Don Byron

Películas

Joe Papp in Five Acts
Music
Joe Papp, the founder of the New York Shakespeare Festival and, subsequently, The Public Theater—arguably the most important theatre in North America—is profiled in this documentary that neither sanctifies nor vilifies him. He brought us free Shakespeare in the Park, Hair and A Chorus Line, and nurtured many of America’s greatest playwrights, directors and actors. His complex personality and mercurial behavior are much in evidence and spoken of with frankness through interviews with some of America’s most celebrated artists, including Meryl Streep, Christopher Walken, Martin Sheen, Kevin Kline, and James Earl Jones.
Lulu on the Bridge
Tyrone Lord
Esta película trata de un famoso saxofonista de jazz, Izzy, cuya vida cambia para siempre después de que le disparan accidentalmente.
Kansas City
Hey-Hey Club Musician: Clarinet / Baritone Saxophone
1934. Kansas City es una ciudad dominada por la mafia y convulsionada por los crímenes, el racismo y la lucha política. Mientras tanto, los clientes del Hey-Hey Club asisten a otra clase de lucha: la de la primacía en el mundo del jazz.
A Jumpin' Night in the Garden of Eden
Himself
A Jumpin' Night in the Garden of Eden was the first film to document the klezmer revival, tracing the efforts of two founding groups, Kapelye and Boston's Klezmer Conservatory Band, to recover the lost history of klezmer music. For nearly a millennium, this vigorous and soulful music was part of the celebration of Jewish life in Eastern Europe. In the early decades of this century, the music took root in America. Klezmer musicians learned hundreds of tunes by ear and their ears were open to Gypsy, Ukrainian and Greek melodies of the old world, as well as to the new sounds of American jazz. Music born in Eastern Europe lived on in the imaginations of composers for New York's Yiddish theater, men whose tunes entered the mainstream through such unlikely adapters as the Andrew Sisters. Eventually Klezmer went underground as its audience assimilated into mainstream American culture.