All posts by Joe Rinaudo

Travel Back in Time with Silent Movie Night at Two Strike Park

EXTRA! EXTRA! Professor Rinaudo makes front page news at Crescenta Valley Weekly:

Silent Movie Night at Two Strike Park – print

Projectionist Joe Rinaudo will bring his vintage equipment to Two Strike Park to share films from the past.

By Joanna KIM, intern
Crescenta Valley Weekly 

With the digitalization of movies and videos in the modern age, silent films of the 1920s and ’30s are often forgotten. Joe Rinaudo, a local silent cinema historian and founder of Silent Cinema Society, is on a mission to preserve these early films by putting on shows for children and adults in parks and museums.

Rinaudo works with the Library of Congress and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to present early films to younger generations. He restored a 1909 Powers 35mm motion picture machine hand-crank and runs the movies as they were over 100 years ago.

Back when motion pictures were not readily available, projectionists traveled to small towns with hand-crank projectors and pianos and provided the townsfolk with entertainment. Rinaudo hopes to resurrect these old projectors and allow children to enjoy these once-adored silent films.

“The kids today have always viewed things on video or on a disk … but with events like this, they’re able to see something that their great-grandparents were seeing in the 1920s in their teens,” Rinaudo says.

On Aug. 5, Rinaudo and the Historical Society of Crescenta Valley are hosting a silent movie night at Two Strike Park beginning around 8 p.m.

“We bring our huge screen, like you would have done back in the ’20s, and have live pianist Cliff Rettalick,” Rinaudo said. “We set the projector up, and we do a show just like you would have a hundred years ago.”

The idea of hosting a silent movie in the park was the brainchild of Joanna Linckhorst and Mike Lawler, both members of the Historical Society of Crescenta Valley.

“[The HSCV] had done a movie night in Two Strike Park years ago celebrating [actor Dennis Morgan], who founded the park,” Linckhorst said.

Joe Rinaudo is known by the Historical Society.

“We have a real treasure in our community in Joe Rinaudo,” said Lawler. “Joe is a living history.”

The Historical Society tries to bring a sense of amazement that keeps audiences coming back for more, like in those early days of Hollywood.

“In the Crescenta Valley, we’re close to Hollywood. This silent movie presentation shows us how Hollywood was born,” Lawler said. “Many of these silent movies were shot nearby. It’s fun to watch the backgrounds and try to guess where they were filmed.”

Attendance to the movies is free. Attendees should bring a chair or blanket to sit on. There will, of course, be popcorn and bake sale items available for a donation.

Two Strike Park is located at 5107 Rosemont Ave. in La Crescenta.

“Everyone seems to like [the event]. We get them showing up earlier for good seats and more people [attend] each time,” Linkchorst said.

The show is kid-friendly, the admission is free, and baked goods and popcorns will be on sale. So bring your picnic blankets and folding chairs to Two Strike Park and travel back in time to the 1920s with Joe Rinaudo.

The movie titles have yet to be announced.

The HSCV survives on donations. Anyone who would like to help can do so by donating at the event or at www.cvhistory.org

Highlights from our last show with orchestra

Here are highlights from our recent “The Golden Age of Silent Comedy”, a screening of classic comedies from the silent era, presented Saturday, June 10th, 2017, in Burbank, California.

The films were accompanied by a period musical score performed live by The Famous Players Orchestra under the direction of Scott Lasky. For the first time ever there were sound effects to go with the films, performed by Mr. Gary Gibson.

Pay Day (1922) starring Charles Chaplin:

A Pair of Tights (1929) starring Marion Byron, Anita Garvin and Edgar Kennedy:

Hope to see you next time. Subscribe so you don’t miss our announcements of special events.

Sat. June 10: “Golden Age of Silent Comedy” with Live Orchestra

REMINDER SATURDAY JUNE 10 REMINDER 


Charles Chaplin


REMINDER SATURDAY JUNE 10 REMINDER

Famous Players Orchestra
presents:

“The Golden Age of Silent Comedy”
Saturday, June 10th, 2017 at 7:30 p.m.

Join us Saturday, June 10th, 2017 as we present “The Golden Age of Silent Comedy”, a screening of four classic comedies from the silent era.


To start the evening off, Mr. Stan Taffel and Mr. Scott Lasky will take you through the process of how the orchestra is used to make the films on the screen come alive musically.

For the first time ever there will be sound effects to go with the films. Mr. Gary Gibson is the sound effects man.


Included on the program will be:

Why Pick on Me? (1918) starring Harold Lloyd, Bebe Daniels and Snub Pollard
Pay Day (1922) starring Charles Chaplin
A Pair of Tights (1929) starring Marion Byron, Anita Garvin and Edgar Kennedy
The Show (1922) starring Larry Semon and Oliver Hardy

The films will be accompanied by a period musical score performed live by The Famous Players Orchestra under the direction of Scott Lasky. Mr.  Lasky has created original scores using period music. He has spent many, many days researching and compiling/creating period scores for each of the four films to be screened.

Your Master of Ceremonies will be film historian Mr. Stan Taffel.

Joe Rinaudo will project 35mm film on an original hand-cranked Power’s 1909 Cameragragh Model 6 Motion Picture Machine, assisted by Mr. Gary Gibson

Mr. Shane Glander will be providing the screen. Mr. Gary Lacher will be on hand to video document the evening.


Showtime is 7:30pm. Doors open at 6:45pm. Program will include a 30 minute intermission and raffle with prizes. Concessions will be available.

Admission is $15 (suggested donation). Tickets may be purchased at the door beginning approximately one hour before showtime, or in advance online here:

Order Tickets Here

The venue is: Christ Lutheran Church, 2400 West Burbank Blvd, Burbank, CA 91505. It is located on the southeast corner of Burbank Blvd and Buena Vista St, directly behind the Dunn Edwards paint store, and right in the heart of beautiful downtown Burbank.

Thank you to everyone for attending our past shows and for your continued support! It is so greatly appreciated!


ABOUT FAMOUS PLAYERS ORCHESTRA

In the final decades of the silent film era (1910 -1929), a new and original art form was burgeoning. During this period, a vast and beautiful repertoire of film music was being created by gifted composers who saw a great future in the new medium. Movie theaters of the day commonly utilized orchestras to provide film accompaniment for their premium showings. These theaters typically housed massive libraries of this music, (known at the time as “photoplay” music) for use as film accompaniment. However, the advent of “talkies” in 1929, preceded by the Movietone and Vitaphone systems, would eventually bring the demise of live film accompaniment. Thus, as movie theaters converted over to sound, these music libraries became obsolete almost overnight and most of the music was discarded in the process. And since photoplay music was rarely recorded, and the composers mostly unknown, this important chapter in cinema history was swept away into obscurity and has remained practically forgotten.

Famous Players Orchestra is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization whose charitable mission is dedicated to reviving and preserving this charming and long forgotten music through live performances and new recording projects. For its repertoire, Famous Players Orchestra draws upon the original orchestrations used by silent era movie theater orchestras in its live presentations and recordings. The ensemble is comprised of professional musicians based in the Los Angeles area.

Your support is appreciated! Your generous contributions help us to continue our work in reviving and preserving this musical treasure from cinema’s past. Donations are easily accepted using paypal. Thank you!

Visit the FAMOUS PLAYERS ORCHESTRA Website