Perhaps the finest of the series of biographical films that Ken Russell made
for the BBC in the Sixties, Song of Summer is an immensely moving story
of sacrifice, idealism, and musical genius. Based on Eric Fenby’s 1936
memoir Delius As I Knew Him, it traces the last years of Frederick
Delius, and Fenby’s dedication in giving up five years of his life to help
the blind, paralysed composer set down the unfinished scores he could hear in
his head. There are terrific performances from Max Adrian as the monstrous,
tyrannical, tormented Delius, Maureen Pryor as his devoted, long-suffering
wife, Jelka, and Christopher Gable (remarkably, in his first screen acting
role) as the shy, intense, talented young composer thrust into this strange
household.
- PAL / Region 2
- Commentary by Ken Russell
- On Screen Biography
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