Allen hits jazz notes for Rome hospital
WHAT'S a nice Jewish boy from Brooklyn doing helping to raise money for a Catholic hospital owned by the Vatican in a city where until 1870 the papacy required Jews to live in a ghetto?
If that nice Jewish boy is Woody Allen, the conundrum is resolved by a four-letter word: Jazz.
"Woody Allen and his New Orleans Jazz Band" charmed a packed house in Rome's Conciliazione Auditorium three blocks from the Vatican and just across the Tiber River from Rome's synagogue.
The band, made up of Allen on clarinet and six other top-notch jazz musicians steeped in the New Orleans tradition, belted out more than a dozen tunes over nearly two hours at the benefit for the Bambino Gesu, Italy's top children's hospital, on Sunday.
"We love to play jazz music and we are always thrilled when anyone comes to hear us - thrilled and surprised, actually," he told the audience in his self-deprecating style.
That was it for one-liners, almost as if he wanted to step out of the shoes of Woody Allen the actor/director/comedian and into those of Woody Allen the musician.
"We are going to play songs from New Orleans from the 1910s, 1920s, 1930s - songs that were popular in the churches, parades, brothels and dance halls of New Orleans so sit back and we will do our best to entertain you."
And entertain they did, with numbers such as Louis Armstrong's "Someday You'll Be Sorry", "Muskrat Ramble" by Kid Ory, "At The Jazz Band Ball", and "Put On Your Old Grey Bonnet".
There was also a moving rendition of the spiritual "Take My Hand Precious Lord" - fittingly, perhaps, since the world's largest church - St Peter's Basilica - was just down the street.
If that nice Jewish boy is Woody Allen, the conundrum is resolved by a four-letter word: Jazz.
"Woody Allen and his New Orleans Jazz Band" charmed a packed house in Rome's Conciliazione Auditorium three blocks from the Vatican and just across the Tiber River from Rome's synagogue.
The band, made up of Allen on clarinet and six other top-notch jazz musicians steeped in the New Orleans tradition, belted out more than a dozen tunes over nearly two hours at the benefit for the Bambino Gesu, Italy's top children's hospital, on Sunday.
"We love to play jazz music and we are always thrilled when anyone comes to hear us - thrilled and surprised, actually," he told the audience in his self-deprecating style.
That was it for one-liners, almost as if he wanted to step out of the shoes of Woody Allen the actor/director/comedian and into those of Woody Allen the musician.
"We are going to play songs from New Orleans from the 1910s, 1920s, 1930s - songs that were popular in the churches, parades, brothels and dance halls of New Orleans so sit back and we will do our best to entertain you."
And entertain they did, with numbers such as Louis Armstrong's "Someday You'll Be Sorry", "Muskrat Ramble" by Kid Ory, "At The Jazz Band Ball", and "Put On Your Old Grey Bonnet".
There was also a moving rendition of the spiritual "Take My Hand Precious Lord" - fittingly, perhaps, since the world's largest church - St Peter's Basilica - was just down the street.
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