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The
National Film Preservation Foundation has awarded CFA funding
to preserve three Don B. Klugman films: Nightsong,
Ive Got This Problem, and Youre Putting
Me On.
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Nightsong
is a rare and unique portrait of the Chicago Near-North folk
club and nightlife scene in the mid-1960s, its real
significance lying in its critical depiction of the racial
and sexual tensions present in mid-1960s Chicago. The
story centers around the struggles and romantic desires of
the films protagonist, long-forgotten African-American
folk sensation Willie Wright. The backdrop of Nightsong is
the vibrant folk and nightclub scene in Chicago in the mid-1960s,
and the film features rare exterior and interior footage of
legendary hot spots such as The Fickle Pickle, Mr. Kellys,
the Kismet Club, the Esquire, and the Tender Trap. Nightsong
contains what is likely the only extant performance footage
of Willie Wright, an African-American performer who crossed
from the doo-wop and soul music scenes of Chicagos South
Side into the Near-North sides burgeoning folk music
community. Wright, who gives an incredibly charming and heartfelt
performance both on stage and as the films protagonist,
a man struggling for respect and survival as an African-American
artist in a primarily white musical genre and neighborhood,
achieved a small amount of recognition in the 1960s
for his folk performances, but quickly fell into obscurity.
Wrights
roots were in the Chicago doo-wop scene, and he got his start
playing in a group that formed out of Cabrini Green called
the Medallionaires. After having not succeeded in three successive
doo-wop groups, Wright decided that there had to be a better
way. Since folk music had become all the rage in the mid-1960s,
and with the remarkable success of black performers such as
Harry Belafonte, Josh White, Odetta, and John Lee Hooker singing
folk music in coffeehouses, Wright decided that he would become
a folk singer too. His decision was aided by Chloe Hoffman,
who, according to the Chicago Defender, suggested that he
try folk music. Hoffman provided him with a guitar and some
albums of folk songs and Willie returned three months later
a selfmade folk singer. Willie Wright is the glowing
focal point of Nightsong, and while he released two
self-titled folk albums on local labels in the late 1960s,
hasnt performed since the early 1970s when he
was severely disabled, losing the use of both of his legs.
Nightsong
won the Coupe Kodak-Pathe prize at Cannes in 1965,
was named one of the Ten Best Winners in the Amateur
Cinema Leagues 1964 International Film and Video Festival,
and was acknowledged at the time of its release for its extraordinary
and expressive use of color.
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Ive
Got This Problem, released in 1966, was a collaborative
production between Don Klugman, Ron Clasky, Judy Harris, Josephine
Forsberg, and Mike Shea, among others (gathered under Klugmans
production group The Problem Company). The film
was formerly distributed by Walter Reade, CCM, and Films Incorporated,
won awards at the Cork, Edinburgh, Mannheim, Melbourne, Sydney,
and American Film Festivals, and screened in theatrical release
in the United States before Peter Watkins The War
Game.
Ive
Got This Problem traces the development of a romantic
relationship between a young man and woman (played by Klugman
and Judy Harris) who meet in a downtown Chicago coffee shop.
Their unconventional attraction to one another is based in
their mutual ability to analyze each others actions,
which range from the quotidian (whether or not to have sugar,
and how many lumps, in ones coffee)
to the
psycho-sexual (relayed in his remembered Oedipal dreams and
her guilt-ridden dates with Ferrari-driving playboys). The
non-stop dialogue between the couple fluctuates between playful
psychobabble and sincere attempts to relay their innermost
feelings and sense of displacement in modern society. The
films humor is based in their relentless self-analysis
and superficial adaptation of the tropes of psychoanalysis,
yet this overt criticism of the popularity of psychoanalytic
discourse in the mid-century is matched by the ridiculous
futility of Klugman and Harris sincere attempts to analyze
the greater ills of society by means of a conscious turn inward.
In keeping with the films movement between humor and
a more serious criticism of the role of psychoanalysis in
the public consciousness, the film intercuts between shots
of the couple talking, and scenes of them interacting in 1960s
Chicago.
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Youre
Putting Me On, released in 1969, traces the
same aesthetic style, themes, and criticism of pop psycho-analysis
present in Youre Putting Me On, and seems to
pick up the same couple, again played by Klugman and Harris,
a few years into their relationship. It was also produced
by Klugmans The Problem Company, previously
distributed by Walter Reade and Radim, won awards at the Cork,
Edinburgh, and Sydney Film Festivals, and screened in theatrical
release in the United States before Michelangelo Antonionis
Blowup.
Youre
Putting Me On follows the young couple from a car to the
streets of Chicago, and finally into a swinging 1960s
bohemian party - complete with a bearded, pipe-smoking bouncer,
scientific-discourse espousing priest, and a meditating enlightened
soul wearing only sunglasses, underwear, and knee socks.
The couples non-stop self-analytical
psycho-babble is taken a step further in this film, as they
prattle on about their fears of everyday activities such as
driving, and the overwhelming complexity of mechanized objects
such as lipstick tubes. Their incessant, free-association
style dialogue centers around their desire for real emotional
connections and difficulties in achieving true intimacy. As
the two encounter the party-goers, they pocket various personal
items from them including a lighter from the priest
and the wallet of a young, self-absorbed, neurotic sex-kitten.
Youre Putting Me On ends with the couple, still
engaged in analysis, talking in bed about the difficulty of
overcoming the obstacle of a rumpled sheet that separates
their two bodies. Combining a sense of humor and social criticism
similar to that in Ive Got This Problem, Youre
Putting Me On pushes Klugmans comedic commentary
on the inability (or unwillingness) of young people to move
beyond self-absorption into the realm of political activism
to new and outrageous heights.
Nightsong,
Ive Got This Problem and Youre Putting
Me On, are extraordinary examples of experimental films
made by a director who is primarily known for commercial,
industrial, and educational filmmaking. Mr. Klugman currently
teaches presentation skills and commercial production at Columbia
College in Chicago, and has worked as a producer, scriptwriter,
director, cameraman, and stage manager for various films and
audio-visual corporations. He earned a Masters Degree
in Cinema and Television at the University of Southern California,
and his films, Ive Got This Problem and Youre
Putting Me On, have won awards at Cork, Edinburgh, Mannheim,
Melbourne, Sydney, and The American Film Festival. Nightsongs
producer, Marv Gold, was extremely active in the local Chicago
experimental and commercial film community in the 1960s.
Nightsong also features rare early footage of Second
City performer Avery Schreiber, who went on to work with Jack
Burns in the comedy duo Burns and Schreiber.
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