Beloved
Cast & Crew
Victor Schertzinger
John Boles
Gloria Stuart
Morgan Farley
Ruth Hall
Albert Conti
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
In his aristocratic castle in Vienna in 1838, Baron Franz Von Hausmann cultivates a love of classical music in his infant son Carl. Ten years later, Carl performs his first composition before an audience as lead violin in a string ensemble. When revolution strikes and his father is killed, Carl and his mother flee to Charleston, South Carolina. Carl becomes enlightened of the music sung by the slaves, which he likens to his first waltz composition. In January, 1861, twenty-three-year-old Carl defends his right to be called a Southern gentleman in a scuffle with the arrogant Wilcox, impressing his friend, Tom Rountree, and a woman he soon learns is named Lucy Tarrant, a prospective piano student of his mother. After Lucy convinces her mother to hire Carl to teach her piano, he falls in love with his student, but Major Tarrant, Lucy's father, refuses the couple permission to marry. During the Civil War, Carl survives a hero, but his mother dies while he is fighting for the Confederacy, and Lucy's father is killed at the Battle of Shiloh. The Tarrants' estate is ruined by the war's end, so Carl and Lucy marry and move to New York, where he gives music lessons and they live in happy poverty. While Carl dreams of creating a musical composition embodying the spirit of America, he runs into Tom, his friend from Charleston, who introduces him to Judge B. T. Belden, a show promoter known for his publicity stunts, whose axiom is "the public loves to be fooled." Belden's exploitation of Carl's violin abilities borders on impropriety, as Carl agrees to personify an eccentric artist with a foreign accent who is popular with the ladies. In the fall of 1867, Carl is enthusiastically received, until Lucy convinces him his reputation as a serious musician is at stake when the press labels him Belden's freakish creation. The couple moves into Mrs. Briggs's boardinghouse, where Carl composes as Lucy supports them. When the nosy proprietress and Miss Murfee scoff at Carl for making his wife support him, he gets a job playing piano at the Duchess Palace Saloon in the Bowery. Meanwhile, the pregnant Lucy is forced to quit work and six months later gives birth to a boy, Charles. Nearly ten years pass, and Carl, now a teacher of piano and violin, is unable to instill his love of music in his son. While working on his "American Symphony," Carl reluctantly agrees to sell some of his songs to an advertising agent, who is interested in using them to promote his patent medicine. Charles grows into a profligate young man and impregnantes Helen Burrows. Learning of the girl's condition from her father, Carl orders his son to marry Helen immediately. In an attempt to reform, Charles enlists to fight in the Spanish-American War, where he dies. Helen dies giving birth to a son, Eric, who, at seven, is "borrowing" his grandfather's waltz and changing it to suit the more modern style. In 1918, Eric, after fighting in World War I, returns home and adapts the themes of Carl's classical Negro spirituals into jazz and publishes the song "My Beloved," which Carl claims he has plagiarized. More songs follow and are made successful in hit stage comedies as sung by Patricia Sedley, whom Eric marries. Informed by Carl that Lucy has had a stroke, Eric grants her last request by playing his grandfather's music the old-fashioned way. Later, Carl visits Eric's publisher, Mr. Yates, who insults the elderly man by saying his music lacks distinction and is a poor imitation of Eric's. Enraged, Carl accuses Eric of stealing his melodies and moves out of Eric's luxurious house into his own small apartment. Alexander Talbot of the Metropolitan Symphony Society, encouraged by a donation from Eric to an unemployed musicians' fund, then offers to feature Carl's symphony in the society's next season. Examining the "American Symphony," Talbot is astounded by its greatness. Eric and Carl are reconciled and attend opening night, where Lucy's ghost smiles as Carl's music is finally performed. As he listens from his box seat, Carl dies, satisfied that his composing genius is at last recognized.
Director
Victor Schertzinger
Cast
John Boles
Gloria Stuart
Morgan Farley
Ruth Hall
Albert Conti
Dorothy Peterson
Edmund Breese
Louise Carter
Anderson Lawler
Richard Carle
Lucile Webster Gleason
Mae Busch
Jimmy Butler
Edward Woods
Oscar Apfel
Jane Mercer
Lester Lee
Mickey Rooney
Holmes Herbert
Lucille La Verne
Mary Gordon
Wallis Clark
Joseph Swickard
James Flavin
Bessie Barriscale
Bobbie Arnst
Fred Kelsey
Otto Hoffman
George Ernest
Cosmo Kyrle Bellew
King Baggot
Sherwood Bailey
William Strauss
Neysa Nourse
Peggy Terry
Clara Blandick
Margaret Mann
Montague Shaw
Walter Brennan
Crew
Edward Curtiss
Paul Gangelin
Paul Gangelin
Merritt Gerstad
Charles D. Hall
Howard Jackson
Gilbert Kurland
Carl Laemmle Jr.
Carl Laemmle
Carl Laemmle
George O'neil
Maurice Pivar
Victor Schertzinger
S. K. Wineland
B. F. Zeidman
B. F. Zeidman
Film Details
Technical Specs
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
The title card on the viewed print read: "Beloved A Musical Romance." The Daily Variety Los Angeles preview length for this film was 90 minutes, suggesting that at least eight minutes were cut for the final film.