Johann Strauss II Movies
One of the most celebrated composers of the 19th century, Johann Strauss II spent almost 50 years at the center of cultural life for much of Western world, from his native Austria-Hungary to such far-flung American territories as California. His work was embraced and acclaimed not only by Europe's upper and ruling classes, but also the working class and the growing middle classes of the era. He was the son of Johann Strauss I, who was the most lionized composer of waltzes in Vienna during the first half of the 19th century, and who also did his best to force his son into a profession other than music. The younger Strauss couldn't resist the calling, however, and quickly overshadowed his father as a composer of waltzes, polkas, and marches, and as orchestra leader. They were rivals until his father's death in 1849, and after that, the younger Strauss never had any potential rivals.By the 1860s, Strauss had found an international public, on at least two continents, eager for his work. Essentially, he brought what amounted to a symphonic scope to the waltz, elevating it from light music to respectable concert music in the process. It's principally because of him that front-line orchestras have ever regularly played and recorded waltz music; essentially, he gave light music the depth of full-blown concert music, rather anticipating the best film music in some respects. He had the further advantage of impeccable timing, rising to prominence amid the rebuilding of the city of Vienna following the failed revolution of 1848. Although Strauss -- a man as naïve in the world of politics as he was adept in the composition of music -- had sided with the rebels, which caused the court of the Emperor Franz Josef to keep him at arm's length for decades, he was able to make his career in the imperial capital. In the process, his music became inextricably associated with Vienna's "golden age" and was one of the few attributes of the city and its culture to rise above the political ferment of the times. The diametrically opposed admirers of Brahms and Wagner, for example, might have been prepared to do bodily harm to each other in the streets, given too much beer and a wrong word on any given night, but both camps admired Strauss. Monarchists who loved the emperor and Democrats, Republicans, and would-be reformers of all stripes, even the most virulent anti-Semites (a great irony, since the Strauss family was Jewish), all loved his music.
Strauss' contribution to operetta was somewhat more uneven than his work in orchestral music, principally because of his inexperience in theatrical matters -- he simply could not, intuitively or intellectually, distinguish a good libretto from a bad libretto. There was also, from the point-of-view of the theater producers, an irrelevancy to that "blind spot"; after his success with Die Fledermaus in 1874, which introduced Viennese operetta to the world (and is still produced regularly 130 years later), it became clear that the public would flock to a Strauss operetta of any quality, so far as the libretto was concerned. Publishers on at least one occasion deliberately stuck Strauss with a second-rate libretto, knowing it wouldn't matter, while reserving a superb, first-quality piece for a less well-known rival composer. As a result, apart from Die Fledermaus, The Gypsy Baron, and A Night in Venice (which really only came into its own after emendations by Erich Wolfgang Korngold early in the 20th century), few of his operettas proved durable, even in the German-speaking world, although their music has often endured in excerpts.
Strauss died in 1899, just as movies were developing into a proper storytelling form. His most immediate influence was in the form of his waltzes and polkas, which were interpolated into countless films during the silent era in the form of suggested cues and full orchestral scores provided by the studios, and carried over into the sound era, by which time the copyright had begun to dissolve on most of his work where it still existed at all. "The Blue Danube" is the most famous of his waltzes; it turns up, in whole or in part, in dozens if not hundreds of movies, in everything from Abbott & Costello's Hold That Ghost (1941) to Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey, the latter utilizing the 1867 waltz before a 1968 audience to underscore the gracefulness of satellites' (and people's) movements in orbit. The overture to Die Fledermaus was used to delightful comic effect for the big finale of H.C. Potter's Hellzapoppin' (1941), and the list goes on and on: Spring Parade; the cartoon A Corny Concerto (1943); the comedy Dios los Cría (1953); The Little Fugitive (1953); Harry Munter (1969); Harold and Maude (1971); Heaven's Gate (1980); Les Bons Débarras (1980, aka Good Riddance); Strictly Ballroom (1992); True Lies (1994); The Jungle Book (1994); Dear God (1996); Earth (1998); Dogma (1999); and Rock 'n' Roll Frankenstein (1999). And those are just some of the more obvious films that have made use of some of his music. There are snatches of it spread far wider, with Carl Stalling and his scores for the Warner Bros. cartoons of the 1940s providing a very vivid canvas on which to place snatches of Strauss's music (thus quietly initiating several generations of young viewers to Strauss' work).
As to the operettas, they've mostly been filmed in the German-speaking world, starting with a 1923 version of Die Fledermaus directed by Max Mack. They obviously didn't come into their own until the advent of sound films in 1927, however, Germany's Ufa Studio produced an especially notable color version of Die Fledermaus in the early '40s. That film raises an interesting and ironic point about the status and meaning of Strauss' music in popular culture during the Nazi era. Hitler, who was of Austrian birth, personally liked Strauss' music (though his favorite operetta was The Merry Widow, by Franz Lehar), and Strauss' waltzes and operettas were embraced by the Nazi-run cultural apparatus of the Third Reich. In Austria, however, a lot of creative people and ordinary citizens who abhorred the Nazis and the occupying Germans, and who clung to their separate national identity, also embraced Strauss' work as their own, as a statement (veiled and subtle, as it had to be for their own safety) of their separateness from the Germans. Indeed, Strauss' music and the Imperial era that it evoked were a safe haven for the nationalists and anti-Nazis working quietly in Vienna, Salzburg, etc. And there was the odd, unspoken truth amid all of this, that the Strauss family was of Jewish descent -- in fact, when the Nazis marched in during the spring of 1938, descendants of the composer were protected from persecution by the timely, surreptitious creation of baptismal certificates, indicating conversions to Christianity generations earlier, which conveniently turned up in the public record.
Perhaps the most cinematically daring and challenging adaptation of Strauss' work came in the form of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's Oh...Rosalinda! (1955), which took the music and basic plot from Die Fledermaus and transposed both into a beautiful, albeit bittersweet, operetta/satire about life in postwar, Allied-occupied Vienna. No less a figure than Erich Wolfgang Korngold enjoyed one of his earliest popular successes, long before he thought of working in movies, by way of Strauss. His edition of A Night in Venice restored the work to the repertory, and his Strauss pastiche, Waltzes From Vienna, was not only a hit on-stage but was brought to the screen in the early '30s, including a notoriously uninspired British version directed by Alfred Hitchcock (his least favorite of all of his movies), and a Hollywood adaptation called The Great Waltz, starring Fernand Gravey. Onscreen, Strauss has been portrayed by numerous actors across the decades, including Gravey and Stuart Wilson in the 1972 miniseries The Strauss Family. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
This release captures a production of Johann Strauss' Weiner Blut featuring Alexander Grill, Natassja Schell, and Freddie Schwardtmann. The Morbisch Festival Orchestra provides the music under the wand of conductor Rudolf Bibl. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Harald Serafin, Ranier Trost, (more)
In the classical performance release New Year's Concert in St Petersburg - shot on New Year's Day 2007 at St. Petersburg's Mariinsky Theatre Concert Hall - Russian maestro Valery Gergiev leads the Orchestra of the Mariinsky Theatre in interpretations of symphonic works by Wagner, Strauss, Verdi, Rachmaninov and a number of other composers. Two soloists - alto vocalist Yuri Bashmet and concert pianist Yefim Bronfman - provide added musical support. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Bashmet, Yefim Bronfman, (more)

- 2004
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A lively cast brings Waltz King's beloved comic operetta to life in this performance headlined by Pamela Armstrong, Thomas Allan, and Ragnar Ulfung, and featuring The Glyndebourne Chorus and London Philharmonic Orchestra performing under Vladimir Jurowski. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

- 2004
- Add Highlights of Vienna Symphonies, Vol. 3 to QueueAdd Highlights of Vienna Symphonies, Vol. 3 to top of Queue
In this concert performance, the Vienna Symphonic Orchestra performs works by Suppe, Strauss, Dvorak, Millocker and Zeller. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Heinz Wallberg, Sylvia Geszty, (more)

- 2004
- Add Highlights of Vienna Symphonies, Vol. 1 to QueueAdd Highlights of Vienna Symphonies, Vol. 1 to top of Queue
In this concert performance, the Vienna Symphonic Orchestra performs works by Mozart, Strauss, Schubert, Chopin, Lehar, and Ziehrer. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Heinz Wallberg, Tamara Lund, (more)
Johann Strauss' three act operetta is performed before a live audience at the 2001 Salzburger Festspiele in this production featuring libretto by Carl Haffner and Richard Genée and music by the Mozarteum Orchestra Salzburg and the Arnold Schönberg Chorus under the direction of chorus leader Erwin Ortner. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
The classical music performance film New Year's Concert 1991 (Abbado, Wiener Philharmoniker) finds celebrated maestro Claudio Abbado - a longtime fixture of the Wiener Philharmoniker symphony in Vienna - returning to conduct that orchestra for a special New Year's Eve performance on New Year's Day, January 1, 1991. The set incorporates pieces by Johann Strauss I, Johan Strauss II, Mozart, Lanner, Schubert, Josef Strauss and Eduard Strauss. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Claudio Abbado
Three of the greatest voices of the operatic stage, Luciano Pavarotti, Marilyn Horne and Joan Sutherland, are united in this performance of Strauss's frothy operetta "Die Fledermaus". Staged in 1990 by the Royal Opera House of Covent Garden by John Cox, this performance marked Sutherland's final appearance at the Royal Opera House; Richard Bonynge conducts the orchestra. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

- 1990
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This musical performance video features the Bavarian State Orchestra, featuring Coburn, Perry, Waechter and Fassbaender. This program is conducted by Carlos Kleiber. ~ All Movie Guide
Conducted by Placido Domingo, this production of Johann Strauss' opera was recorded at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden. A dialogue booklet is included which features German with some English. ~ All Movie Guide
The Elizabethan Sydney Opera in Australia mounted this 1982 stage production of Johann Strauss's 1874 opera Die Fledermaus. The work interweaves the stories of three characters: the zany Eisenstein, who prefers incessant partying to incarceration; his wife Rosalinde, who resents his behavior and decides to teach him a lesson he will never forget; and their cunning, manipulative maid Adele. At the heart of it all stands the luminous diva Joan Sutherland, supported by a cast that includes Robert Gard and Heather Begg. The Australian Opera Chorus and The Elizabethan Sydney Orchestra lend added musical support. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
A musical work by Johann Strauss first performed in 1874 provides the basis for this musical comedy set in Vienna during the late 19th-century. It tells the story of a prince who plans an enormous costume ball with Phillip, his good friend. They are holding the ball to get revenge on Alexander, another friend. As the lavish dance begins, comic mayhem ensues. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Carlos Thompson, Willy Millowitsch, (more)
The ever-adventuresome Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger are responsible for the British musical farce Oh, Rosalinda! Set in postwar Vienna, the film stars Michael Redgrave as Colonel Eisenstein, a military officer who because of a little legal misunderstanding must serve a few months in prison. While sitting alone in her sumptuous house, the colonel's wife Rosalinda (Ludmilla Tcherina) is romanced by American officer Alfred Westerman (Mel Ferrer). When the guard assigned to escort Rosalinda to prison marches in, Westerman, hoping to save Rosalinda from disgrace, claims that he's her husband, and winds up in the pokey himself. Later on, Rosalinda attends a costume ball, where she flirts outrageously with her own husband. Sound familiar? It should: Oh, Rosalinda is a modernized version of Johann Strauss' comic opera Die Fledermaus. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Michael Redgrave, Mel Ferrer, (more)
Though made in Germany, this film version of Johann Strauss' comic opera Die Fledermaus was distributed in the U.S. by the Russian firm of Artkino. Such full-throated singing personalities as Marte Harell, Johannes Heesters, Willi Dohm and Haus Brauseweiter go through the time-honored paces of the opera's libretto, wherein an upper-class Viennese gentleman simultaneously tries to avoid arrest and to prove his wife's fidelity. Because of running-time restrictions, the audience is denied the pleasure of the original opera's third-act highlight, wherein the participants are invited to sing their favorite operatic arias, whether written by Strauss or not. Happily, the lengthy, largely ad-libbed scene with Frosch the jailer remains intact, with Willi Fritsch bringing down the house as the bibulous Frosch. The Afgacolor process is cleverly deployed throughout, especially in the scene wherein Rosalind (Marte Harell) dyes her hair a flaming red. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Marte Harell, Johannes Heesters, (more)
The delightful Johann Strauss comic opera Die Fledermaus was mercilessly lampooned in this truly bizarre production. For starters, a framing device has been added: After appearing in 300 consecutive appearances of Fledermaus (which translates as The Bat) the lead tenor (Georg Alexander) imagines that he's seeing bats everywhere. Driven a bit over the edge by all this, he falls asleep and has a nightmare about the opera, with a group of non-singers cast in the leading roles. The original libretto about romantic assignations, political imprisonments and mistaken identity is burlesqued to the hilt: at one point, the hero finds out that his prison cell is surrounded by rubber tubes! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Lida Baarova, Hans Söhnker, (more)
The Gypsy Baron was based on the Johann Strauss operetta of the same name. Set in the early 19th century, the story concerns Sandor Barinkay (Adolf Wohlbreuck), the black-sheep son of a wealthy Hungarian family. Sandor returns home in the guise of a gypsy to reclaim his ancestral estate from an unscrupulous pig farmer (Fritz Kampers). He is also forced to choose between a marriage of convenience with haughty Arsena (Gina Falckenberg) and a more romantic union with gypsy girl Saffi (Hansi Knoteck). Leading man Adolf Wohlbreuck later changed his nom de screen to Anton Walbrook. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Anton Walbrook, Hansi Knoteck, (more)
In this musical, a loose adaptation of Strauss' opera Die Fledermaus, a writer goes to Vienna to supposedly research his new book. Actually he is going to have a few flings. His wife catches on and accosts him at a magnificent costume ball. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Evelyn Laye, Gina Malo, (more)
- Starring:
- Anny Ondra, Georg Alexander, (more)
This musical performance video features Nancy Gustafson, Judith Howarth, and Louis Otey. Conducted by Richard Bonynge, this comic opera by Strauss features the Royal Opera of Covent Garden. ~ All Movie Guide
The Wiener Philharmoniker mounted this production of Johann Strauss's 1874 operetta Die Fledermaus, directed by Otto Schenk and starring Erich Kunz, Gundula Janowitz, Eberhard Wächter and Wolfgang Windgassen. The Wiener Philharmoniker (under the baton of Karl Böhm) and the Wiener Staatsopenchor (under the direction of Norbert Balatsch) provide musical accompaniment. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Eberhard Wächter, Gundula Janowitz, (more)





















