Conductor Bob Bernhardt is pretty sure there wonβt be many in the Tucson Symphony Orchestra audience this weekend who have seen the 1967 Swedish film βElvira Madigan.β
βHave you seen it? Neither have I,β he said with a chuckle during a phone call from Tennessee to talk about this weekendβs βLights! Camera! Pops!β concerts he will lead to open the TSOβs SuperPops series. βEverybody knows (Mozartβs) 21st Concerto, but I think maybe five people in the audience will have seen the movie.β
The 21st Concerto, in fact, has often been nicknamed the βElvira Madiganβ because of its association to the 51-year-old movie β even though Mozart composed it centuries earlier, in 1785.
In fact, many, if not most, of the movies represented on Bernhardtβs program will be head-scratchers β βCaptain Blood,β for example, didnβt exactly win any awards when it was released in 1935 and no one has rushed to remake it in the 80-plus years since, βBut almost everyone will know this music from their melodies,β said Bernhardt, who makes his first TSO appearance in several years.
Bernhardt, who led the TSO for nine seasons in the late 1980s to mid β90s and returned every year over the 20 that followed, programmed βLightsβ with the idea of βfilm music that became classic and classical music used in films.β
The program traverses film history from Erich Wolfgang Korngoldβs overture to βCaptain Bloodβ to Max Steinerβs βTaraβs Themeβ from βGone With the Windβ and John Williamsβ βThe Force Awakensβ Suite from the 2015 installment of the βStar Warsβ franchise. Bernhardt also mixed in some βStar Trekβ (Michael Giacchinoβs βInto Darknessβ and more βStar Warsβ themes including βJyn Erso and Hope Suiteβ from 2016βs βRogue One: A Star Wars Storyβ).
The conductor, who has made Tennessee his home for years, hopes we find ourselves remembering where we were and how we felt when we first saw the movies and heard the music.
βThe idea is to be able to talk about how this music can lead us to the moments we sat in the theatre and saw the films,β he said. βThereβs a visceral connection between the music and the visual.β
Bernhardt experiences a similar visceral reaction whenever he comes to Tucson.
βThereβs a certain sense of coming home when I come to Tucson. There are still members of the orchestra who were there when I was with the orchestra,β he said. βIt brings back a lot of wonderful memories.β
βEvery time Iβm there Iβm reminded a lot of how much I loved living there. That right there is a beautiful thing,β he added. βIβve gone back at least 20 times since I was music director and every time itβs been welcoming and happy.β