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Anton Karas

 
Artist: Anton Karas
  • Country: Austria
  • Born: July 07, 1906 in Vienna, Austria
  • Died: January 10, 1985 in Vienna, Austria

Biography

But for a chance encounter with filmmaker Carol Reed, Anton Karas might've spent his life anonymously playing his zither in Vienna's taverns; instead, he ended up the world's most renowned virtuoso on the instrument. Born the son of an automobile worker in 1906, Karas picked up the zither, a stringed instrument bearing a slight resemblance to an autoharp, at age 12, and by his mid-teens was playing in Vienna's taverns. He lived quietly through the ensuing decades of economic depression, forced Nazi annexation, and war, marrying and raising a family on his income from tips. It was on a visit to a wine garden that Reed heard Karas' playing -- the director was in Vienna preparing his upcoming thriller The Third Man and had yet to decide on how it would be scored, except that he would not use Strauss waltzes. Karas was chosen to provide the music for the movie and Reed took him to London. In the finished film, his music ran continuously over virtually every shot and scene -- the strings of a zither being plucked were even seen close up in the opening credits -- and audiences all over the world fell in love with his title theme, a gently lilting, sentimental, yet jaunty piece that he'd written in the 1920s. No record label was interested in issuing the music ahead of the movie, but after the movie opened, requests began pouring in and Decca/London Records recorded Karas. The single of The Third Man Theme (aka "The Harry Lime Theme") sold half a million copies in England alone and the subsequent 10" and 12" LPs and of Karas' work also did well. The music was also able to pave the way for the movie's 1950 release in America, where it became a huge hit. Karas had returned to Vienna after his work was done and was astonished to receive requests for concert appearances in England and the United States. He toured in the 1950s and recorded other albums, none of which sold as well as his work associated with the movie. By the early '50s, Karas was able to afford a wine house of his own, where he performed for pleasure. He spent the rest of his life a beloved celebrity in Vienna, delighting audiences with zither performances that, to their surprise, were usually heavy on Viennese waltzes and operetta themes by Strauss, Millöcker, Zeller, Kálmán, and Lehár, saving the Third Man Theme for last. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide

Discography

Anton Karas

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Anton Karas: The First Man of the Zither

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Around the World

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Zither Magic

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Actor: Anton Karas
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  • Born: 1906
  • Died: 1985
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '40s-'50s, '90s
  • Major Genres: Romance, Musical
  • Career Highlights: The Third Man, A Hundred and One Nights
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Third Man (1949)

Biography

Composer Anton Karas didn't so much break into films as much as find himself pushed when he was performing in a tavern one night and filmmaker Carol Reed happened to stop in. Liking Kara's unaccompanied zither playing very much, Reed insisted that Karas compose the theme music for his newest film The Third Man. Karas accepted, and both his music and the film became classics. Karas earned enough money from the film to buy his own tavern. In addition to performing there, Karas also occasionally recorded albums. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Anton Karas
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Karas on a 1951 autograph card.

Anton Karas (July 7, 1906, Zwischenbrücken – January 10, 1985) was a Viennese zither player, best known for his soundtrack to Carol Reed's 1949 adaptation of The Third Man ([1]).

Being one of five children of a factory worker, Anton Karas was already keen on music as a child. He desired to become a band leader, which due to the family's financial situation was impossible. However, he was allowed to learn to play an instrument, as were his two brothers and two sisters. He later reported that his first own zither was one he found in his grandmother's attic, at the age of 12.

As ordered by his father, he started an apprenticeship as a tool and die maker at the age of 14, while also taking music evening courses at a private institution. He successfully finished his apprenticeship in 1924 and worked in a car factory until being unemployed in January 1925. As he had already begun to study at the University of Music and Performing Arts, Vienna in 1924, he subsequently earned his living as an entertainer in a Heuriger (Viennese Wine Bar, typically with a garden) and soon found himself earning more income than his father. He continued his studies until 1928.

In 1930, he was married, followed by the birth of his daughter three months later. From 1939–1945 he was with German Wehrmacht anti-aircraft warfare, temporarily in Russia, where he also took a zither along. He lost more than one instrument due to war action, but always managed somehow to find another one.

In 1948, director Carol Reed was preparing to shoot The Third Man in Vienna and decided to have Karas playing the zither for the soundtrack.[2] Reluctant Karas was invited to London and lived with Reed while composing the score, and at that time was drawing a considerable salary of 30 GBP a week, plus 20 in pocket money, with expenses. The soundtrack was created in Korda's London Films studios, and Karas, who was homesick most of the time, worked up to 14 hours a day for twelve weeks: He had not been a composer before, but a great performer, and added improvisations to his repertoire. Later, Karas would mention that Reed almost "kept him like a slave" when he wanted to go back to Vienna more than once.

The film, not least due to its music, turned into a gigantic success which changed Karas' life.[3] As a result, he toured all over the world and performed for many celebrities, among them members of the British Royal family (Princess Margaret had invited him to London's fashionable Empress Club, where he played twice a week during his stay at London), Juliana of the Netherlands, members of the Swedish royal family, and Pope Pius XII ([4]).

By the end of 1949, a half million copies of "The Harry Lime Theme" had been sold, an unprecedented amount for the time. The success of the score also caused a surge in zither sales.

In Austria, the film opened on March 10, 1950 in Vienna's Apollo Kino, and it initially offended some Viennese inhabitants, as it focused on the disgrace of the destroyed city. Vienna's newspaper critics hated the film, except for its music.[5] When Karas returned to Austria after his first world tour in July 1950, he was welcomed by chancellor Leopold Figl and other members of the government. Most importantly, the public liked the film. In Brigittenau, where Karas was born, people queued for tickets which were sold out eight days in advance.

Karas, however, disliked all of the glamour: "I never was a star, and never felt like one. It is because of that film that I was pushed from one place to the other ... My only desire was to be back home again." he stated later. However, he went on tour again in 1951, travelling to Montreal and Las Vegas, followed by a number of other tours, including Japan in 1962, 1969 and 1972, where he performed for emperor Hirohito.

In 1954, he opened his own Heuriger which immediately was fashionable under Hollywood celebrities like Orson Welles, Gina Lollobrigida, Curd Jürgens, Hans Moser, Paul Hörbiger, Marika Röck or Johannes Heesters; therefore becoming a tourist attraction. However, he was still not satisfied, as he would have preferred to perform for locals who would understand him, his language and music. Because of this he retired and retreated from the limelight in 1966. Quote: "I'm not a tourist guy, and what I did there hadn't hardly anything to do with 'Vienna Heuriger'".

References

  1. ^ The Third Man in You Tube [1]
  2. ^ Where and how Reed and Karas met, is not sure. There are a couple of versions, and therefore most of them are legends.
  3. ^ "Wherever the film is shown you can almost see the procession from cinema to gramophone shop. In its first three weeks sales have reached 100,000." (The Continental Daily Mail quoted by Ulrike Granögger, p.84.)
  4. ^ Karas Biography by Peter Payer, P. 13 [2]
  5. ^ "Der Sieveringer Zithervirtuose hat den Streifen kompositorisch untermalt und ersetzt mit seinem Instrument wirkungsvoll ein Orchester. Er beherrscht die Zither mit einer Virtuosität, die aller Anerkennung würdig ist." (Die Presse, 1950-3-11) Rough translation: "The zither-virtuoso from Sievering has composed his accompaniments for the film and effectively replaces, with his instrument, a whole orchestra. He plays the zither with a virtuosity that is praiseworthy."

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Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Anton Karas" Read more

 

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