Martha
Argerich, evening talks
|
Press
reviews & Critics of the film
|
- A film by
Georges Gachot
|
DVD
Release
- Official
Nominations of MIDEM Classical Awards
2009
- Brazil
- "Martha
Argerich, Conversa noturna" lançado no Brasil para
Biscoito Fino
- O
Globo, 27 novembre 2008
por
Eduardo Fradkin
No
camarin com Martha
Argerich /
pdf-->
- Folha
de Sao Paulo, 5.11.2008
"Filme
expoe encantos de Martha Argerich"
- Veja,
5.11.2008
"recomenda"
- O
Globo, 31.10.2008
"Martha,
my dear"
|
-
|
- Le
Temps, 7.09.2008
- Compliqué
parce que toujours paradoxale, mais simple parce que
totalement sincère et généreuse,
telle apparaît la grande pianiste, dans ce film ou
Georges Gachot a su la saisir au débotté.
Elle ne finit pas toutes ses phrases, mais ce qu'elle
à a dire touche au coeur, parce que la
crinière de la tigresse cache tant de
fragilité. Et l'humour n'est jamais absent, par
exemple quand elle se rappelle ses premiers succès
et ses première foucades. Les documents
d'archives, les extraits de répétitions et
de concerts, qui ne sont pas les plus connus, renforcent
encore l'intérêt de ce DVD, à juste
titre couvert de prix. P.M.
- pdf--->
|
|
Le
Monde de la Musique, Septembre 2008
- pdf--->
-
|
- Classica,
Septembre 2008
- Ces
"conversations nocturnes "vont au coeur du sujet avec
patience et pudeur. Un magnifique portrait servi par une
image et un son remarquables. S.F
- pdf--->
|
|
- Neue
Zürcher Zeitung, 15.08.2008
- Peter
Hagmann
- Martha
Argerichs Geheimnisse
- Zwanzig
Jahre lang hat Georges Gachot gefragt und gebeten, dann
endlich gab Martha Argerich ihre Zustimmung.
«Nachtgespräche» nennt der
französisch-schweizerische Filmregisseur das 2002
fertiggestellte Porträt, in dem die argentinische
Pianistin am Klavier und im Gespräch die Hauptrolle
spielt. Bewegend genug die Bilder aus frühen Jahren:
Martha Argerich als artiges Mädchen zu Hause am
Klavier, als (einzige) Schülerin von Friedrich
Gulda, als Preisträgerin des Warschauer
Chopin-Wettbewerbs, als junge Solistin mit Dirigenten wie
Erich Leinsdorf oder später Charles Dutoit. Eine
Tigerin an den Tasten, aber im Grunde genommen ein sehr
scheuer Mensch - so wirkt sie auch in den geschickt
zwischen die Filmdokumente eingelegten
Gesprächsteilen. Sie scheint Vertrauen gefasst zu
haben zu dem Filmer, der sie diskret begleitete,
jedenfalls spricht sie munter und lebendig - und doch
gibt sie wenig preis von sich.
- Immerhin,
sie berichtet von der inneren Verbindung mit den
Komponisten, deren Musik sie spielt, auch von der Angst,
allein auf dem Podium zu sitzen, und dem Absagen. Sehr
berührend, diese anderthalb Stunden, die jetzt auf
DVD verfügbar sind.
- pdf--->
-
|
- Naxos
Blog, July 17th. 2008
- By
Paula
- Martha
Argerich, Forever
- Generally,
I would never advocate posting press releases as blog
entries. In this case, however, I will make an exception.
The July 29 release of Martha Argerich: Evening Talks was
reason for great personal celebration for me. Yes, I've
loved her playing for decades. And I just spent the
better part of an hour trying to dig up an old Playbill
from her last solo recital at Carnegie Hall. Much to my
horror, it, along with my Horowitz programs, has gone
missing. I do, however, have a whole bunch of eminently
forgettable Metropolitan Opera programs from the early
1980s through the early 2000s. Don't ask.
-
- I've
told the following story many times about Argerich's
recital. I remember expecting a formal affair, where the
pianist would strut onstage in a suitably beautiful gown,
bow gracefully, and then treat us to her great artistry.
I got the last bit, which of course is all that mattered
in the end. If memory serves, Argerich almost waddled
onto the stage in a black leotard, long black stretchy
skirt, and those hideous Mao shoes that were once
"fashionable" (God knows why). She didn't quite bow, but
I do remember her head seemed to slope downward. But for
anyone who has ever heard the great Ms. Argerich play, it
made absolutely no difference. Of course she brought the
house down
and seemed almost surprised by her
feat. It was as if she thought that what she was doing
was very simple: she was merely speaking for the
composers, pure and simple. They, in fact, were the Gods
and she was just the messenger.
-
- Below
is my love letter to the film and to Ms.
Argerich:
- "First
of all, there was this interview-which is not an
interview at all, as I do not believe I asked her a
single question. Let us, rather, call it a conversation
that took place at dead of night, without a spotlight or
makeup- a single 'night-time conversation' recorded as if
by miracle on the magnetic tape of a comer that would
then become the very heart of this film." -Georges
Gachot
-
- It
took the French film director Georges Gachot 20 years to
convince the very private and elusive Martha Argerich to
agree to appear on camera for this intimate portrait. The
resulting film, Martha Argerich: Evening Talks (Medici
Arts 3073428), pays tribute to this great pianist's
40-year career with a blend of informal conversations and
superb performance footage. It also contains rare
archival material from across the globe, including
footage from her 1957 First Prize win at the Geneva
Competition when she was just 16.
-
- The
film allows Argerich to express her feelings about music,
composers, and musicians and to discuss her background
and early career and how they shaped her as an artist.
Argerich reminisces about her early studies with Austrian
pianist Frederich Gulda, whom she credits with
"[teaching] her how to listen." She also recounts
her yearlong stint with Michelangeli, during which time
she received only four lessons. Moreover, she recalls the
crisis she experienced in her early 20s, which spurred
fellow Argentinean pianist (and conductor) Daniel
Barenboim to once say, "Martha, you are like a very
beautiful painting without the frame." It becomes clear
that her abandonment of solo performance so early in her
career grew partly out of the intense loneliness she felt
during this period.
-
- However,
through her commitment to concerto and chamber music
repertoire, Martha Argerich developed into a deeply
generous artist, never satisfied with herself and always
looking for new meanings and approaches to her
repertoire. "I find something new all the time," she
explains. "I hope I always will; I always doubt and I'm
always groping." She finds her deepest satisfaction in
communicating with other musicians and communing with
composers, whose music is inarguably part of her DNA.
Gulda once told her "It's not your fault that Schumann
was not Argentinean." As she plays Schumann's Piano
Concerto in A minor (effortlessly, it would seem), the
listener notes that the music appears to be a natural
extension of her being. "I hope I'm not bad for him,"
Argerich remarks. "Schumann is very intimate for me, but
I hope he likes me." It is not surprising to hear this
unique artist make such a humble comment about her work.
Argerich appears utterly possessed by the composer's
essence each time she performs his music.
-
- In a
2001 article about Martha Argerich for The New Yorker,
critic Alex Ross wrote "Argerich brings to bear qualities
that are seldom contained in one person: she is a pianist
of brainteasing technical agility; she is a charismatic
woman with an enigmatic reputation; she is an unaffected
interpreter whose native language is music. This last may
be the quality that sets her apart. A lot of pianists
play huge double octaves; a lot of pianists photograph
well. But few have the unerring naturalness of phrasing
that allows them to embody the music rather than
interpret it." One listen to the Scarlatti encore from
her performance in Zurich and the viewer will know
exactly what Ross means.
- Online--->
-
|
- The
Toronto Star, Aug 05, 2008
- By
John Terauds
- DVD
Review
- "He's
been very good to me; he's never played any tricks on
me."
-
- Pianist
Martha Argerich is talking about composer Sergei
Prokofiev. For her, the personal is musical and the
musical is personal. That
is the core message in this hour-long 2002 documentary by
Georges Cachot.
-
- Buenos
Aires native Argerich, now 67, rose to the top rank of
pianists after winning two big competitions in 1957. But
her long, still intensely active career has been marked
in seeming equal proportion with public triumphs and
private doubts. In
the documentary, she describes how pianist-conductor
Daniel Barenboim described her as a "beautiful painting
without a frame." Gachot
does the best he can to put this intensely shy artist
with a huge personality into focus, using a stream of
rehearsal and concert footage as the narrative
flesh.
-
- The
English title of the documentary is misleading, as the
rambling interview that is this film's spine was done in
one take, late one night in 2001 during a
post-post-performance gathering of Argerich
intimates. This
headstrong, self-assured artist is still the innocent,
bewildered 16-year-old who stunned Europe more than half
a century ago. In the absence of personal detail, her
music speaks louder than any words.
-
- There
are 30 minutes of concert extras. What a
treat.
- online--->
-
|
- New
York Times, 3 August, 2008
- By
VIVIEN SCHWEITZER
- A
Film on the Reclusive Pianist Martha Argerich, Now on DVD
...
- Once-Shy
Pianist Tells, Um, Not Quite All
-
- WHEN
the reclusive Argentine pianist Martha Argerich performs,
her long, thick hair cascades over her shoulders, often
entirely obscuring her face from the audience and
affording a glimmer of privacy even onstage.
-
- A
scene from the documentary "Martha Argerich: Evening
Talks," which offers close-up interviews with this
Argentine pianist and archival footage.
-
- Ms.
Argerich, who for almost two decades gave very few solo
recitals, has always felt uneasy in the spotlight
offstage as well. "I just saw a program called 'Big
Brother,' " she says at the beginning of "Martha
Argerich: Evening Talks," a 2002 film by Georges Gachot
newly released on DVD by the Medici Arts label. "All
those exhibitionists who like their private lives filmed.
Not me."
-
- But
Ms. Argerich, a brilliant musician whose playing combines
prodigious technique with uncanny musicality, overcame
her shyness and granted Mr. Gachot a three-hour
interview. It was shot one evening in 2001 between a
rehearsal and a performance of Schumann's Piano Concerto
with the Württemberg Chamber Orchestra in Heilbronn,
Germany.
-
- According
to the DVD booklet Mr. Gachot had been trying to obtain
such an interview for more than 20 years. "Evening
Talks," in which Ms. Argerich, 67, chats candidly in
French and English, is billed as the first film about
her. Intimate, close-up interview shots are interspersed
with archival footage, from her teenage victory at the
Geneva International Music Competition in 1957 to solo,
chamber and concerto appearances as recent as
2001.
-
- Ms.
Argerich recalls her first musical epiphany. She was 6,
at a concert with her mother, listening to Claudio Arrau
play Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 4. The trills in the
second movement gave her goose bumps. "I was dozing off,
and suddenly," she says with a sharp intake of breath,
experienced "an electric shock." Ms. Argerich refuses to
play the concerto, she says, because "I'm afraid what
would happen, it's so important to me."
-
- At 9,
before performing a Mozart concerto, she knelt down and
thought, "If I hit one wrong note, I'll die." That sense
of perfection stayed with her.
-
- "I
always doubt," she says. "I'm always groping. If you're
too pleased with what you've done, or you get into a
routine, that's the worst. Sometimes I go out on a limb,
so it doesn't happen."
-
- Ms.
Argerich candidly recalls the crisis of loneliness she
experienced in her midteens after winning both the Geneva
competition and the Ferruccio Busoni International Piano
Competition in Bolzano, Italy. "I was terribly shy," she
says. "It was dismal. I was in quite a state. Then when I
was 19 or 20, I went through a crisis." She spent a few
years in New York watching late-night
television.
-
- Ms.
Argerich, whose last-minute cancellations have
disappointed fans, describes her first cancellation, at
17 in Florence. She was not unwell, she says, but thought
she "didn't want to play." So she sent a telegram to the
concert organizers saying she had hurt her finger. She
then took a knife and cut her finger, so "it would be
true." The wound was so bad it also prevented her from
playing a concert the next week.
-
- Like
other legendary performers, including the cellist Pablo
Casals and the pianist Vladimir Horowitz, Ms. Argerich
has suffered from stage fright. "Sometimes I was in
terrible panics," she says ruefully. "I'd imagine the
worst things, imagine a full hall. It's terrible." Her
knees would tremble so forcibly, she says, that her feet
would inadvertently bang on the floor, and she suffered
chills and runny noses.
-
- When
she was young, Ms. Argerich's nearsightedness was also
problematic. She didn't have contact lenses at the time
and didn't want to wear glasses onstage. So the piano
looked "like crocodile's teeth," she says, and the bright
lights made her feel "like an insect." The film doesn't
touch on other aspects of her personal life, like her
marriages to the conductor Charles Dutoit and the pianist
Stephen Kovacevich, her three daughters or her recurring
bouts with cancer, which began in the 1990s.
-
- The
film offers footage of Ms. Argerich, who often laughs
during the interview, performing the composers she
discusses. During a rehearsal of Schumann's Piano
Concerto she vociferously argues in German with Jörg
Faerber, the conductor, dismissing his
suggestions.
-
- "I
prefer not to fool with Schumann," she says. "But I think
he likes me." She describes performing Liszt and Chopin
in the same recital: "The Liszt Sonata would be fine but
not the Chopin Preludes. So I'd say, 'He's a little
jealous.' " As for Prokofiev, she says with a laugh:
"He's very fond of me. He's never played any dirty tricks
on me." A night owl, Ms. Argerich claims that she learned
Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 3 by osmosis, while
sleeping during the day in the same room where her
roommate practiced.
-
- Daniel
Barenboim once told Ms. Argerich she was "like a
beautiful painting without a frame." This film offers
fans an insightful, unguarded portrait.
- online--->
- Pdf--->
-
|
- Estadao
de Sao Paulo, 17 Junho, 2008
- Luiz
Carlos Merten
- A
música, abrindo a mostra
suíça
- Martha
Argerich, Conversa Norturna inaugura, no Centro Cultural
São Paulo, a programação Pastores,
Amantes e Sonhos
- Luiz
Carlos Merten O Estadao de S.Paulo
- No ano
passado, Georges Gachot esteve no Peru acompanhando a
exibição de Martha Argerich, Conversa
Noturna no evento Pastores, Amantes e Sonhos. A mostra,
apoiada por representações
diplomáticas da Suíça na
América Latina, visa a divulgar um aspecto menos
conhecido da cultura do país. A
Suíça é renomada pelos chocolates,
queijos e relógios que produz, mas seu cinema -
caracterizado pela multiplicidade étnica e
cultural - circula pouco, mesmo em grandes eventos
internacionais de audiovisual. Gachot esteve em Lima e
Puno. Como ele conta, ''a música clássica
não é o forte das platéias peruanas,
mas o público reagiu, apaixonado. Foi
emocionante.''
- Foram
necessários dez anos para que Gachot conseguisse
filmar Martha Argerich (leia ao lado). Logo
- depois
ele descobriu o Brasil, fez um documentário sobre
Maria Bethânia (Música É Perfume) e
trabalha agora em outro sobre Nana Caymmi (ainda sem
título). Como diz o próprio Gachot, seus
documentários sobre música, ou
músicos, possuem um recorte particular. Logo na
abertura de Conversa Noturna, Martha Argerich diz que viu
na TV um programa, Big Brother, no qual as pessoas se
expõem. Não é o caso dela, e Martha
até pede a Gachot que desligue sua câmera. A
tela fica escura,por alguns segundos.
- Adentrar,
com consentimento, na vida de alguém que preserva
sua privacidade é algo complicado, mas Gachot
conseguiu, como você poderá confirmar
assistindo a seu filme que abre hoje a mostra Pastores,
Amantes e Sonhos. Até dia 22, no Centro Cultural
São Paulo, serão exibidos 13 longas e 12
curtas que mapeiam a produção
suíça dos anos 2000/2005. O encontro de
Gachot com a lenda do piano argentino tem um interesse
especial no País porque Martha, afinal, é
parceira de outro ícone, Nelson Freire, em
concertos memoráveis. Só que a mostra
reserva muito mais para o prazer dos olhos e ouvidos dos
espectadores. A força do novo cinema
suíço, surgido nos anos 60, está nos
documentários e filmes de autor. A mostra fala de
sentimentos, de raízes e sonhos. Veladamente,
coloca a política em discussão. O
Gênio Helvético, de Jean Stéphane
Bron, expõe como funciona o Parlamento
suíço; Em Direção ao Terceiro
Milênio, de Eric Langjahr, documenta pastores
divididos entre a tradição e a modernidade;
Todo Um Inverno Sem Fogo, de Greg Zglinski, trata do
drama de um casal cuja filha morreu num incêndio;
Rumo ao Sul, de Vincent Pluss, é sobre religioso
divorciado que tenta reatar com a ex-mulher; Utopia
Blues, de Stepan Haupt, conta a história de
músico jovem confrontado com as amargas
lições que a vida proporciona; Vento do
Norte, de Bettina Oberli, mostra homem que oculta da
família sua demissão da empresa em que
trabalhou por 20 anos. Na sexta-feira começa outra
mostra, de inéditos do cinema francês. Os
cinéfilos precisarão
desdobrar-se.
- --->
pdf
-
- Gachot
revela musicalidade dos artistas que
ama
- Georges
Gachot encontrou-se com Martha Argerich em Munique, em
1992. Seduzido pela grande pianista argentina, tentou
convencê-la a participar de um filme sobre Liszt,
cuja sonata em si menor é uma das peças que
ela gosta de tocar. Martha vive cercada de um grupo que
não facilita o acesso de ninguém. A grande
pianista detesta câmeras, não dá
entrevistas, não gosta de se expor.
- Com
muita dedicação e tato, Gachot venceu sua
resistência e fez Martha Argerich, Conversation
Nocturne, entre 2000 e 2002.
- Há
um momento decisivo. Martha recupera o tempo perdido.
Quando tinha 6 anos, a mãe levou-a para ouvir o
grande Arrau no 4o Concerto de Beethoven. A menina Martha
ficou tão marcada que guardou aquele momento
mágico para toda a vida. Inclusive, ela nunca
tocou aquele concerto. ''Contei-lhe que eu também
conheci minha mulher durante uma audição do
2o Concerto de Beethoven. Isso criou uma cumplicidade
entre nós'', diz o diretor. Cumplicidade é
bem a palavra. Gachot dedica-se ao que é
difícil, mas que ele prova não ser
impossível. Busca decifrar a musicalidade de
artistas que o seduzem. Usa o cinema como um espelho para
revelar a sensibilidade à flor da pele desses
bichos raros que são os grandes
artistas.
- São
filmes difíceis de editar. Ele demora meses,
até anos. Evita filmar o público porque
acha desinteressante e, pior, fácil de manipular.
''Teria de mostrar exatamente o momento em que o artista
provocou a reação do espectador,
estabelecer um elo entre ambos, caso contrário
é falso.'' O filme sobre Martha é sobre a
música e ela, sobre a música nela. Nada de
revelações, de tititis nem de depoimentos
sobre a artista. Martha basta-se por si só. Quando
quis fazer o filme sobre Maria Bethânia, ele lhe
enviou o filme sobre Martha. Ela gostou. Bethânia,
de quem ele documentou o espetáculo Brasileirinho
- para Música É Perfume -, abriu-lhe as
portas para Nana Caymmi. ''Mas quem é essa
mulher?'', perguntou-se Gachot, quando Nana cantou
João Valentão, no show. Ele trabalha num
projeto sobre Nana Caymmi, atualmente parado (desde
janeiro) porque Nana não tem cabeça para
música, por causa do doença do pai, o
grande Dorival. Gachot também trabalha na
edição da trilha, à qual acrescenta
ruídos, de Música É Perfume. O CD
será distribuído no Brasil pela Biscoito
Fino, que também lançará, em DVD,
Martha Argerich, Conversa Noturna.
- --->pdf
|
|
- LIBERATION,
Paris, 29 mai 2004
- La
magie Martha Argerich
- ARTE,
samedi 29 mai 2004. «Musica : Martha Argerich»,
documentaire de Georges Gachot.
-
- L'art
de la conversation. Comment dire beaucoup sans
préméditation et en peu de mots,
voilà à quoi se prête la
légendaire pianiste Martha Argerich à
l'occasion de sa première apparition à
l'écran.
-
- Interrogée
à questions feutrées par un interlocuteur
invisible, elle dissipe une timidité qu'elle
prétend de toujours (est-ce la raison de ce rideau
de cheveux qui ne l'a jamais quittée ?) pour
s'évoquer avec un émerveillement
rétrospectif : l'enfance argentine, l'initiation
auprès de Gould, les compositeurs qui
«l'aiment bien», croit-elle (sourire de
gamine), Schumann surtout, la peur panique du public
(«les touches comme les dents d'un crocodile, on se
sent comme un insecte»), l'expérience comme
vérité et mensonge... Son phrasé qui
se suspend à la fin des phrases, marque un silence
puis lâche un mot conclusif, où se concentre
l'émotion, fait penser à Duras.
Maniérisme qui ne résiste pas longtemps
à une fraîcheur confondante. Ce portrait la
révèle dans ce qui fait l'essentiel d'une
grande artiste : l'acquisition de la maîtrise doit
s'accompagner de son inverse, («le pire, s'imiter
soi-même»). Répétitions,
archives, concerts, les mains de Martha Argerich sont
extraordinaires (avant la télé, voyait-on
les mains des pianistes ?), de vélocité,
d'humour, de générosité, deux faunes
étourdissants qui suspendent le temps ; avec leur
reflet sur le piano, ça en fait quatre qui dansent
et créent l'image animée parfaite, dont on
pourrait ne jamais se lasser.
-
- Isabelle
POTEL © samedi 29 mai 2004
|
- LA
NACION, Buenos Aires, 18 September, 2003
- Encounter
With Martha Argerich
- Review:
Very Good
- "Martha
Argerich, Evening Conversations" (Martha Argerich,
conversation nocturne Franco-Swiss & German
Production / 2002, in color). Director: Georges Gachot.
With Martha Argerich. Photography: Matthias Kàlin
and Milivoj Ivkovic. Edition : Ruth Schläpfer.
Presented by Cine Ojo. Duration: 72 minutes. Rating:
U
-
- For
those who love music and admire Martha Argerich, this
documentary will prove to be a passionate experience. A
close-up meeting with this exceptional artist and an
approximation to her thoughts and her personal feelings,
an opportunity to take a peek at her during rehearsals
and to be present during fragments of her performances -
the latest ones or those which gave her the early
triumphs - and above all, of being a witness to a
pleasant, spontaneous conversation, without ceremonies
nor formalities, in which Martha blots out her legendary
image of a mysterious, evasive and inaccessible
character, with simple pure charm and open
friendliness.
- The
great merit of Georges Gachot, the Swiss film maker who
specializes in the making of films on classical music,
lies in having overcome all resistance from this renowned
artist and to have generated a trustworthy environment
for her to accept, for the very first time, to face a
camera in a conversation, as well as having focused all
excluding attention on his main character.
- The
film's importance lies in listening to and seeing Martha
Argerich, not in the film's formal resources; the camera
is the bridge between her and the audience, the camera is
the discreet witness which becomes imperceptible and is
therefore doubly admirable, the camera which knows how to
discover her expressive face or her hand gestures, in the
inflexions of her voice or in an almost insinuated smile,
in her thoughtful gaze or in her open laughter, all that
which completes her spoken words, so often left
unfinished ...
- It is
true that the documentary took almost two years of hard
work, but it is almost heroic to have managed to extract
from one three-hour conversation (held two years ago in
between a rehearsal and a concert in Heilbronn) so
substantial an amount of material for it to become the
central axis of the film.
- "It
was truly a magic moment", remembered the director, with
no fears of the space in common and no exaggerations, as
can be judged from the results. Nor is it less
praiseworthy to note the way in which Gachot threaded
each portion of the interview with the musical film
fragments or with the shots of Argentina (our country),
integrating them into the finished product with
extraordinary fluidity and with never decaying interest,
including for those amongst the audience who are not so
familiar with this great artist.
-
- The
Strength of Charisma
- With
her generosity, her sensitivity, her intelligence, her
down to earth manner and her sense of humor, Argerich
becomes an almost hypnotic character for those watching.
Even though there are questions, it is she who leads the
conversation, which revolves around music, but from which
can be inferred a concept of art and life. It travels
through childhood memories - the decisive impact she
suffered at age 6 on hearing Beethoven's Fourth Piano
Concerto played by Claudio Arrau at the Teatro Colˆ„n;
the defining early years of childhood; her most
influential teacher, Friedrich Gulda; - towards confiding
thoughts: her fears and insecurities, the hard experience
of solitude, the remembrance of her first transgression,
when she cancelled a concert in Italy with the excuse
that she had hurt her finger. She talks about work - "one
has to prepare oneself 150% to be able to give 60%; of
the constant need to find new ways to approach the same
works; of her "personalÄù ties with
composers; of the works with which she feels at home; of
the subliminal way in which she learnt Prokofiev's Third
Concerto; she talks about humor in music, about Ravel,
about Schumann... Her attitude is reserved, her sincerity
is overwhelming.
- Martha's
enthusiasm is generously catching and she seduces with
fresh warmth and friendliness, unaffected, not only
during the conversation - registered with only one
digital video camera and almost invariably in close-ups -
but also in some of the rehearsals, of which the audience
is a privileged witness.
-
- Performances
- There
are abundant fragments of her performances - a variety
ranging from her teenage years and which includes works
by Dvorak, Beethoven, Lutoslawsky, Piazzolla, Saint
Saëns, Chopin, Bach, Ravel or Prokofiev, to a
prolonged section dedicated to Schumann: needless to say
that there are more than enough moments of moving beauty.
The film only merits a minor objection and a very unusual
one at that: the 72 minutes of screening go by far too
quickly.
-
- By
Fernando Lopez © LA NACION 2003
|
- LA
NACION - Buenos Aires - Sunday, 20 April,
2003
- Martha
Argerich, intimate (in private)
- Frenchman
Georges Gachot and the accomplishment of the impossible
interview
-
- "I
have been working for 20 years to get a 'yes' ", the
French film maker, Georges Gachot, tells us smiling and
with a certain air of distraction, feeling as happy as he
was comforted by the Argentine audience's response to the
presentation of his documentary: "Martha Argerich,
evening conversation" during the Buenos Aires Independent
Film Festival, where tonight, at 11:00 pm, this film can
be seen for the last time at Hoyts Cinema 8, located in
the Abasto Shopping Mall.
-
- The
night before last, very few spectators left their seats
as soon as the screening to a full house, came to
an end. The remainder accepted Gachot's proposal - he
works and lives in Zürich, Switzerland - for an open
dialogue on the film, whose argentine connotations,
according to what the director discovered, went far
beyond the fact that the leading role was played by
someone of the same origin.
-
- What
everyone wanted to know - and LA NACION also, who soon
afterwards spoke to Gachot privately - was how such an
elusive star, evasive and unpredictable, had finally
accepted to do what until then had never done: speak
straight forwardly and willingly to a camera about her
life and her extraordinary musical prowess. "It was a
miracle", says Gachot simply and with the enthusiasm of
talking about something which under any light is out of
the ordinary. "Now that I am here - he adds - I can also
say that it is not only a film about Martha Argerich. I
realized during these past days that the film is also
about Argentina, because both seem to be almost the same
thing".
-
- A good
portion of the 62 minutes of film - shot on digital video
- takes place in the association of images of our country
with the memories and the career of this great
pianist. There are shots of the streets of Buenos
Aires (porteño=belonging to Buenos Aires), the
Teatro Colón, the vibrant take of a herd of horses
in the Pampas and of the beaches of Mar del Plata, all of
them a symbol of Argerich's temperament and professional
career. There was also a suprising display of rare
archival material gathered from different parts fo the
world, ranging from the time when a very young Argerich
receives the First Prize of the Piano Competition in
Geneva, which opened up her career, until her last
concert to date at the Colón, together with Nelson
Freire.
-
- In the
midst of the above lies the most important: fragments
from a three hour long conversation between Gachot and
Argerich, filmed two years ago in between a rehersal and
a concert of works by Schumann at Heilbronn. "How did I
get to her? It took me almost ten years to get close,
after having discovered, as a student, that the works
that Martha played regularly (Bach's Partita No. 2,
Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 3, Ravel's G Major
Concerto) were the ones that had had the greatest impact
on my life. Until I finally came into contact with her,
always surrounded by people because she feels that she
can thus better protect herself from the outside world.
After a while, in a small gathering I managed to get
close and I suggested we speak about Schumann and
Beethoven. With Martha one can plan nothing, because she
decides everything, always going forward, but to my
surprise she accepted the dialogue, which as you
witnessed takes place in sequential planes and without
abrupt cuts. She opens and closes each subject with
complete spontaneity," Gachot explains. He admits that if
he had to define his work in one word, he would choose
honesty. "She speaks about how she had to fight against
herself and on her obsession for not making mistakes.
During the conversation I had no notes nor script guide.
We simply chatted and in so doing, tried to trap the
intimacy of someone who had never before made such
confessions. I think I succeeded: each time I see the
film again, I find that she is really concentrating on
what she is saying and does not look the other way.
Besides, I was so sure of what I was going to do that,
instead of taking small cameras, supposedly not to make
her feel uncomfortable as it had been suggested, I chose
to take one large camera only. I had not made a mistake
and Martha appears almost all the time in close up,
without ever feeling uncomfortable", he adds.
-
- Film
maker and himself a pianist, Gachot chose to pursue his
career by exclusively making documentaries on classical
music: "My work, and also my quest, is to combine music
with words. In this case, editing the film was very
difficult (that in itself took almost seven months)
because we had to combine Martha's words with the music
from the archival material. It is very difficult to know
which subject preceds the next and to place them in such
an order that will appear harmonic. The most important
difference is that in a concert, the performer can play
an encore and in movies that is impossible".
-
- After
his conversation with Argerich, Gachot decided to
complete his work by travelling to Argentina, where he
shot for three weeks. Back in Europe, he showed the
pianist the finished documentary. "She had no
participation in the final editing and assembly and only
said: "If I were a Martha Argerich fan, I would love to
see this movie"."
-
- Marcelo
Stiletano © LA NACION 2003
-
- http://www.lanacion.com.ar/03/04/20/ds_490119.asp
- LA
NACION | 20/04/2003 | Página 04 |
Espectáculos
- Free
translation by Maria Elena Hartung
|
- LE
MONDE,
Novembre 2002
- Le
Clavier bien inspiré
- Rencontre
inédite avec une pianiste de génie. Libre,
subtil, enchanteur.
-
- L'EXPRESSION
semble désuète mais s'impose ici plus que
jamais: soyez tout ouïe. Pour le pure enchantement
des morceau musicaux, la rareté de la parole, la
richesse et la profondeur implicite de la confidence.
Combien de points de suspension dans la conversation
nocturne avec cette musicienne de génie qu'est
Martha Argerich ? Combien de phrase
inachevées, de mots abandonnés en suspens
pour l'imaginaire de l'auditeur ? Il y a bien
sûr cet accent argentin, naturellement dansant et
effusif, que la rigueur du français contrarie et
que le pragmatisme de l'anglais réprime. Mais
surtout, ce rendez-vous médité par Georges
Gachot a quelques chose de sauvage, de
dérobé, d'évanescent.
-
- A la
mesure de l'événement qu'il
constitue : c'est la première fois, en
quelque quarante-cinq ans de métier (elle a
à peine 16 ans, en 1957, lorsqu'elle est
propulsée sur la scène internationale), que
l'artiste qualifiée de mythique et de
légendaire se confie devant une caméra. A
celle, aussi, de l'incertitude du moment (le soir, la
nuit profonde, l'aube ?) et du lieu (Buenos Aires,
Pescara, ailleurs ?) choisis. Enfin, à l'aune
de son sujet, interprète d'exception
auréolée de mystère.
Généreuse, fascinante. D'une
intégrité radicale et radicalement
insoumise aux code du star-system, à la notion de
carrière.
-
- On
sait seulement que derrière Martha il y a
là deux ou trois amis musiciens ; la plupart
du temps hors champ, mais avec des plans d'une
beauté ineffable lorsque le visage du pianiste
Mauricio Vallina s'accroche dans l'image au coté
d'Argerich (comme les tableaux de deux pensées en
chemin). Rien de convenu, d'attendu. L'interlocuteur
relance à peine, et dans un quasi-chuchotement. La
conversation s'anime sur le "choc électrique" de
ses six ans (elle joue depuis qu'elle en a trois)-le
Concerto No 4 de Beethoven par Claudio Arrau.
Hommage éloquent à son maître, le
pianiste et compositeur autrichien Friedrich Gulda.
L'amour, le besoin vital de jouer avec les autres. Le
travail -" il faut se préparer à 150%
si on veut obtenir 60%". L'enfance, comme paysage
définitif. La vulnérabilité, le
gouffre abyssal de la panique... et cet incroyable
récit d'une transgression - l'annulation d'un
concert en Italie, à 17 ans.
-
- Lovée
au propos en manière de contrepoint, la part
solaire, littéralement resplendissante et
jubilatoire, d'archives musicales recueillies depuis 1957
sur toutes les scènes de la planète. Liszt
Ravel, Prokofiev, Beethoven, Chopin, Schumann,
Bach...dans une intimité inédite. Ferveur
et ravissement.
-
- Valérie
Cadet, LE MONDE © 2002
|
- Neue
Zürcher Zeitung, 4. 10. 2002
- Lebensintensität
- Georges
Gachots Nachtgespräch mit Martha
Argerich
- Es ist
Nacht; das Bild zeigt einen kleinen Ausschnitt aus der
neutralen Anonymität einer Hotellobby. Keine
besondere Beleuchtung, keine Scheinwerfer. Nur eine
Kamera. Martha Argerich, die Ausnahmepianistin,
erzählt. Und das ist eine Sensation, denn noch nie
hat sie vor laufender Kamera ein Interview gegeben. Sie
ist gerne auf der Bühne. Wenn sie sich entschliesst,
einen Auftritt zu geben, schenkt sie dem Publikum ihr
Talent in grosszügiger Weise. Sie lebt intensiv, ja
turbulent, liebt spontane Entscheide und Reaktionen. Doch
die Öffentlichkeit scheut sie. Dennoch hat sie aus
einer Eingebung heraus dem Filmemacher Georges Gachot ihr
Vertrauen geschenkt.
-
- Eine
einmalige Chance, ein Glücksfall also, dass man so
das erste - und vielleicht letzte - Interview mit
Argerich sehen kann. Gachots conversation nocturne mit
ihr ist das Rückgrat des Films. Die von den
äusseren Umständen diktierten reduzierten
filmischen Mittel erhalten darin eine eigene
Qualität. Argerichs Persönlichkeit kommt zu
intimer Wirkung; ihre Ausstrahlung ist einmalig. Behutsam
geführt von Gachots Fragen, erzählt sie von den
Menschen, die sie geprägt haben, Friedrich Gulda
beispielsweise. Von der Musik, von den Werken, die
für sie wie Persönlichkeiten mit eigenem Leben
sind, von den Komponisten, die ihr am Herzen liegen. Sie
tut das mit einer Offenheit und Ehrlichkeit, dass man sie
als Person spürt und sich sofort von dieser
nächtlichen Begegnung mitnehmen und berühren
lässt.
-
- Es
braucht Mut, ein so persönliches, nur mit einer
Kamera (Matthias Kälin) geführtes Interview
stehen zu lassen als das, was es ist, und es nicht
künstlich aufzublasen. Und es braucht Mut, es zu
redigieren, darin die wesentlichen, für den
Charakter der Künstlerin entscheidenden Momente zu
finden und Verdoppelungen wegzulassen. Der in Zürich
lebende Gachot hat den Mut in «Martha Argerich -
Conversation nocturne» gehabt. Sein Film hat eine
stimmige Dramaturgie, ist ausgezeichnet geschnitten und
wohl dosiert mit Material ergänzt, das Argerichs
künstlerische Dimensionen zeigt: Konzertmitschnitte
aus dem Archiv, aus der Zürcher Tonhalle und
aufschlussreiche Ausschnitte aus Proben.
- Auch
das ist ziemlich einmalig, dass sie während einer
Probe spricht: Beim Schumann-Klavierkonzert tut sie's,
verständigt sich auf subtile Weise mit dem
Konzertmeister des Orchesters, um den etwas gar
mittelmässigen Dirigenten zu umgehen . . . Man hat
das Gefühl, dass Gachot in seinem Film den Kern von
Martha Argerichs vitaler Persönlichkeit verstanden
hat und ihn auch vermitteln kann. - Am vergangenen
Wochenende wurde er mit dem begehrten Prix Italia in der
Kategorie Musik und Kunst ausgezeichnet, zuvor erhielt er
bereits den Preis der Studentenjury und den ersten Preis
in der Kategorie Dokumentarfilm des grössten
Musikfilmwettbewerbes, Golden Prague.
-
- ©
Neue Zürcher Zeitung, Alfred Zimmerlin.4. 10.
2002
|
- Tagesanzeiger,
27. 9. 2002
- Eigenwilliges
Charisma
- «Big
Brother» sei nichts für sie, sagt Martha
Argerich und winkt ab: Einspielen will sie sich allein,
ohne Kamera. Das erstaunt weniger als die Tatsache, dass
die interviewscheue Pianistin überhaupt auf ein
Filmprojekt eingestiegen ist.
-
- Immerhin,
den Gesprächsverlauf bestimmt sie in «Martha
Argerich &endash; Conversation nocturne» weit gehend
selber: Sie erzählt von Lampenfieber und
musikalischen Schlüsselerlebnissen und schweigt
manchmal plötzlich, sie versteckt sich hinter ihren
Haaren und gibt dann wieder ihre sehr persönliche
Sicht auf Werke und Komponisten preis. Sie habe den
Eindruck, dass Prokofjew sie möge, meint sie einmal,
und der Satz sagt mehr über ihren Zugang zur Musik
als jede wortreiche Analyse. Martha Argerich hat
Charisma, und der in Zürich lebende Dokumentarfilmer
Georges Gachot hat gut daran getan, ihr die Leinwand
praktisch allein zu überlassen. Nur selten hat er
andere Bilder zwischen die Interviewpassagen geschoben,
und auch auf diese hätte man gut verzichten
können: Galoppierende Pferde und Stadtszenen tragen
nichts bei zum Verständnis der Musikerin und
ändern auch nichts an der konventionell-soliden
Machart des Films. Ergiebig sind dagegen die
eingestreuten historischen Aufnahmen, in denen die junge
Martha Argerich Liszt oder Chopin spielt &endash; und in
denen ihre Ausstrahlung bereits die gleiche ist wie
heute. Denn am beredtsten ist die Pianistin immer noch
hinter den Tasten, wenn sie ravelschen Humor aufblitzen
lässt oder schumannscher Verletzlichkeit
nachspürt. Oder auch, wenn sie einem Dirigenten, der
nicht allzu viel zum Schumann-Konzert zu sagen weiss,
diskret, charmant und unmissverständlich klar macht,
wie sie sich die Interpretation vorstellt.
(suk)
-
- ©
Züritipp , Freitag, 27. September 2002
|
- Lauter
Liebesaffären
- Neu
im Kino: «Conversation nocturne» - ein
Dokumentarfilm über die Pianistin Martha Argerich
- Die
Pianistin Martha Argerich gilt als eigensinnig,
exzentrisch, medienscheu. Umso erstaunlicher ist, dass es
dem Schweizer Filmemacher Georges Gachot gelungen ist,
sich mit Kamera und Mikrofon der Künstlerin
anzunähern.
-
- Sie
habe gerade am Fernsehen «Big Brother» gesehen,
sagt Martha Argerich am Anfang von Georges Gachots
«Conversation nocturne». Grässlich, wie
alle erpicht seien, ihr Privatleben in der
Öffentlichkeit auszubreiten. Darüber werde sie
nichts erzählen.
-
- Nächtlicher
Monolog
- Punktum.
Und dann berichtet Martha Argerich von lauter
Liebesaffären - mit Komponisten, die schon lange in
einer andern Welt angelangt sind. Sie spricht von ihnen,
als seien sie noch lebendig und anwesend - sogar von
Eifersucht ist die Rede, wenn sie sich zwischendurch
einem andern Komponisten zuwende. Beethoven, Chopin,
Debussy, Ravel, Prokofjew, Bach sind ihre musikalischen
Liebhaber - und ganz besonders Robert Schumann, mit dem
sie sich schon mehr als seelenverwandt fühlt.
«Nachtgespräch» (Conversation nocturne)
nennt Georges Gachot seinen Film nicht zufällig. Der
Hauptteil ist ein von nur wenigen Fragen unterbrochener
Monolog Martha Argerichs in ihrem Brüsseler Heim -
spätabends aufgenommen, ohne Vorbereitung und
Absprache. Ein kaum geglieder- ter Erinnerungs- und
Gedankenstrom, der gerade in seiner Sprunghaftigkeit
Entscheidendes über diese Ausnahmekünstlerin
aussagt. Gachot erzwingt nichts; er geht behutsam auf das
Wesen dieser besonderen Frau ein. Eingelassen in die
nächtliche Offenbarung sind Bilder mit viel Musik:
Gegenwärtiges wie Vergangenes. Wie sie 1957 mit 16
Jahren die Klavierwettbewerbe in Bozen und Genf gewann
und gerade wegen dieses frühen Erfolges in eine
Krise schlitterte. Ihr argentinischer Kollege Daniel
Barenboim meinte damals, sie erinnere ihn an ein Bild
ohne Rahmen. Wie sie sich dann wieder auffing und nach
dem Sieg beim Warschauer Chopin-Concours 1965 eine
Weltkarriere antrat, die bis heute anhält. Anfang
und Schluss spielen in Martha Argerichs Heimatstadt
Buenos Aires. Hier kann Gachot der Versuchung nicht ganz
widerstehen, «stimmungsvolle» Aufnahmen aus der
argentinischen Hauptstadt - nächtliche Strassen,
wilde Pferde, sturmgepeitschtes Meer - unter die Musik zu
legen. Das ist zwar poetisch, aber konventionell.
Ergiebiger ist der lange Blick ins Gesicht der Martha
Argerich, in diese faszinierende menschliche Landschaft.
-
- Spontaneität
- Martha
Argerich bekennt sich bedingungslos zur
Spontaneität: im Leben wie in der Kunst. Sie hasst
Routine und Wiederholung; sich selber zu imitieren, sei
das Allerschlimmste. Die Pianistin tritt seit ein paar
Jahren nicht mehr solo auf. Das sei schrecklich - wenn
sie nach links oder rechts schaue, sei niemand da. Also
bevorzugt sie Auftritte mit Orchester, vor allem aber
Kammermusik. Sie will mit andern zusammen sein,
musizieren, lachen - es ist genau dieses verschmitzte,
mitunter unbändige Lachen, das in unserer Erinnerung
haften bleibt. Das Lachen eines Menschen, der ironisch
über sein Tun und Lassen berichten kann und doch
alles sehr ernst nimmt. Marthas Argerich ist und bleibt,
letztlich, eine fanatische Person.
-
- In
St. Gallen im Kino Palace; am 27. September ist
Regisseur Gachot zu Gast.
- ©
Aus dem St. Galler TAGBLATT vom Donnerstag, 26. September
2002. (Mario Gerteis)
|
- South
African Intl. Documentary Film
Festival
- An
intimate glimpse into the life of one of the greatest
concert pianists alive, the Argentinian Martha Argerich.
Talent and dedication don't require histrionics: Argerich
comes across as deeply sensitive and intelligent, in awe
of her craft and those who have gone before her, paying
particular homage to her teacher, Friedrich Gulda as well
as the composers "who like her". The film takes us to
Warsaw, where she won the Chopin competition as a young
girl, and around the world, including her native Buenos
Aires. Interspersed with these are casual moments of
conversation in which she proves to be both remarkably
unassuming and inspired.
- (Text
from the catalogue, July 2002)
|
- LE
TEMPS, Samedi 27 avril 2002
- Julian
Sykes
- Martha
Argerich se livre pour la première fois, pudique
mais généreuse, au coin d'une
caméra
- Martha
Argerich a toujours beaucoup parlé, mais jamais
devant une caméra. Elle fuit les interviews.
Georges Gachot l'a traquée pendant deux ans avec
un cameraman et un ingénieur du son. Ce fut long,
presque impossible. Puis une nuit, elle a
lâché le morceau. Le résultat est un
film qui dure près d'une heure, à voir
absolument ce samedi, au festival Visions du réel
de Nyon. «Il faut beaucoup d'inconscience pour faire
un film sur Martha. Pour moi, c'est vraiment un cadeau
qu'elle m'a fait. J'aurais voulu appeler ce film Le
Cadeau de Martha.» Georges Gachot, qui vit à
Zurich, n'en croit toujours pas ses yeux: on lui a ri au
nez lorsqu'il a sollicité des
télévisions pour financer le
projet.
-
- Première
approche en 1993, à Munich. «C'était
après un concert. Un ami producteur m'a dit:
«Vas-y, tu peux y aller.» Mais même lui
avait peur: Martha regarde tout le monde, elle a des
antennes partout. C'est une aura.» Le fan d'Argerich
lui propose alors de jouer dans un film sur le Concerto
en Sol de Ravel. «Martha» l'écoute,
l'interroge. Les années passent. La pianiste tombe
gravement malade. Va suivre une thérapie en
Californie. En 2000, Georges Gachot tente une seconde
approche au Festival de Verbier: «Elle se souvenait
de moi.» Trois semaines plus tard, le voici qui
débarque chez sa grande fille, à
Genève, et qui tourne les premières
images.
-
- Le
pari n'était pas gagné d'avance. «Il a
fallu six mois pour que le projet aboutisse. Un soir, on
s'est assis dans le hall d'un hôtel. Je me suis mis
par terre, Martha était sur un sofa, le cameraman
a tout juste eu le temps de poser l'objectif sur ses
genoux.» D'où ces images un peu
tamisées, cette ambiance de pénombre:
«Martha vit la nuit. Elle se couche quand les autres
se lèvent. Elle sait épargner ses
sentiments et les sortir au bon moment.» C'est donc
entre une heure et trois heures du matin qu'elle s'est
livrée, d'où le titre du film,
Conversation nocturne.
-
- Argerich
livre anecdote sur anecdote. Sur un ton elliptique. Avec
toute une panoplie de gestes. L'attitude est pudique
(elle se cache derrière sa chevelure), le regard,
lui, oblique. Elle parle de son mentor Friedrich Gulda,
de sa première impression musicale forte à
6 ans: «C'était le quatrième
[Concerto] de Beethoven. Que je ne joue pas.
(Sourire). Et euh... c'était quelque chose
d'incroyable. C'était Arrau qui jouait. Ma
mère m'amenait toujours au concert, c'était
très tard [...] et j'avais sommeil. Mais
quand j'ai écouté les trilles dans le
deuxième mouvement... Aahhh! J'ai eu des
espèces de frissons, comme ça!»
D'emblée, le ton est donné. Le personnage
est tellement hypnotique que peu importent les
références musicales: c'est l'histoire
d'une vie.
-
- Et
comme dans toute vie, il y a des crises. «J'ai eu
les Concours de Genève et de Bolzano à 16
ans. Alors j'ai commencé à jouer. Et
après je me sentais très isolée, je
faisais la vie d'une personne de 40 ans [...] Je
ne connaissais personne de mon âge, j'étais
terriblement timide, et... c'était triste, tu
vois!» Déroutée, Martha se
réfugie à 19-20 ans chez le grand
pédagogue Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli: «Je
suis restée une année et demie chez lui,
mais j'ai eu quatre leçons!» Eclats de rire.
Le regard demeure intense, à la fois fuyant et
à l'affût.
-
- C'est
toute la dimension imprévisible du personnage qui
éclate dans ce film. Tout son génie, aussi,
sans parler des splendides archives de concerts. Argerich
raconte comment elle a appris le 3e Concerto de Prokofiev
de manière «subliminale», en partageant
une chambre avec une femme qui étudiait la
même uvre de jour, pendant son sommeil:
«Quand j'ai dû le jouer, je l'avais appris
avec des erreurs, des petites erreurs qu'elle
faisait.» Et de lancer: «Il y a des
méthodes aussi comme ça pour apprendre les
langues, non?» Le passage le plus émouvant
est lorsqu'elle évoque (en anglais ) le petit
doigt qu'elle s'est coupé pour justifier
l'annulation de son premier concert: «Et je l'ai
vraiment fait!»
-
- La
légende est donc bel et bien vivante.
Derrière ses doutes, derrière cette
chevelure à la fois souple et torsadée, se
trament des souvenirs. Mais surtout une
générosité qui n'appartient
qu'à elle: «J'en ai passé des nuits
à suivre Martha dans les hôtels, explique
Georges Gachot. Avec Martha, on peut parler de
tout.»
-
- Martha
Argerich, Conversation nocturne. Sa 27 avril à 20
h, au Festival Visions du réel à Nyon.
Rens. 022/361 60 60 ou
http://www.visionsdureel.ch
|
- Dans
l'intimité musicale de Martha.
- Georges
Gachot a réussi l'exploit de filmer
l'insaisissable et secrète dame Argerich, la
célèbre pianiste argentine. A
découvrir à Visions du réel,
à Nyon, le 27 avril.
-
- Georges
Gachot, qui habite à Zurich, n'en revient toujours
pas! A force de persévérance, il a
tourné ce documentaire sur Martha Argerich,
nommé "Conversations nocturnes". "J'avais
contacté la pianiste il y a huit ans, nous
explique-t-il. C'était à Munich,
après un concert et, comme tout le monde,
j'étais très impressionné par sa
personnalité. Comme toujours, elle était
très entourée (réd.: elle a horreur
de la solitude) et vivait la nuit. Il faut tenir le
rythme! Nous en sommes restés là
puisqu'après cette rencontre, elle est
tombée gravement malade et s'est fait soigner en
Californie. Puis, en 1999, je l'ai revue au festival de
Verbier. On a reparlé de ce film que je voulais
d'abord consacrer à Ravel uniquement. La confiance
s'est instaurée entre nous."
-
- Pour
l'essentiel, ce documentaire a été
tourné à Heilbronn, près de
Stuttgart. "J'ai passé une partie de la nuit avec
elle: un vrai moment de magie. Je n'ai pas fait son
interview, mais nous avons parlé, parlé,
parlé. De musique, bien sûr. Des musiques
qui lui sont proches. Avec elle, j'ai marché sur
des ufs, tout le temps, mais ce fut un moment
très privilégié. J'ai eu beaucoup de
chance. Je ne veux pas me vanter, mais quelque chose
s'est passé entre nous. Et l'ambiance de cette
conversation a été un cadeau."
-
- C'est
fou ce qu'elle rit, Martha Argerich. Comme en
témoigne ce documentaire, tourné en
français et en anglais. Et si sa légende en
fait une femme volcanique, réputée
irascible, voire invivable, elle se montre en
réalité généreuse,
fidèle à ceux qu'elle aime, tendre... Ceux
qui voudraient en savoir davantage sur sa vie
privée seront pourtant déçus. "Je
lui ai posé des questions plus intimes, dit
Gachot. Mais Martha a horreur de parler hors du contexte,
en l'occurrence musical. J'ai l'impression qu'elle
épargne ses sentiments pour le moment
approprié." On l'aura deviné: quand elle se
jette sur son piano, l'épaisse chevelure en
bataille, ses mains puissantes caressant ou giflant
l'ivoire et l'ébène. Des mains qui,
à chaque fois, redonnent souffle à
Schumann, duquel elle se sent très proche, au Bach
de la "Deuxième partita", à Ravel, chez
lequel elle se sent très à l'aise, au jeune
Beethoven, qu'elle trouve plein d'humour.
-
- "A
61ans, dit Gachot, elle garde ce trait de
caractère fondamental chez elle: son
imprévisibilité. Ainsi qu'une
capacité incroyable à tirer son inspiration
du moment. Elle dit qu'elle n'aime pas tellement jouer
seule. Contrairement à ce que beaucoup croient,
Martha ne vit pas dans un monde à part. C'est une
femme normale..."
-
- Des
extraits d'archives éclairent ce film. Des
souvenirs pieux, en somme, quand on voit Friedrich Gulda,
son maître, qui, pourtant, ne pensait pas pouvoir
lui apprendre grand-chose! C'est cependant grâce
à lui que Martha a quitté son Argentine
natale. Et gagné des concours aussi prestigieux
que ceux de Genève, de Bolzano ou de Varsovie.
Elle parle aussi de ce fameux "Concerto No4", de
Beethoven, sa première découverte musicale
alors qu'elle avait 6ans et... qu'elle ne joue pas. "J'ai
trop peur", dit-elle dans le film!
-
- Voilà
donc pour l'essentiel de ce documentaire, qui nous fait
entrer dans l'intimité musicale d'une artiste de
tout premier plan...
-
- "Conversations
nocturnes", de Georges Gachot, Visions du réel,
Nyon (Capitole 1) samedi 27 avril, 20h
-
- ©
LE MATIN, lundi 22 avril 2002 / Aimé
Corbaz
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- "Golden
Prague" 2002
- Report:
Two awards to the film "Martha Argerich, evening talks"
- CZECH
CRYSTAL
- Category
3: Documentary programmes with a musical or dance
theme
- Dr.
Franz Wagner, Chairman of the Jury
- Mr
Georges Gachot, Director of the awarded programme,
Switzerland
-
- The
Czech Crystal is awarded again to two programmes, 'Martha
Argerich, Evening Talks', and 'Breaking the Silence:
Music in Afghanistan'.
- The
first Crystal goes to number 5, a musical documentary on
Argentina's legendary pianist by Idéale Audience
of France.
- 'Martha
Argerich' is a unique and intimate approach to a great
artist and personality. The sensitive manner of the
interviewer helps make possible the first television
portrait of this remarkable artist.
-
- STUDENT
PRIZE
- Mr
Peter Janecek, Chairman of the Student Jury, Vienna,
Austria
- Mr
Georges Gachot, Director of the awarded programme,
Zürich, Switzerland
-
- When
describing this documentary "Martha Argerich, Evening
Talks" by Georges Gachot, it would perhaps be more
fitting to think of it as "A Portrait of an Artist", an
artist who was both entertaining and endearing to the
viewer from the outset. The extreme honesty which she
displayed was uniquely refreshing, and was reflected by
the director´s approach. The boundaries often
present between the interviews and musical sections were
expertly merged screating an organic work which flowes
from start to finish. This work captured the very essence
of Martha Argerich, unfolding effortlessly like her
performances.
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- Annäherung
an eine Starpianistin
- Georges
Gachot präsentiert am Churer Kinofest seinen Film
über Martha Argerich
- Freunde
der klassichen Musik kommen heute Abend am Churer
Kinofest auf ihre Rechnung. Der Schweizer Filmemacher
Georges Gachot präsentiert um 19 Uhr im Kino Apollo
seinen Film über die Starpianistin Martha
Argerich.
-
- Es ist
mittlerweile zur Tradition geworden, dass Schweizer
Filmschaffende dem Churer Kinofest einen Besuch abstatten
und bei dieser Gelegenheit dem Publikum ihre Filme
persönlich vorstellen. Gestern war es Linoel Baier,
der sein Werk «La Parade» im Kinocenter
präsentiert hat. Und heute Abend reist
gewissermassen ein «alter Bekannter» des
Kinofestpublikums an: der Regisseur Georges Gachot. Er
bringt seinen neuen Film «Martha Argerich,
Nachtgespräch»
- mit,
den er den Zuschauerinnen und Zuschauern um 19 Uhr im
Kino Apollo persönlich vorstellt.
-
- Musikalische
Leidenschaften
- In
seinem Film versucht sich Gachot der Person der
Starpianistin Martha Argerich anzunähern, die als
verschlossen gilt und nur ganz selten Interviews gibt.
Und der Versuch gelingt: Die in Argentinien geborene
Musikerin öffnet sich vor Gachots Kamera. Ihr
persönliches Umfeld bleibt dabei aber mehr oder
weniger abgeschottet. Dafür erzählt sie von
ihren musikalischen Leidenschaften. Von Liszt, Ravel oder
Schumann. Grosse Komponisten, zu denen sie eine
imaginäre Beziehung pflegt. Es sind zwar
eigenartige, aber dennoch faszinierende Dialoge, die
Argerich mit dem Autor des Porträts führt.
Gachot hält sich dabei diskret im Hintergrund,
lässt die Pianistin frei über sich und die
Rolle der Musik in ihrem Leben erzählen.
-
- Ohne
Begleitkommentar
- Der
Film verkümmert trotz seines hohen Anspruchs, eine
Pianistin von Weltruhm zu porträtieren, indessen
nicht zu einer trockenen musikwissenschaftlichen
Diskussion. Denn die Künstlerin gibt sich im Laufe
des «Nachtgesprächs» ziemlich
selbstironisch, auch kann sie über sich selber
lachen. Geschickt eingewoben in das Gespräch werden
zudem Ausschnitte aus
- Konzerten,
die in Argerichs Leben eine grossen Rolle gespielt haben.
Die vornehme Zurückhaltung des Autors gereicht dem
Film aber nicht nur zum Vorteil. Grund: Gachots
«Nachtgespräch» kommt ohne einen
erklärenden Begleitkommentar aus. Und deshalb
dürften sich besonders jene Filmfreunde etwas allein
gelassen fühlen, die sich bis anhin nicht intensiv
mit der Person und der Musik Argerichs auseinander
gesetzt haben.
-
- Das
zweite Mal in Chur
- Gachot
war bereits vor zwei Jahren am Kinofest zu Gast. Damals
zeigte er dem Publikum seinen Dokumentarfilm
«... And the Beat goes on». Dieser gibt
einen Einblick in das Wirken des Schweizer Kinderarztes
Beat «Beatocello» Richner. Richner hat in
Kambodscha drei Kinderspitäler erbaut, in denen er
tagtäglich Hunderte von kranken Kindern
behandelt.
- ©
DIE SÜDOSTSCHWEIZ, Mittwoch 3. Juli 2002 / Dario
Morandi
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