Fall 2021—Grand Opening: Tuesday, November 9, 7:00 p.m.

A still image from the film.

Forbidden Songs

(Zakazane Piosenki)

Poland, 1947, 97 minutes
Directed by: Leonard Buczkowski
Screenwriting by: Ludwik Starski, Jan Fethke
Principal Cast: Danuta Szaflarska, Janina Ordężanka, Jerzy Duszyński, Jan Świderski, Jan Kurnakowicz

Tickets and Venue


Description

Forbidden Songs was the first feature film released in Poland after World War II. Conceived and written by Ludwik Starski, a Polish-Jewish survivor of the Holocaust, the film remarkably adopted the genre of light musical comedy to portray the diverse experiences of Warsaw's inhabitants during the period of Nazi occupation from 1939 to 1945. Although it was a huge box office hit received enthusiastically by Polish audiences, the film was ferociously attacked by critics and withdrawn from movie houses after just three months in order to undergo revisions that would appease Communist authorities. The film’s score, created by Roman Palester, draws heavily on authentic popular sources, notably satirical Polish “street songs” banned by the Nazis, but nonetheless performed as expressions of resistance and a means of psychological sustenance during this time of deprivation and terror. Today the film remains an iconic record of Polish wartime history and a commemorative symbol of national survival.

A musician named Roman Tokarski, responding to a “call for songs” in the paper, appears at the Film Polski studio. Through reminiscences at the piano, he initiates a series of flashbacks that enfold each of the film’s forbidden songs into larger narratives about the fate of his family, other residents of their apartment building, and, more broadly, that of Warsaw’s civilian population as a whole.


Following the Screening

Barbara Milewski.

Q&A session with Barbara Milewski, Associate Professor of Music at Swarthmore College, who researched the music of the film and authored its English subtitles.

We are very sorry to inform you that due to University regulations we cannot have a reception after the screening.