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Silent Film – The Phantom of the Opera

By October 9, 2012October 4th, 2014News

Brett Valliant, internationally renowned theatre organist and Director of Worship, Music, and the Arts at First United Methodist Church in Wichita, Kansas, will provide accompaniment to the silent film The Phantom of the Opera Monday, October 15 at 7:30 PM in All Faiths Chapel on the Kansas State University campus. In the world of silent film, Valliant is known for scoring and accompanying many films but is best known for dramatic films such as King Of Kings, Phantom Of The Opera, The Ten Commandments, Broken Blossoms, Wings, and The Eagle. He plays annually for several film festivals including the International Film Festival hosted by the American Film Institute, and has been a featured performer at national conventions of the American Guild of Organists and the American Theatre Organ Society. He has toured extensively as a solo artist, featured soloist with orchestras, and film accompanist abroad and throughout the United States.

Silent films, which enjoyed their heyday in the 1920s, had live musicians which provided piano or organ accompaniment. Organs were often installed in larger theatres and local organists would improvise (simultaneously compose and play) music to the film. With the advent of talking pictures, silent films fell out of favor and the art of accompanying silent films also became a generally lost art among pianists and organists. Valliant will be providing accompaniment to the original 1925 silent version of The Phantom of the Opera, starring Lon Chaney and directed by Rupert Julian. The film is an adaptation of the Gaston Leroux novel that bears the same title. Valliant’s performance is free and open to the public and is jointly sponsored by the School of Music, Theatre, and Dance and the Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia.

Valliant was inspired by the organ at church when he was just three years old. He soon excelled at the piano, but that early love of the pipe organ propelled him to his position as a full time church musician at the First United Methodist Church of Wichita, Kansas, a post he has held since his teen years. Brett studied organ at Wichita State University, and he has been a featured performer on National Public Radio’s Pipedreams as well as the National Bible Broadcasting Network where his imaginative hymn arrangements are heard daily throughout the United States. At fifteen, he played his first Wurlitzer and exhibited a natural talent for the popular music loved by fans of theatre organ. For his innovative approach to musicianship and performance, Brett credits his love and passion for rock ‘n’ roll, classical, jazz, and popular music. He resides in Wichita with his tiny Chihuahua, Mabel.