of as Swedish theater’s most legendary stage actor, Gösta Ekman enjoyed a prolific stage career during his short life, becoming the first real star of Swedish theater. His boyish good looks attracted both sexes, helping

GRAND BARTON ORGAN

Like all grand movie theaters built during the Silent Film Era, the Capitol Theater had a pipe organ that allowed a single musician to fill the theater with music while movies were being shown. Overture Center’s organ is a Barton, manufactured by the Bartola Musical Instrument Company in Oshkosh. It is believed to be the oldest Barton in Wisconsin, and the only one in the state remaining in its original location and condition. The instrument is such a rare gem that in 1990 it was honored by the Organ Historical Society as “an instrument of exceptional merit,” the first time a theater organ had been so recognized by the society, which typically reserves such honors for the grand pipe organs found in churches.

Hollywood had premiered the first “talkie” the year before the Capitol Theater opened, but it took a while for sound films to catch on, and the Barton got a lot of use in the early years of the Capitol Theater. As sound films became popular, the organ was used for sing-alongs and pre-feature entertainment, but as film showings lost their pageantry, this role diminished.

The gold and red horseshoe-shaped console is the most visible part of the instrument, but the organ’s sound comes from 1,034 pipes hidden in chambers on either side of the stage. The large

illuminated console and its 141 stop keys and three manuals is usually located at house right. At one time, it was on its own elevator in the orchestra pit. It was moved to make space for the many large-scale productions staged in the theater. A seven and one half horsepower blower in the basement of the theater powers the organ and the massive electrical switching system is sealed in a special room high in the building. This electrical relay is so large that it was put in place before the theater was finished in 1928 and could only be removed with considerable demolition of the building.

The smallest pipes, which produce the high notes, are the size of a soda straw, and the largest are 16 feet tall and 18 inches in diameter. The pipes that produce the deepest notes are eight feet high and about 24 inches square, made of thick, knotless pine slabs. Like any wind instrument, the sound comes from air passing through the pipes, but the wind is supplied by a seven-horsepower air pump, rather than a musician’s breath. The pipes are divided into fourteen ranks, or sets, that mimic the instruments of an orchestra.

In addition, a “toy counter” offers special sounds like a chirping bird, auto horn, sleigh bells and percussive effects.

An important part of keeping the organ in top condition is regular use. Overture Center continues to use the organ as part of the center’s Duck Soup Cinema series.

to create a massive cult following and elevating him to the status of a living legend. Combined with a beautiful voice and a powerful stage presence, Ekman was able to captivate his audiences. (from IMDB)

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4 Overture Center | Faust

DENNIS JAMES

For well over 25 years, Dennis James has played a pivotal role in the international revival of silent films with live music. Beginning as a pianist for campus screenings at Indiana University during the late 1960s, James now tours worldwide under the auspices of his own Silent Film Concerts production company presenting feature silent film programs with solo theatre organ, chamber ensemble and full symphony orchestra accompaniments. Performing silent films regularly with symphony orchestras throughout the United States and Canada since 1978, James offers the most comprehensive repertoire in the field. James is a featured soloist on the international film festival circuit, including regular appearances for the San Francisco, Toronto, Washington D.C. and Philadelphia as well as the annual Pordenone and Rome (Italy) Festivals Cinema Muto. He performs frequently at the Walker Film Center in Minneapolis, the Cleveland Cinematheque and for the Chicago Art Institute’s film series and at the Louvre Museum in Paris, the Palazzo Delle Espisozioni in Rome, and the National Film Theatre in London. He regularly performs under the auspices of the American Film Institute, the Museum of Modern Art, the Pacific Film Archive, the George Eastman House, the American Federation of the Arts,

and for the U.C.L.A. Film and Television Archive and the British Film Institute. His silent film presentations have been seen throughout Australia, New Zealand, France, Germany, The Netherlands, Italy and England. Dennis James is also dedicated to furthering public interest in the pipe organ and to the continuation of the theatrical traditions of organ performance. His has served as house organist for the Lansdowne and Brookline Theatres in Philadelphia and later at the Paramount and Rivoli Theatres in Indiana. From 1975 to 1989 James was the final appointed house organist for the restored Ohio Theatre in Columbus. Since 1991 he appears frequently at the Stanford Theatre in Palo Alto, California, between his international touring engagements.

In a career made up of diverse engagements, he has performed with such popular film personalities as Vincent Price, Ray Bolger, Bob Hope, Red Skelton, Myrna Loy, Olivia De Havilland, Ginger Rogers and Fay Wray. He was selected by composer/conductor Carmine Coppola as the organist for the ongoing world tour presentations of Napoleon, the 1927 epic silent film by Abel Gance. He has also toured extensively with silent film stars Charles “Buddy” Rogers and the late Lillian Gish and providing musical accompaniment at national revivals of their motion pictures.

Connect with Overture on Facebook and Twitter.

overturecenter.com

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Duck Soup CinemaHarold Lloyd’s Girl Shy, 1924Harold Meadows is a shy, stuttering bachelor working in a tailor shop. Despite his bashfulness, he takes it upon himself to write a guidebook for other bashful young men, “The Secret of Making Love,” chapters from which are portrayed as fantasy sequences

SAT, APR 13, 2 & 7 pm$7 Adults, Kids 12 & under $3

Capitol TheaterOrganist: Clark Wilson

Sponsored by

overTureCenTer.Com 608.258.4141

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Are you a silent film aficionado? Does the sound of the Capitol Theater’s Barton Organ signal the beginning of a fabulous evening of Duck Soup Cinema for you? Then join Overture’s Duck Soup Cinema Club, and help keep this community program healthy and affordable for all!

Learn about the benefits of membership and make your donation online at overturecenter.com/contribute. You’ll have even more fun with Duck Soup and take pride knowing that your generosity is part of how it all happens.

2012/13 Duck Soup Club Member ListCurrent as of December 10, 2012

DON’T STAY SILENTABOUT YOUR

OFLOVE

SILENTFILMS

Anonymous (2)Celeste AntonCindy BallardDaniel BeckerDawn BerneyRhonda BohnhoffJulie D’AngeloRobert N. DoornekRabbi Irvin & Vivian EhrlichTheodore FinnWayne GlowacThomas GregoryBob & Beverly HaimerlTerry HallerReta Harring

John & Nancy HilliardBill & Marcia HolmanAndrew HunnRita JacksonRichard JudyLarry KneelandPricilla LaufenbergRudy LienauMike & June McCowanRobert A. & Susan MillerRobert Miller & Pam HoffmanJanet MonkStanford & Bev NinedorfLynn & Sally PhelpsEvan & Jane Pizer

M. Diane PollockIn Memory of C. Fred PollockAmi Orlin RodlandJenny Rowland & John SearsDon & Barb SanfordDiane & David SilbaughJoe & Jeanne SilverbergTanner SpaudeBrenda SpychallaRobert & Marsha SteffenEllen TwingJames WelschAlan WestEileen Zeiger

CALL 608.258.4442 or VISIT overturecenter.com/contribute

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For just these few weeks, your $20 donation becomes $40,your $50 becomes $100, your $100 becomes $200. Three generous Local Legends — the Kelly Family Foundation, Dianne Christensen and the MG&E Foundation —have offered to match every dollar we raise from committed supporters like you between now and April 30, up to $300,000!

Every dollar you give now will be doubled.

CALL 608.258.4442 | MAIL 201 State Street, Madison, WI 53703 | VISIT overturecenter.com/contribute

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8 Overture Center | Faust 1xx | Overture Center

ORDERING & INFORMATIONOrder online! overturecenter.com Phone orders: Call 608.258.4141 Mail or fax: online order form at overturecenter.com or in our magazine.Buy in person: Visit the ticket offi ce located on the main fl oor just off the Rotunda Lobby. Ticket offi ce hours: Mon–Fri, 11 AM–5:30 PM; Sat, 11 AM–2 PM; open additional hours evenings and Sundays on days of ticketed performances.Group orders: Groups of 15 or more receive a discount on most performances. Call 608.258.4159 to make reservations.Visit overturecenter.com: For a calendar of events, links to artists’ websites, video, audio, directions, parking and much more.

PATRON SERVICES & POLICIESAccessibility: Request accommodations when ordering your tickets. Call 608.258.4144 for information, questions, or to request the following:■ wheelchair-accessible seating■ house wheelchair for transport■ sign language interpretation■ Braille playbill■ other accommodationsInformation is also available at overturecenter.com/tickets/accessibility

Children and lap seating: Every person, regardless of age, must have a ticket to enter the theaters for performances. Children under the age of 6 are not permitted at certain performances. See our season brochure, visit our website or call the Help Line at 608.258.4143 for information.

Event Staff Stagehand services in Overture are provided by members of Local 251 of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees.Usher and other services for Overture are provided by Overture volunteers. For information, visit overturecenter.com/contribute/volunteer or call 608.258.4177.

Lost and Found: Visit the information desk in the Rotunda Lobby or call 608.258.4973.

Rentals: For information on renting spaces in Overture Center for weddings, performances, meetings or other events, call 608.258.4163 or email [email protected].

EtiquettePlease turn off all paging devices, cell phones and watch alarms.Smoking is prohibited in Overture.The use of cameras or tape recorders in the theaters is prohibited without written permission from Overture Center and the performing company’s management. Food, large bags and other large items are not permitted in the theaters. Bottled water and beverages in Overture Refi llable Theater Cups are allowed in the theaters at select shows.In consideration of audience members with scent sensitivities and allergies, please use perfumes, aftershaves and other fragrances in moderation.

RESIDENT ORGANIZATIONSBach Dancing & Dynamite Societybachdancinganddynamite.org | 608.255.9866Children’s Theater of Madisonctmtheater.org | 608.255.2080Forward Theater Companyforwardtheater.com | 608.234.5001Kanopy Dance Companykanopydance.org | 608.255.2211Li Chiao-Ping Dancelichiaopingdance.org | 608.835.6590Madison Balletmadisonballet.org | 608.278.7990Madison Operamadisonopera.org |608.238.8085Madison Symphony Orchestramadisonsymphony.org | 608.257.3734Wisconsin Academy’s James Watrous Gallerywisconsinacademy.org | 608.265.2500Wisconsin Chamber Orchestrawcoconcerts.org | 608.257.0638

PATRON SERVICES AND INFORMATION

Welcome to Overture Center for the Arts Your enjoyment is important to us. Please contact an usher or the ticket offi ce if you have any concerns about your experience here.