IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2.3K
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An intimate look at the life and work of Greek-American opera singer Maria Callas, as told in her own words.An intimate look at the life and work of Greek-American opera singer Maria Callas, as told in her own words.An intimate look at the life and work of Greek-American opera singer Maria Callas, as told in her own words.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 1 nomination total
Joyce DiDonato
- María Callas
- (voice)
Maria Callas
- Self
- (archive footage)
David Frost
- Self
- (archive footage)
Edward R. Murrow
- Self
- (archive footage)
Elvira de Hidalgo
- Self
- (archive footage)
Rudolf Bing
- Self
- (archive footage)
Aristotle Onassis
- Self
- (archive footage)
Giovanni Battista Meneghini
- Self
- (archive footage)
Bernard Gavoty
- Self
- (archive footage)
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
- Self
- (archive footage)
Pier Paolo Pasolini
- Self
- (archive footage)
Omar Sharif
- Self
- (archive footage)
Barbara Walters
- Self
- (archive footage)
Brigitte Bardot
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Jean Cocteau
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Vittorio De Sica
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Catherine Deneuve
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Greetings again from the darkness. These days, it's inconceivable for anyone under 40 years old to think there was a time when the general public knew very little of the private life of celebrities - even those of whom they were dedicated fans. Today, it's not uncommon for celebrities to pre-package their life, delivering behind-the-scenes details that far too many people care about. Madonna, Justin Bieber, Taylor Swift and Jennifer Lopez are just a few that have simultaneously tried to appease and manipulate fans into a feeling that they really know the person behind the superstar facade - and perhaps fulfill a fantasy of some common ground. Even more prevalent are the biopics, either in the form of a documentary (WHITNEY: CAN I BE ME) or dramatization (RAY).
Filmmaker Tom Volf realizes that the great Opera singer Maria Callas was known for two things: being a world class soprano/actress and for being difficult to work with ... the ultimate diva, one might say. Working with narrator and noted mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato, the film expertly reinforces those two traits, and even adds a new label: narcissist. It does so by using (as the title suggests) Maria Callas' own words taken from interviews, letters to friends, and personal diary entries.
The Greek-American Opera singer/actress was born in Brooklyn to Greek immigrants, and, as a teenager, moved to Athens with her mother and sister after her parents' marriage fell apart. Director Volf uses a BBC TV interview with David Frost to provide a framing structure to the film, but there are also clips of other interviews shown, and of course, Ms. DiDonato's readings of the personal Callas writings. We learn Maria was originally controlled by her mother, and then by agents and her husband. Maria attempts to explain how the "difficult" label undeservedly stuck to her for decades due almost entirely to her vocal issues/illness at one sold out performance at the New York Metropolitan. Her own words later contradict, or at least cast much doubt on the accuracy of this simplification.
Archival footage of her life ... her mostly glamorous life ... is shown throughout, including bits with Aristotle Onassis, filmmaker Vittorio De Sica, actor Omar Sharif, filmmaker Pier Pablo Pasolini, Grace Kelly, and renowned soprano Elvira de Hidalgo, who became Maria's voice coach. Maria's fairy tale life is on display: chauffeurs, standing ovations, worshipping fans, and her incredible wardrobe that made her a fashion icon of the times. Her words convey the unhappiness and loneliness she felt, even during the "good times".
It's the stage performances that made her famous and took her to the top, so Mr. Volk includes several full-length numbers from Verdi, Bellini, Bizet and others ... her glorious talent on full display and surely to inspire awe from any first timers. So while her singing provides a welcome respite from her words, it's those words ... her own words ... that seem to solidify her reputation as a diva. Though she claims to have been controlled by others, she managed to take extended breaks throughout her career, and every opera fan and director understands that vocal issues arise periodically, so it's quite doubtful anyone would hold an extended grudge over such an occurrence.
A substantial portion of the film deals with Maria's long-term affair with Aristotle Onassis, and how shocked she was, and betrayed she felt, when he married Jackie Kennedy without so much as a word of warning. And when his marriage to Jackie crumbled, he came scurrying back to Maria, who openly welcomed him ... a sure sign of just how lonely she had been for most of her life, despite the glamour and adulation. We can debate whether the legacy of Callas might have been better off had her personal thoughts remained buried, but there is little doubt that we are sometimes better off simply enjoying the work or art of a rare talent, rather than getting to know them as a person.
Filmmaker Tom Volf realizes that the great Opera singer Maria Callas was known for two things: being a world class soprano/actress and for being difficult to work with ... the ultimate diva, one might say. Working with narrator and noted mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato, the film expertly reinforces those two traits, and even adds a new label: narcissist. It does so by using (as the title suggests) Maria Callas' own words taken from interviews, letters to friends, and personal diary entries.
The Greek-American Opera singer/actress was born in Brooklyn to Greek immigrants, and, as a teenager, moved to Athens with her mother and sister after her parents' marriage fell apart. Director Volf uses a BBC TV interview with David Frost to provide a framing structure to the film, but there are also clips of other interviews shown, and of course, Ms. DiDonato's readings of the personal Callas writings. We learn Maria was originally controlled by her mother, and then by agents and her husband. Maria attempts to explain how the "difficult" label undeservedly stuck to her for decades due almost entirely to her vocal issues/illness at one sold out performance at the New York Metropolitan. Her own words later contradict, or at least cast much doubt on the accuracy of this simplification.
Archival footage of her life ... her mostly glamorous life ... is shown throughout, including bits with Aristotle Onassis, filmmaker Vittorio De Sica, actor Omar Sharif, filmmaker Pier Pablo Pasolini, Grace Kelly, and renowned soprano Elvira de Hidalgo, who became Maria's voice coach. Maria's fairy tale life is on display: chauffeurs, standing ovations, worshipping fans, and her incredible wardrobe that made her a fashion icon of the times. Her words convey the unhappiness and loneliness she felt, even during the "good times".
It's the stage performances that made her famous and took her to the top, so Mr. Volk includes several full-length numbers from Verdi, Bellini, Bizet and others ... her glorious talent on full display and surely to inspire awe from any first timers. So while her singing provides a welcome respite from her words, it's those words ... her own words ... that seem to solidify her reputation as a diva. Though she claims to have been controlled by others, she managed to take extended breaks throughout her career, and every opera fan and director understands that vocal issues arise periodically, so it's quite doubtful anyone would hold an extended grudge over such an occurrence.
A substantial portion of the film deals with Maria's long-term affair with Aristotle Onassis, and how shocked she was, and betrayed she felt, when he married Jackie Kennedy without so much as a word of warning. And when his marriage to Jackie crumbled, he came scurrying back to Maria, who openly welcomed him ... a sure sign of just how lonely she had been for most of her life, despite the glamour and adulation. We can debate whether the legacy of Callas might have been better off had her personal thoughts remained buried, but there is little doubt that we are sometimes better off simply enjoying the work or art of a rare talent, rather than getting to know them as a person.
I heard a segment on NPR about "Maria by Callas" and wanted to see the movie. It was fantastic. What an amazing talent, what a special human being. I was so touched, I walked out of the theater with a smile and feeling really good.
Once in the height of the press media exploiting the supposedly rivalry between singers, Callas and Renata Tebadli, Callas was quoted (on comparing herself to the other singer) that it was like "comparing champagne to cognac". Tom Volf's debut documentary follows Callas's professional/personal life through its ups and downs by wonderfully, spooling in between her most famous "arias" performances.
It focuses on using archived TV interviews and scenes of "paparazzi" swarms but keeps a sharp focus on her early 50's career accomplishments until her untimely death in the mid 70s. Her early NYC childhood story and late adulthood Parisian isolation were only shown thru her interviews and the usage of a off-screen narrator reading Callas's letters and memoirs.
It also displayed her "Tigress" temperament towards the harsh reality of the Opera world as a booming recording industry and its societal environments. Volf's documentary subtlety unveils her own decadence of solitude dealing with a vocal declination and an endless love for Aristotle Socrates Onassis. A must-see for Opera lovers, truly amazing!
It focuses on using archived TV interviews and scenes of "paparazzi" swarms but keeps a sharp focus on her early 50's career accomplishments until her untimely death in the mid 70s. Her early NYC childhood story and late adulthood Parisian isolation were only shown thru her interviews and the usage of a off-screen narrator reading Callas's letters and memoirs.
It also displayed her "Tigress" temperament towards the harsh reality of the Opera world as a booming recording industry and its societal environments. Volf's documentary subtlety unveils her own decadence of solitude dealing with a vocal declination and an endless love for Aristotle Socrates Onassis. A must-see for Opera lovers, truly amazing!
Believe me - You don't have to be a die-hard opera fan in order to appreciate this engaging celebrity bio-documentary about famed soprano singer, Maria Callas (1923-1977).
Born in Manhattan, NY, USA - Maria Callas (who had an incredibly wide vocal range and impeccable vibrato control) is unanimously regarded as being one of the most influential and renowned female opera singers of the entire 20th century.
Through stills, archival footage, and interviews - This 2-hour presentation looks at the highs, as well as the lows, of the life and times of Maria Callas.
Born in Manhattan, NY, USA - Maria Callas (who had an incredibly wide vocal range and impeccable vibrato control) is unanimously regarded as being one of the most influential and renowned female opera singers of the entire 20th century.
Through stills, archival footage, and interviews - This 2-hour presentation looks at the highs, as well as the lows, of the life and times of Maria Callas.
Footage of the great opera superstar is included in this French documentary which includes various interviews, letters she had written and recorded arias performed live. The main focus is an interview with David Frost in the 1960s.
This film has an unfair advantage compared to other documentaries. Its subject is so compelling that it can only come off as great regardless of the skills of the film-makers. (In fairness, the film-makers did a fine job.)
Callas truly represents the grandeur of the 50s, 60s, and early 70s. She had a regal elegance with an old-world, old-school charm that has been missing for many years - decades even. The highlight of watching such stunning arias (much greater than just hearing the audio recordings) provides an elation that could never be experienced by downloading an app to a mobile phone.
Though Callas - the person and the singer - lived in the same world as the one we are in now, the world then seems like a different entity from the one we currently inhabit. This alone makes the viewing of this film so worthwhile. Further evidence of a greater difference in this "other world" included separate brief interviews with three young, intelligent men lined up for hours at the Met opera house in the mid-1960s, expressing great admiration for the diva. Such articulate admiration for great artists is very unlikely in our current times.
The film does have its flaws. Some of the English dialogue in the footage was incomprehensible. Subtitles would have been more than helpful. Also, some of Callas's old letters were narrated in a tone that did not always sound genuine. But the pluses far outnumber the minuses.
Around the beginning of the film, Callas makes a quote of how music is one of the ways that the great heavens can be made earthbound. She certainly lived up to that principle. This film graciously proves so. - dbamateurcritic.
This film has an unfair advantage compared to other documentaries. Its subject is so compelling that it can only come off as great regardless of the skills of the film-makers. (In fairness, the film-makers did a fine job.)
Callas truly represents the grandeur of the 50s, 60s, and early 70s. She had a regal elegance with an old-world, old-school charm that has been missing for many years - decades even. The highlight of watching such stunning arias (much greater than just hearing the audio recordings) provides an elation that could never be experienced by downloading an app to a mobile phone.
Though Callas - the person and the singer - lived in the same world as the one we are in now, the world then seems like a different entity from the one we currently inhabit. This alone makes the viewing of this film so worthwhile. Further evidence of a greater difference in this "other world" included separate brief interviews with three young, intelligent men lined up for hours at the Met opera house in the mid-1960s, expressing great admiration for the diva. Such articulate admiration for great artists is very unlikely in our current times.
The film does have its flaws. Some of the English dialogue in the footage was incomprehensible. Subtitles would have been more than helpful. Also, some of Callas's old letters were narrated in a tone that did not always sound genuine. But the pluses far outnumber the minuses.
Around the beginning of the film, Callas makes a quote of how music is one of the ways that the great heavens can be made earthbound. She certainly lived up to that principle. This film graciously proves so. - dbamateurcritic.
Did you know
- TriviaThis film was screened at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) in Toronto, Ontario, Canada in September 2018.
- Quotes
Maria Callas: I would have preferred to have a happy family and have children. I think that is the main vocation of a woman. But destiny brought me into this career.
- ConnectionsReferences Medea (1969)
- SoundtracksAh, quanto cielo!
From the Opera "Madama Butterfly"
Composed by Giacomo Puccini
Performed by Maria Callas, Orchestra del Teatro alla Scala (as Orchestra del Teatro alla Scala di Milano) and Herbert von Karajan
- How long is Maria By Callas?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- María Callas: En sus propias palabras
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,267,301
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $91,915
- Nov 4, 2018
- Gross worldwide
- $2,869,237
- Runtime1 hour 59 minutes
- Color
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