Listen to the opening film music to "Young Man With a Horn":
"A finely wrought melodrama of its time"
- Radio Times
Contrary to what has been written over the years about Doris Day's
performance in "Young Man With A Horn", this was not one of her great
performances. She was still "in training" at Warner Brothers
and seemed to be rushed into this film to prove that she could act, not
just sing. Day had not received all-out top billing in any of
her previous pictures, although she had certainly been the centrepiece
in all of them. In this film, she received third, but equal billing with Kirk Douglas
and Lauren Bacall and for the first time, she was not the main character,
Douglas was, as Rick Martin, a character based on the great trumpet player,
Bix Beiderbecke, who grew up poor with an older sister who cared more
about living her own life rather than properly raising her young brother.
Rick becomes fascinated by music at a young age, first by
the piano, which he learned to play in one day, and later by the trumpet,
which he purchased one day after wandering the streets. After he meets
Art Hazzard (Juano Hernandez), a friendly black trumpet player who takes
the young boy under his wing. Hazzard becomes the father figure in
lad Martin's life. He teaches Rick how to play the trumpet and imparts
valuable knowledge to him, not only about music, but also about life itself.
Their relationship is so close, that Rick refers to Hazzard as "Pops".
Grown up, Rick is obsessed with music and has thoughts of
nothing else. Hazzard, having lived a similar existence, doesn't want young
Rick to end up like him, no wife, children or family. He tells Rick that
he is like a "bird trying to
fly on one wing...you'll stay up for a while, but then you're going to
fall".
After Hazzard leaves on tour, Rick secures a good job playing with Jack
Chandler's band. There, he meets Smoke Willoughby (Hoagy Carmichael),
pianist with the aggregation. The band's singer, Jo Jordan (Doris
Day) is puzzled, but fascinated by the new player. The problem is,
Rick Martin, has been jazz trained and Chandler's band plays for
innocent dances where novelty tunes are all the rage. Even when Jo,
in rehearsal, sings "The Very Thought of You", Rick is
compelled to play jazzy riffs behind her, much to the dissatisfaction of
the bandleader. He is ordered to follow the music, verbatim.
Jo gets
to know Rick after one of their shows. She recognises his style
of playing as being very much like a "guy who is on records, Art Hazzard".
This pleases Rick, who tells her that it was Hazzard who taught
him to play and fuelled his obsession with the trumpet. Jo realises,
like Hazzard, that Rick is consumed with his music. She warns him
that he'll "go off his rocker" if
he doesn't develop some other interests. My interpretation of what she
meant by "other interests", perhaps, was her. His vow to someday "do
something on the trumpet" and to "hit a note that nobody's ever
heard before" frightens
Jo, whose concern for Rick grows. Chandler, the bandleader, is
a kind of boyfriend to Jo, but her feelings are moving steadily
towards Rick. Chandler knows this and becomes hostile towards Rick
when he and a few of the other musicians jam to a jazz tune between
shows. He fires Rick. Jo tries to help Rick by talking to Chandler,
but Rick is determined to leave. Jo, exasperated, calls him "young man
with a horn, crazy young man with a horn". This is a very touching scene
and Doris and Kirk play it well. Their goodbye ends with a handshake,
not a kiss.
Rick leaves, but not alone. Smoke quits the band and they
both set out to conquer the music world. They play in every dive, burlesque
house and juke joint from coast to coast. Meanwhile, Jo Jordan begins
to enjoy greater success as a singer, appearing in top clubs from New
York to California. After not much luck, Smoke goes back to Indiana
and Rick goes it alone. Arriving in New York, where Art Hazzard is playing
at Galba's, a swank club in Greenwich Village, Rick encounters Jo Jordan
again. She is headlining at the Strand Theatre. Rick listens backstage
as she sings "You're Just Too Marvellous For Words" and revels in how
good she has become. Rick's reunion with Art is heartfelt.
Art insists upon Rick playing a number and Jo, who accompanies him
to the club, is enthralled by his brilliant playing of "With A Song
in My Heart". Jo arranges for Martin to meet Phil Morrison
(Jerome Cowan) who is looking for a trumpet player for his orchestra,
which is playing at the Netherlands Roof, an A-list spot in Gotham.
Soon Rick receives billing with the band and his star begins to rise
quickly.
At Galba's one evening, Jo brings her friend, Amy North
(Lauren Bacall) to hear Rick play. Amy is sophisticated, educated and studying
to become a psychiatrist. She says to Rick, "tell me about jazz, you think it's purely African...I didn't
come here to listen to it...I came here to study the people, watch their faces,
they're interesting..." Well, Rick was "interested" in Amy. She was cool, beautiful
and sexy. In her eyes, Rick saw many things that he'd never seen in Jo. During
Jo's song, "I May Be Wrong", Amy comments, "Jo is interesting, isn't she? So
simple and uncomplicated..." Amy on the other hand is complicated. She has
a bird named "Louise" whom she introduces as her "best friend", describes herself
as an "intellectual mountain goat" and she lives in a luxurious apartment.
They become inseparable and he falls in love, despite the warning she gives
him about " not falling in love" with her.
Rick sends for Smoke and gets him a job in Morrison's orchestra.
Meanwhile, Jo confronts Rick about Amy, telling him "if I can only make you believe that
I didn't come here because I'm hurt or jealous...Amy isn't a stage door pick-up,
I know her much better than you do, Rick...she's a strange girl and you've
never known anyone like her before, I can understand all that...but inside,
way inside, she's all mixed up..." Today, most critics interpret
that speech as a warning that Amy was a lesbian. Certainly, her
relationship with another woman, later in the picture, supports
this theory. Jo's speech is interrupted when Amy walks in from
the adjoining room to announce that she and Rick were married the
day before.
The marriage is tumultuous with Amy returning to school
during the day and Rick playing all night in clubs. The union
suffers when their schedules conflict and Amy's demeanour turns cold and
distant. When Amy starts staying out and not coming home, Rick
takes to the bottle. Art tries to come to his rescue, but Rick
is belligerent towards him. Confused and disoriented, Art is
struck by a car and taken to Belleview Hospital. Rick, rushes to the facility
to apologise, but he is too late. Art has died. In a poignant
scene in the church during his funeral, Rick gets up and takes Art's
trumpet which lies on his coffin and plays a mournful, "Nobody
Knows the Trouble I Feel".
Amy announces that she and "a girl
I met" may go to Paris to study art together,
since she has flunked her final exams. She was aloof as she spoke,
not considering the fact that she was a married woman. After
Rick doesn't show for a party hosted by Amy, they argue and express
their true feelings towards one another. Rick quits his job with
Morrison who complains about his drinking and decides to play
music the way he feels it. The trumpet has become a "drug" for
Rick, and he wants to play day and night, trying to forget his
mounting personal problems.
In a recording session, playing behind
old friend, Jo Jordan, Rick trys to hit that impossible note
of which he's always dreamed. Realising that the note was never
possible, he parallels his life with the failure and has a mental
breakdown, sinking deeper into alcoholism. Ending up in an alcoholic
sanatorium, Rick is visited by pal, Smoke and the woman who really
loves him, Jo Jordan. Rick tells Smoke, "I got lost". According
to the ending of the picture, he recovered and went on to continue
in a successful career.
This was a well-written script by Carl Foreman and Edmund H.
North, based on the novel by Dorothy Baker. The whole production
was first-rate and the characters of Rick Martin, Jo Jordan and
especially Amy North were finely drawn. Miss Bacall gave an excellent
performance as did Kirk Douglas and Hoagy Carmichael. Juano Hernandez
was good as Art Hazzard and Doris Day held her own in a different
type of role. On this viewing, I appreciated her much more than
before. I think it may take two or three viewings of this to
really absorb the magnitude of all that happens here.
Listen to Doris sing "I May Be Wrong but I Think You're
Wonderful"
The movie
seems rather long at 112 minutes, but there is nothing here that
won't be of interest to serious moviegoers. Much of the film
looks to have been shot on location in New York, but if it wasn't,
kudos must go out the set decoration by William Wallace. Michael
Curtiz proved, once again, that he was one great director.
Miss Day's singing is wonderful throughout and Harry James' trumpet playing
(for Kirk Douglas) was thrilling. This is the movie that inspired a number
of hopeful young moviegoers, like Frankie Avalon, Sal Mineo and others,
to try acting as a profession. That's a respectful tribute to Mr. Douglas. Ralph McKnight,
New
York, October, 2001
Bix Beiderbecke taught himself to play the cornet when he
was in his teens. During his brief career he became one of the true sensations
of the Jazz Age. Read story
Other Reviews - Derald Hendry:
“Young men who blow their own horns can be quite boring.
In the case of this one, though, considerable interest is evoked, for the
young man is Kirk Douglas, and as he becomes the trumpet-tootling genius
of the late 20s a colorful era of jazz is explored. Chronologically the
story traces the musicians life from a drab boyhood to flaming success.
But we can tell you the going isn’t
easy. Particularly when Mr. Douglas sidesteps amiable Doris Day and marries
Lauren Bacall, who, we believe, is customarily described as “sultry” and
we’ll let it go at that. However, for keeping Hoagy Carmichael and
Juano Hernandez around, and for having Harry James do the trumpeting for
Mr. Douglas, Michael Curtiz is entitled to at least a brass medal for directing
this musically intricate pre-bebop piece.” Ladies Home Journal (?)
“Jo Jordan herself is a celluloid creation not far removed from
the real Doris Day, when she was just the kid with the vocal chords, traveling
from town to town on one-night stands. Although the songs in Young Man
With a Horn are subordinated to the drama, Day’s renderings..are
smooth and mellow, perfectly capturing the style and tone of the big band
singer she is play. For once, even Ray Heindorf’s musical score is
appropriate, a rich jazz flavor permeating the bluesy, smoky orchestrations.”
George
Morris, Doris Day, A Pyramid Illustrated History of the Movies.
When
Isodore Demsky and Betty Perske dated in New York, they little dreamed
they'd one day co-star in a movie biopic of their hero, jazz cornetist
Bix Biederbecke. But here they are on the Warner Bros lot, now rechristened
Kirk Douglas and Lauren Bacall respectively, he dubbed by the great Harry
James on trumpet, and she playing a daring for its day society closet
lesbian.
Warners softened the source novel substantially, and, despite
protests from brilliant director Michael Curtiz, a relatively happy ending
was tacked on. Nevertheless, enough of the sordid drama managed to get
through, and this is a finely wrought melodrama of its time, with Douglas
particularly outstanding as the self-absorbed horn player, leading vocalist
and good girl Doris Day on some superbly staged standards such as The Man
I Love and Get Happy, and the whole tragic tale told in flashback by a
warm-hearted Hoagy Carmichael. The sleazy tone of the original novel by
Dorothy Baker is preserved, along with all the pseudonyms for the real
people, but in the UK the American title was changed to 'Young Man of Music'
when the original was deemed too sexually suggestive.