From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China


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From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China is a 1979 documentary film about Western culture breaking into China produced and directed by Murray Lerner. It portrays the famous violinist and music teacher Isaac Stern as the first American musician to collaborate with the China Central Symphony Society (now China National Symphony Orchestra).

From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China

DVD cover art for 2001 release

Directed byMurray Lerner
Produced byWalter Scheuer
StarringIsaac Stern
David Golub
CinematographyDavid Bridges
Nick Knowland
Edited byTom Haneke

Production
company

Hopewell Foundation

Distributed byHarmony Film

Release date

  • 1979

Running time

84 minutes
CountriesUnited States
China
LanguagesEnglish
Mandarin
Wu
Box office$1,205,934[1]

The film documented Stern's rehearsals and performances of violin concertos by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Johannes Brahms. Stern is featured with the famous Chinese conductor Li Delun, who also acted as his guide and translator on his trip. The film also included footage of Stern's visit to the Central Conservatory of Music and the Shanghai Conservatory of Music where he lectured to the Chinese music students on violin playing and the art of musical expression. Most of those musicians were playing mechanically, especially the String section, prior to the human improvements, concerning the qualities of the orchestras. One conductor was imprisoned in a closet for playing works by Ludwig van Beethoven, during the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s, when Western music was prohibited under the rule of Mao Zedong. Among many others talented players, young cellist Jian Wang (at the time only ten years old) is featured briefly. Jian Wang has gone on to international stardom.[2] Another performer, violinist Vera Tsu Weiling, was featured playing Caprice after a study in the form of a waltz by Saint-Saens, arranged by Ysaÿe.[citation needed]

The film won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1981.[3] It was also screened out of competition at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival.[4]

The Academy Film Archive preserved Mao to Mozart in 2000.[5]