Schalcken the Painter explained

Schalcken the Painter
Director:Leslie Megahey
Screenplay:Leslie Megahey
Paul Humfress
Starring:Jeremy Clyde
Maurice Denham
Cheryl Kennedy
John Justin
Ann Tirard
Anthony Sharp
Cinematography:John Hooper
Editing:Paul Humfress
Studio:BBC
Distributor:BBC
Runtime:68 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

Schalcken the Painter is a 1979 British television horror film based on the 1839 story Strange Event in the Life of Schalken the Painter by Sheridan Le Fanu, and stars Jeremy Clyde as Godfried Schalcken and Maurice Denham as Gerrit Dou. It aired on the BBC as an episode of Omnibus on 23 December 1979, following in the tradition of A Ghost Story for Christmas.

Plot

The painter Godfried Schalcken sees his true love, Rose, the niece of the artist Gerrit Dou, wedded by contract for a large sum of money to Vanderhausen of Rotterdam, a strange and ghostly figure. Filled with dread, Rose begs Schalcken to run off with her to save her from the marriage, but he is cowardly and ambitious and wants to continue his studies with Dou; instead he says he will buy back the marriage contract when he is successful.

The marriage goes ahead as agreed, and nothing is heard of Rose until she escapes some time later and returns home distraught and starving and begging for protection, but she is pursued by her ghostly husband and disappears.

On the death of Dou a melancholy Schalcken lingers in the church after the funeral service, where a terrifying encounter with his former love leaves his senses reeling.[1] [2]

Cast

Production

A fictional tale woven round the lives of actual historic figures,[1] [2] the television film is a 70-minute-long adaptation of Le Fanu's 1839 gothic tale "Strange Event in the Life of Schalken the Painter", directed and adapted by Leslie Megahey.[3] When Megahey was offered the opportunity to oversee Omnibus, the BBC’s long-running arts documentary series, he accepted on condition that he could make Schalcken the Painter. He shot the film in the style of a docudrama, using a minimum of dialogue. Megahey has stated that he was influenced in the making of the film by the Polish director Walerian Borowczyk, whose 1971 film Blanche also shows the fate of a young woman being decided by rich men, without consideration of her feelings or opinions.

Like the earlier Whistle and I'll Come to You, Schalcken the Painter was listed as an episode of Omnibus.[1] It aired on 23 December 1979, filling the slot traditionally taken in previous years by the BBC’s A Ghost Story for Christmas.[4]

The actor Vincent Price was initially considered for the Narrator but it was decided his voice would be "too camp", and Peter Cushing turned down the role as being too dark. Finally the actor Charles Gray was cast. Arthur Lowe of Dad's Army fame was considered for the role of Gerrit Dou, but he was unavailable and the role went instead to Maurice Denham.[5]

The sets and atmospheric lighting used in the film are based on the backgrounds of the paintings by Vermeer.[5] Paintings by Schalcken showing young women holding candles in dark rooms are used throughout the drama, but the final image, again showing a young candlelit woman, but this time with a man in the shadowy background drawing his sword, was created for the film, based on the style of Schalcken.[5]

Megahey subsequently used the same narrative device of combining historical figures with the paintings of the lead subject on the 1987 production Cariani and the Courtesans.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Angelini, Sergio . Retrieved 2014-11-10.
  2. http://www.screenonline.org.uk/tv/id/1154981/synopsis.html Synopsis of Schalcken the Painter
  3. Schalcken The Painter at the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2014-11-10
  4. https://www.bfi.org.uk/features/why-i-love-schalcken-painter Fuller, Graham 'Why I love... Schalcken the Painter'
  5. Interview with Leslie Megahey on the Schalcken the Painter DVD extras