Thursday, April 9, 2026
Viva Verdi! (2024)
This documentary has a song that was nominated for Best Song in the 2026 Academy Awards--which it did not win, but I liked the song far more than the winner.
This is a documentary which
follows the lives of artists after their careers end but not before their lives end. Situated in Milan, the cradle of art, retired opera singers and musicians live together in harmony at Casa Verdi, a neo-Gothic sanctuary commissioned by Giuseppe Verdi in 1898 to honor artists who devoted their lives to music and the arts.
The documentary opens to the soaring strains of La Traviata, the curtains opening to a quotation that captures the spirit of a compassionate humanist devoted music lover: “Among my works, the one I like best is the Home that I’ve built in Milan for accommodating old singers not favored by fortune.” The premise of his deed was simple: during Verdi’s time, there were no pensions for artists; they were sadly left to their own devices. Devoting one’s life to art was therefore a courageous choice, reliant on hard work and luck, and Verdi sought to host all of those who had dared to follow their artistic passions.
The cinematography in Viva Verdi! is both intimate and evocative, capturing the soul of Casa Verdi and its residents with a painterly touch. This visual approach creates a warm and immersive atmosphere that reflects the enduring and unifying brilliance of music, shared across generations.
Through their personal stories, we traverse time, theaters, countries, and librettos. A wide range of nationalities mingle in Casa Verdi, telling intimate chronicles marked by success and ovations, disappointments, loss, and discrimination. Most of all, the film shows how a love for music and performing does not end when the paychecks cease. Even though most of the performers in the film have died by the time it came out, you can see that they were engaged in activies they loved to the end.
Labels:
Academy Award Nominee,
Artist,
Documentary,
Movie Review
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