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Nose aside, Maestro completely ignores Bernstein’s Jewish identity

This is not a film with a Jewish sensibility — it’s a star vehicle for Bradley Cooper and his nose

November 16, 2023 16:34
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3 min read

In 1970, Jonathan Miller directed The Merchant of Venice at the National Theatre, with Laurence Olivier as Shylock. Miller’s version, later adapted for television, is seen as a turning point in the production history of Shakespeare’s play: it introduced us to Shylock as a humane, even dignified figure. In opening scenes, the assimilated gentleman Shylock appeared indistinguishable from his Gentile colleagues.

As per Miller’s biographer Kate Bassett, it nearly wasn’t this way. Laurence Olivier, a star who rarely brooked disagreement, showed up to the first rehearsal clutching a bag of tricks. The contents appalled Miller. Inside was a large prosthetic hooked nose, a wig of ringlets and a jutting set of false teeth ordered as a costly and bespoke imitation of a Jewish member of the National Theatre board. Miller, attempting compromise, allowed him to keep the teeth.

Fifty years later, film stars are still reaching for the false nose to play a Jew. The latest big name to dabble in “Jewface” is Bradley Cooper, who directs, co-writes and stars in Maestro, a biopic about the composer/conductor Leonard Bernstein. The news that Cooper wears a prosthetic nose has been met with outrage by many Jews, and excuses from the rest of Hollywood. Bernstein’s family, we are repeatedly told, have given their “blessing” to the schnauzer. I missed the memo where they spoke for the entire Jewish community.

Watching Maestro, it is clear that Cooper and Olivier have much in common. Maestro is a decent enough movie, if your primary interest in Bernstein is the story of his marriage to the actress Felicia Montealegre, who tolerated his affairs with men — until she didn’t. I’d have preferred more about Bernstein’s music, his tussle between popular and elite success, and his role in the evolution of music broadcasting — points briefly mentioned, then unexplored.

The biggest flaw in Maestro, however, also explains its Jewface problem. This isn’t a project about Leonard Bernstein: it’s a project about Bradley Cooper. Like Olivier, Cooper is desperate to assert himself as an auteur. He missed an acting Oscar for his directing debut, A Star is Born, but he’s hungry for one here. Thus a series of decisions that seem to showcase Cooper’s role at the expense of unity or tone. There’s an extended sequence which shows him, as Bernstein, conducting at Ely Cathedral. Why? Seemingly, to show he can, after extensive training. Expect his Oscar campaign, as with A Star is Born, to focus on his dedication to learning his own piano sequences.