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“Young@Heart”: Grandma's rockin' the houseWhen I was a kid, my grandmother
was involved in a senior center choral and dance group. Every year there
was a recital, and we had to go. Think 20–30 old women and three old
men singing and dancing. The highlight was the restaurant we went to
afterward — an Italian restaurant that served individual pizzas and was located
in a strip mall with Old West décor. (Because Passaic, N.J. had a
big frontier history.) However, if my grandmother's group had
been anything like Young@Heart, I suspect I would have enjoyed the
recitals a little more.
Young@Heart is a Northampton-based chorus composed of senior
citizens, currently ranging in age from 72 to 88. (They've had members
as old as 100!) They've been around
since 1982, and
have been on a dozen international tours. What distinguishes them from
the traditional old-lady chorus is that rather than sing the standards,
they sing current and classic rock, pop and punk songs. And I'm not
just talking about gentle Beatles songs. I'm talking about
the Ramones' “I Wanna Be Sedated” and Sonic Youth's “Schizophrenia."
They're the subject of a documentary screening this week
at Sundance and
scheduled for theatrical release in April.
You really have to see them
for yourself though. Here's the trailer: And a synopsis of the movie:
I can make two predictions
about this documentary. (Or, actually, about how I will react to it.)
(1) It will likely be my favorite documentary of the year. (2) It will
make me cry. I'm easily moved and inspired by stories of older folks
who are adventurous and full of life (think Ruth Gordon as the
grandmother in My Bodyguard), and by anyone not limited by obvious
limitations.
These folks certainly seem
to have a sense of fun, and the movie is said to have its share of poignant moments.
Apparently, the scene of them performing “Forever Young” to an audience
of prison inmates is particularly moving. As is their performance of
Coldplay's “Fix You.” Coldplay has always left me ... well, cold.
But this cover sent me in search of tissues. Jody Rosen at Slate put it quite well:
Given that my parents are approaching the age of the chorus members, I'm prepared to find some bittersweet inspiration from the movie. (And given that the chorus members hail from Northampton, I'm looking forward to playing “spot the elderly lesbian.”) So, I'll be keeping an eye out for the Fox Searchlight release this spring, and I hope that some of you are looking forward to this movie as much as I am. Submitted by on January 22, 2008 - 2:00pm. |
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Oh, I'm with you. The first
Oh, I'm with you. The first time I saw that performance of "Fix You" on Youtube, I cried for about fifteen minutes, and then every time I thought about it for the next week. I showed it to my sisters, who both sat there with tears streaming down their faces, too. I don't know why it affected me so much.
Tell you what, though - I'll be first in line for this piece. You gotta thank Michael Moore for at least one thing - making the feature doco commercially viable again.
I just
watched that clip for the very first time, and I sobbed hysterically. I think this is the only time where I've actually cried while watching a clip on the internet.
I think that moved me so much because Knittle reminds me so much of my late grandfather- he used to sing to me too. That rendition just redefined "Fix You" for me, and I think I may have to listen to it again. I'm glad you posted this, because now I'm definitely seeing Y@H.
I can't watch this documentary...
I will cry through the whole movie. I know it, since I cried through the trailer!!!
I always cry when I watch toutching movies, but this was the first time it hapened during the trailer...
I so love old people and little people! Age extremes are the best!
Let me go tell my great-grand-mother that will are going to the theates soon!!!