Current:Home > ScamsBradley Cooper's 'Maestro' fully captures Bernstein's charisma and complexity -PureWealth Academy
Bradley Cooper's 'Maestro' fully captures Bernstein's charisma and complexity
View
Date:2025-04-17 02:57:34
We're in the thick of year-end movie season, or, as I've come to think of it, biopic season, when some of our finest actors line up to deliver their most Oscar-friendly feats of historical impersonation.
Right now you can see Rustin on Netflix, starring Colman Domingo as the civil rights activist Bayard Rustin. This week also brings Joaquin Phoenix in Napoleon, and next month, keep an eye out for Adam Driver in Ferrari, playing the founder of the Italian sports-car empire.
One of this year's strongest biopics is Maestro, an exquisite new drama starring Bradley Cooper as the conductor and composer Leonard Bernstein. Cooper, who also directed and co-wrote the movie with Josh Singer, gives a dazzling multi-decade arc of a performance.
We first see Bernstein near the end of his life, playing a somber piano piece from his opera A Quiet Place and remembering his late wife, the actor Felicia Montealegre. The movie then flashes back to 1943, when a 20-something Lenny makes his electrifying Carnegie Hall debut, guest-conducting the New York Philharmonic — his first step toward becoming the most famous conductor in American history.
Cooper captures Lenny's brilliant musical mind, his gregarious energy and his intense attractiveness to both men and women. Matt Bomer gives a brief but poignant turn as the clarinetist David Oppenheim, one of his many lovers. It's around this time that Lenny meets Felicia, who's just getting started as a New York stage actor; she's played, superbly, by Carey Mulligan.
This early stretch of the movie was shot in black-and-white by Matthew Libatique, whose marvelously fluid camerawork conveys Lenny and Felicia's boundless sense of possibility. One playful sequence uses a musical number from Bernstein's own On the Town to capture both Lenny's attraction to men and his very real feelings for Felicia.
In time, Lenny and Felicia marry, buy a house in Connecticut and raise three children; meanwhile, Lenny continues to have affairs. As the years pass, the black-and-white shifts to color and the once-freewheeling camerawork slows to a melancholy crawl. Even as Lenny's career flourishes, the cracks in his and Felicia's marriage are widening.
The beauty of Maestro is that it sees the complexity, the tragedy and the undeniable passion and tenderness of the Bernsteins' relationship. Crucially, it gives both leads equal dramatic weight; like Cooper's 2018 directing debut, A Star Is Born, this is a remarkably even portrait of a complicated showbiz marriage. It even strives for balance in the way it presents both characters as artists.
Unsurprisingly, the movie can only squeeze in a handful of Bernstein's creative highlights, whether it's dropping in a bit of the West Side Story score or a reference to his famously polarizing 1971 theater piece, Mass. But there are also glimpses of Felicia's acting career, including her appearance on the arts anthology series Camera Three, shortly before she's diagnosed with cancer.
Mulligan, who receives top billing, gives one of her best and most piercing performances. She fully captures Felicia's anger at her husband's philandering, her frustration at having to dwell in his artistic shadow, and her persistent love for him despite his exasperating flaws.
Cooper plays Lenny as a fount of energy, charming and irrepressible. At times there is something a little overly imitative about the actor's mannerisms, especially during Lenny's later years. But this is still a complex and persuasive performance; crucially, Cooper doesn't soft-pedal the character's selfishness or his failings as a husband and father.
When the trailer for Maestro was first released, there was controversy around Cooper's decision to wear a prosthetic nose, raising questions about, among other things, whether non-Jewish actors, like Cooper, should play Jewish characters. That debate won't be resolved here, but it's worth noting that Cooper employs many cosmetic enhancements to play Bernstein over roughly five decades, and his performance is too rich to be reduced to just one detail. In the end, we believe Cooper not just because of any physical resemblance, but because he so fully captures Lenny's charisma, the way his love for music and for people seems to flow out of him.
We don't see him do much actual conducting until late in the movie, when Cooper re-creates a famous 1976 Bernstein performance with the London Symphony Orchestra at Ely Cathedral. The piece is Mahler's Symphony No. 2, often known as his Resurrection Symphony — fitting for a sequence in which Bernstein, pouring sweat and waving his baton, really does seem to live again.
veryGood! (69148)
Related
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- How Auditing Giant KPMG Became a Global Sustainability Leader While Serving Companies Accused of Forest Destruction
- Barbenheimer opening weekend raked in $235.5 million together — but Barbie box office numbers beat Oppenheimer
- Destroying ‘Forever Chemicals’ is a Technological Race that Could Become a Multibillion-dollar Industry
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Rob Kardashian Makes Subtle Return to The Kardashians in Honor of Daughter Dream
- 4 reasons why now is a good time to buy an electric vehicle
- Minnesota Is Poised to Pass an Ambitious 100 Percent Clean Energy Bill. Now About Those Incinerators…
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Khloe Kardashian Defends Blac Chyna From Twisted Narrative About Co-Parenting Dream Kardashian
Ranking
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- What’s the Future of Gas Stations in an EV World?
- Drowning Deaths Last Summer From Flooding in Eastern Kentucky’s Coal Country Linked to Poor Strip-Mine Reclamation
- EPA Announces $27 Billion Effort to Curb Emissions and Stem Environmental Injustices. Advocates Say It’s a Good Start
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- What Lego—Yes, Lego—Can Teach Us About Avoiding Energy Project Boondoggles
- A Rare Plant Got Endangered Species Protection This Week, but Already Faces Threats to Its Habitat
- Gov. Moore Commits Funding for 67 Hires in Maryland’s Embattled Environment Department, Hoping to Fix Wastewater Treatment Woes
Recommendation
Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
Tesla board members to return $735 million amid lawsuit they overpaid themselves
Outrage over man who desecrated Quran prompts protesters to set Swedish Embassy in Iraq on fire
Patrick Mahomes Is Throwing a Hail Mary to Fellow Parents of Toddlers
DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
Pittsburgh Selects Sustainable Startups Among a New Crop of Innovative Businesses
How Willie Geist Celebrated His 300th Episode of Sunday TODAY With a Full Circle Moment
Maryland Embraces Gradual Transition to Zero-Emissions Trucks and Buses