The Art of Amália explained

The Art of Amália
Director:Bruno de Almeida
Starring:Amália Rodrigues
Cinematography:Mustapha Barrat
Editing:João Asensio
Runtime:90 minutes
Country:Portugal, United States
Language:English

The Art of Amália is a documentary by Bruno de Almeida on the artistic career of Amália Rodrigues (1920–1999), the celebrated Fado singer from Portugal. The 90-minute film is based on a previous five-hour made-for-television mini-series on the singer that dealt with her life and career; it was also de Almeida’s fourth cinematic project celebrating Rodrigues’ career.[1] The film opens with an on-screen introduction by David Byrne, who praises the singer for “singing in these fado songs about the sadness of the universe, not only about a personal sadness or a tragedy in her own life or in the writer's life, but she was expressing the sadness of existence."[2] The Art of Amália mixes rare film, television and concert footage from different periods of Rodrigues’ career. The film also presents a previously thought lost clip of a rare appearance (billed only as “Amália”) on U.S. television in 1953, where she performed her hit song "Coimbra" (better known to U.S. audiences in the English-language version "April in Portugal").[1]

The Art of Amália also includes the last filmed interview by Rodrigues, who died one week before production was completed.

The film had its U.S. premiere in March 2000 at a United Nations benefit, and its theatrical premiere in New York in December 2000. A DVD was released 2004.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Film Threat interview with Bruno de Almeida . Filmthreat.com . 2000-05-15 . 2017-02-25.
  2. http://www.nitrateonline.com/2000/rAmália.html Nitrate Online review of the film
  3. Web site: Amália Rodrigues – The Art Of Amália . discogs.com . 2019-05-23.