Don’t miss Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Laurel & Hardy
on the BIG SCREEN at Music Hall’s historic Ballroom
CINCINNATI, OH – Experience the joy and genius of silent movies at KINGS OF SILENT COMEDY WITH THE MIGHTY WURLITZER, presented by The Society for the Preservation of Music Hall (SPMH) on Tuesday, May 12 at 10:30 AM and 7:00 PM at the Music Hall Ballroom. The popular theatre organ concert series is presented in cooperation with the Ohio Valley Chapter of the American Organ Society.
Tickets are on sale now at www.CincinnatiArts.org, (513) 621-ARTS [2787], and the Aronoff Center or Music Hall Ticket Offices. For groups of ten or more, call (513) 977-4157.
Join the Society for the Preservation of Music Hal for a fun-filled, laugh-out-loud good time with the Kings of Silent Comedy – Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Laurel & Hardy – on the BIG SCREEN at Music Hall’s historic Ballroom. Nationally-acclaimed ‘Organist of the Year’ Clark Wilson will accompany classic silent movies on the original Mighty Wurlitzer Theatre Organ from downtown Cincinnati’s long-departed Albee Theater with his own original score written especially for this event. With all the free popcorn you can eat, this is a chance to relive old memories or create new ones. Bring the entire family for an experience of ‘the good old days’ that they won’t soon forget.
Clark Wilson
Clark Wilson is one of the most prominent and recognized scorers of silent photoplays in America today. He works exclusively with the Organ in developing accurate and historic musical accompaniments as they were performed in major picture palaces during the heyday of the silent film era.
Wilson began his scoring career in 1980 and has successfully toured North America with hundreds of film presentations at schools and universities, performing arts centers, theatres, film festivals, and conventions. His work has led to performances for UCLA; the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, where, in addition to other pictures, he has re-premiered Wings for Paramount Studios’ 100th Anniversary; the Atlanta premier of the restored Metropolis; and annual presentations at the Atlanta Fox Theatre and for the Los Angeles Philharmonic Society at the Walt Disney Concert Hall organ. He is the organist of choice for many of the American Theatre Organ Society’s (ATOS) international convention silent film presentations, and his performances have received the highest marks from colleagues and professionals, one commenting that his was “the finest use of a theatre pipe organ that I have ever heard.”
Clark has been organ conservator and Resident Organist at the Ohio Theatre for the Columbus Association for the Performing Arts (CAPA) since 1992. He is responsible for all music during CAPA’s annual classic movie series, which features one or more major silent films each season. In addition, he has led courses in theatre organ styling and silent film accompaniment at the Indiana University School of Music, and he is heavily involved in the development of a similar degreed program at the University of Oklahoma, the first such program to exist since 1929. In addition to several articles published in Theatre Organ magazine, he has recently authored an article on film scoring for The American Organist magazine, the periodical of the American Guild of Organists.
Wilson has been named in numerous Who’s Who and Men of Achievement editions and was presented with the ATOS Organist of the Year award in 1998. An acclaimed organ technician and consultant, he has also been professionally involved with over 200 pipe organ installations to date and has earned the ATOS Technician of Merit award, the only person to receive both ATOS distinctions. Visit Clark’s website at www.clarkwilson.net.
The Mighty Wurlitzer
The Mighty Wurlitzer was installed in the ornate Albee Theater on Fountain Square in December 1927 – one of only 2,200 theatre-organs produced at that time to accompany silent feature films. When talkies took over in 1929, the theatre organ was mainly silenced. The Albee organ was donated to the Emery Theater in 1969 (where it played for movies and other events) and was partially rebuilt by the Ohio Valley Organ Club. It was removed from the Emery in 1999 and put into storage.
The leadership at SPMH thought the historic Music Hall Ballroom would be an ideal location for the instrument, and in June 2007, Ronald F. Wehmeier, Inc., Pipe Organ Service in Cincinnati was contacted to completely rebuild and install the Wurlitzer. A donor foundation funded the entire project in the amount of $1.41 million. Only a small number of Wurlitzers of this size still exist, and Cincinnati (the home of the Wurlitzer Company) is one of the few cities in the country to have an instrument of this quality.
The Wurlitzer was expanded in tonal colors and effects, from 19 ranks of pipes to 31 ranks (a rank is made up of 61 pipes, and represents orchestral sounds, such as trumpets, flutes, tubas, strings, etc.). A full array of percussion effects is also present – xylophone, marimba, glockenspiel, chimes, and even a large Steinway grand – all playable from the giant three keyboard and pedal console, decorated in 22-karat gold leaf. Wind for the pipes is provided by a 15 HP high pressure turbine, the electrical switching is controlled by computer, and pipes range in size from 16 feet to the size of a pencil. In addition, the Wurlitzer is now fully computerized, so that it can be played without an organist through a digital input system.
The Society for the Preservation of Music Hall
The Society for the Preservation of Music Hall (SPMH) is a non-profit organization that provides ongoing financial and volunteer support toward maintaining and improving Cincinnati’s historic Music Hall. SPMH members are volunteers from all walks of life who are dedicated to the continuing preservation of Music Hall as a national historic monument and promoting it as one of the world’s foremost performing arts, entertainment, and rental facilities. For more information, visit www.spmhcincinnati.org.
Kings of Silent Comedy with the Mighty Wurlitzer Radio Partner: WMKV-FM
