The Harry Lime Theme & The Powder Puff
Tuesday, November 19, 2019
How many people in this century could go to a nifty and classy thrift store called the Hop- Too on West broadway and find a strange looking contraption (identified by the knowledgeable and kind women who work there that it was a woman's powder box) that was also a working music box and immediately identify the tune as the one from Carol Reed's (story by Graham Greene) The Third Man? Not many but I did. I purchased it with delight for $10. The theme, one that is impossible to forget has lyrics but the story as to how it came to be is nicely recorded by the folks of Wikipedia. I vaguely remember reading in one of my Graham Greene biographies that Greene was in Vienna researching for his film story when the mayor of the city asked him what it was going to be about. Greene answered it was going to be about spies and the underground. It was then that the mayor told him that the city had a large underground sewer system which is most important in this film I first saw with my mother who could not ever decide if she preferred Joseph Cotten over Leslie Howard.
When I purchased the box I thought back to many years ago when I photographed the then most powerful MP of the Pierre Trudeau government, Ron Basford, who was singly responsible for the building of Vancouver's Granville Island. I wrote about that here. Briefly and to the point I had to removed the shine from Basford's shiny head with Coffee Mate!
Will I be able to buy powder and a puff for my new music box?
"The Third Man Theme" (also known as "The
Harry Lime Theme") is an instrumental written and performed by Anton Karas
for the soundtrack to the 1949 film The Third Man.
Wikipedia
The Harry Lime Theme (The Third Man Theme) YouTube
The Harry Lime Theme
When a zither starts to play
You'll remember yesterday
In its haunting strain
Vienna lives again
Free and bright and gay
In your mind a sudden gleam
Of a half forgotten dream
Seems to glimmer when you hear the third man theme
Once again there comes to mind
Someone that you left behind
Love that somehow didn't last
In that happy city of the past
Does she still recall the dream
That rapture so supreme
When first she heard the haunting third man theme?
Carnivals and carousels and Ferris wheels and parasols
The Danube nights, the dancing lights again will shine
The zither's sweet refrain
Keeps swirling in your brain
Like new may wine
Strauss waltzes, candle-glow
And the laughter of long ago
Fill the magic chords and make it seem like today
You never knew that you could be
Enchanted by a melody
The years will never drive it out
You don't know why
It's something you can't live without
You hear it in the twilight hush
And in the morning traffic rush
A song that's always new
In your heart a part of you
Oh, shines so brightly when you hear the third man theme
When a zither starts to play
You'll remember yesterda
In its haunting strain
Vienna lives again
Free and bright and gay
In your mind a sudden gleam
Of a well remembered dream
Seems to glimmer when you hear the third man theme
Once again there comes to mind
Someone that you left behind
Love that somehow didn't last
In that happy city of the past
Does she still recall the dream
That rapture so supreme
When first she heard the haunting third man theme?
Carnivals and carousels and Ferris wheels and parasols
The Danube nights, the dancing lights again will shine
The zither's sweet refrain
Keeps swirling in your brain
Like new may wine
Strauss waltzes, candle-glow
And the laughter of long ago
Fill the magic chords and make it seem like today
You never knew that you could be
Enchanted by a melody
The years will never drive it out
You don't know why
It's something you can't live without
You hear it in the twilight hush
And in the morning traffic rush
A song that's always new
In your heart a part of you
Oh, shines so brightly when you hear the third man theme
Songwriters: Anton Karas
Story
The Third Man is a 1949 British film noir, directed by
Carol Reed. One night after a long day of filming The Third Man on location
in Vienna, Reed and cast members Joseph Cotten, Alida Valli and Orson Welles
had dinner and retired to a wine cellar. In the bistro, which retained the
atmosphere of the pre-war days, they heard the zither music of Anton Karas, a
40-year-old musician who was playing there just for the tips. Reed immediately
realized that this was the music he wanted for his film. Karas spoke only
German, which no one in Reed's party spoke, but fellow customers translated
Reed's offer to the musician that he compose and perform the soundtrack for The
Third Man. Karas was reluctant since it meant traveling to England, but he
finally accepted. Karas wrote and recorded the 40 minutes of music heard in The
Third Man over a six-week period, after the entire film was translated for him
at Shepperton Studios.[
The composition that became famous as "The Third Man
Theme" had long been in Karas's repertoire, but he had not played it in 15
years. "When you play in a café, nobody stops to listen," Karas said.
"This tune takes a lot out of your fingers. I prefer playing 'Wien, Wien',
the sort of thing one can play all night while eating sausages at the same
time."
So prominent is "The Third Man Theme" that the
image of its performance on the vibrating strings of the zither provides the
background for the film's main title sequence.
The theme became popular with audiences soon after the
film's premiere, and more than half a million copies of "The Third Man
Theme" record were sold within weeks of the film's release.
The tune was originally released in the UK in 1949, where
it was known as "The Harry Lime Theme". Following its release in the
US in 1950 (see 1950 in music), "The Third Man Theme" spent 11 weeks
at number one on Billboard's US Best Sellers in Stores chart, from April 29 to
July 8. Its success led to a trend in releasing film theme music as singles.
A guitar version by Guy Lombardo also sold strongly. Four other versions
charted in the US during 1950.[6] According to Faber and Faber, the different
versions of the theme have collectively sold an estimated forty million copies.
Wikipedia