| Raconteur, TV personality,
concert pianist, self-described "verbal vampire" and sometime supporting
player in films. Levant had originally planned a career as a concert pianist
but, after playing in dance bands and becoming George Gershwin's protege,
he devoted himself to interpreting the composer's works and, utilizing
his own eccentric personality, played character parts or more accurately
variations on his own character in films. He did, however, enjoy considerable
success as a concert pianist and, at one point in the 1940s, was the highest
paid concert artist in the US. Levant's film appearances, too, whether
they were musicals or not, usually gave him a chance to play a piano as
well. A chain-smoking neurotic and self-professed genius, Levant was noted
for his mordant, scathing wit and finely honed insults often hurled against
himself and his own hypochondria, manic depression and addictions.
Oscar Levant's mercurial personality can be
summed up by two of his most oft-repeated witticisms: the self-aggrandizing
"In some moments I was difficult, in odd moments impossible, in rare moments
loathsome, but at my best unapproachably great;" and the self-deprecating
"I am the world's oldest child prodigy." The son of a Pittsburgh repairman,
Oscar Levant went to New York at 16 to study music under such masters as
Stojowski, Schoenberg and Schillinger. Before reaching his 20th birthday,
he had gained renown as a concert pianist, teacher, band leader and composer.
He played a minor role in the stage play Burlesque, repeating this assignment
in the 1929 film version The Dance of Life. During his first visit to Hollywood,
Levant befriended George Gershwin; his friendship approached idolatry,
and by the mid-1930s Levant was perhaps the greatest interpreter of Gershwin's
works in the world. The relationship had a profound effect on Levant's
own compositions, as witness his "Rhapsody in Blue"-like score for the
1937 film Nothing Sacred. Not that he was limited to any one musical style:
he composed a faux Italian opera, Carnival, for the 1936 "B"-picture Charlie
Chan at the Opera.
A perceptive musical theorist, Levant often
wrote upon the art of composing for films; it was he who coined the phrase
"Mickey Mousing," in reference to movie scores that slavishly commented
upon the action. The longer he stayed in Hollywood, the more he became
famous as a "character" rather than a musician. The public first became
aware of Levant's acidic erudition when he began popping up on the Information
Please radio program. From 1940 onward, he spent more and more time on-screen
as an actor. His most fondly remembered film credits include Humoresque
(1945), Rhapsody in Blue (1945), The Barkeleys of Broadway (1949) and O.
Henry's Full House (1952), in which he co-starred with Fred Allen in the
"Ransom of Red Chief" segment. He was at his best in two classic MGM musicals:
An American in Paris (1951), wherein he appears in a dream sequence, playing
every member of the orchestra in a performance of Gershwin's "Concerto
in F;" and The Band Wagon (1953), in which he and Nanette Fabray play characters
patterned on Adolph Green and Betty Comden.
While he retained his popularity and circle
of friends into the 1960s, Levant's mood swings and increasingly erratic
behavior began having professional repercussions. He was nearly banned
from television after making a few scatological references concerning a
prominent film actress during a 1960 telecast of his LA-based talk show.
As time went on, only late-night host Jack Paar would risk having Levant
as a guest, and when Paar left TV in 1965, so, for all intents and purposes,
did Levant. In and out of rest homes and mental institutions during his
last two decades (his final film, 1955's Cobweb, was significantly set
in a sanitarium), he became dependent upon pain-killers and other prescription
drugs. Despite his deteriorating physical and mental condition, he was
able to turn out three superb autobiographical works, A Smattering of Ignorance,
The Unimportance of Being Oscar and The Memoirs of an Amnesiac. Oscar Levant
died of a heart attack in 1972 at the age of 66.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide |