whistles in movies

I saw the tail end of a black and white movie the other night with Humphrey Bogart. The closing scene was in a night club with a jazz band playing. There was a piano and a whistle player. Anyone know the name of the movie, or better still. How many movies can you name with a visual of a whistle being played?

Waking Ned Devine (Thats almost too easy!)

Waking Ned Devine for a movie with whistle playing not for the name of the movie that you saw :blush:

The Road to Perdition.

Best wishes,
Jerry

“to Have and Have Not” alluded to in a recent post

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w6-QJJ0VCPg&feature=related
pennywhistle
Hong Kong Blues
(Hoagy Charmichael)

My fave is “A day at the Races” where Harpo plays a whistle in “who dat man/all dem chillun got rhythm”

classic

Or me in Patriot Games :wink:

Wow! A celebrity here on C&F. I saw that a few months ago several times on one of those channels that repeats movies. So what is the name of the tune you play, and where was the scene taken.

I just watched “To Have and Have Not” the other day and was excited that there was a whistle player. :slight_smile:

Harpo plays whistle in a couple other Marx Brothers movies as well.

~Tiff

We love that movie at my house , and all the Bogey movies. He was a interesting fellow. He was born fairly well to do. And all the tics that gave him his style were his way of covering up a problem, i.e. that little smile /grimace was to tighten his dentures. The way he held his cig ,was to hide that ,he “wet lipped it” wont use the old term

Lewis and Clark soundtrack is great , lots of beautiful whistle

That was filmed at Molly Mallone’s in LA on a freezing cold January morning. The makeup woman kept spritzing our faces with cold water to make it look like we were sweating.
The song was from some semi-pop Irish band- I can’t remember who. I was playing my trusty old tweaked Generation C which I still play.

Thought maybe we are lucky on here. Anyone who has a copy of the movie Black Jack by Ken Loach? Have been looking for it for a few years now but no success :sniffle:

Wishing you all a nice evening!!!
Brigitte

There’s a scene with a whistle in a movie/tv show/something on a screen set during the Napoleonic wars. Sorry I can’t be more specific; I’ve seen a few films set during this time (The Duelists, that TV miniseries with Sean Bean, etc) and I can’t remember which it is from. :confused:

A bit off track as usual:
My daughter is 19 and moved to New York City last Sept. She tells me on the phone the other day that some friends of her roommate came by and this guy started in about tin whistles. He was laughing and saying how ludicrous they are. Equated them with leprecauns and such. So, my daughter says, “I can play the tin whistle.” He laughs and says, Why?" She says, “I don’t know. I guess because my dad taught me when I was 7 and I didn’t know any better.” That’s loyalty (and gratitude) for you.
Tony

I recall posting about the final scene in this fine film (To Have and To Have Not) a couple of years ago, right around this time of year. They must haul this classic out around holiday time. In addition to the musical number that Mack was kind enough to provide a link for, the upbeat final number really shows the instrument more clearly. It looks to be silver or silver plated, not unlike my fine Tully!! (Eric, were you making whistles back then?)

That thread, which started as a whistle-related trivia question (Which Bogart Movie features a tinwhistle, etc.?) led to some other interesting side-tracks, including information about the US Army Jazz Band landing in Paris after that city was liberated in WW II. (One of their first questions was “Where can we find Django Reinhardt?”) Les Lieber, a sax player who is, I believe, still active in the New York music scene, was a member of that band and played what many believe to be a pennywhistle on some of the recordings the band made with Django. The discography for one or more cuts lists “Flute?” If you go to the link posted below, you will be able to listen to one such cut.

http://www.wellsleyarts.com/jazz/index.html

I have been ‘off the board’ for some time as a result of some travel and a recent surgery on my Left Achilles tendon. So, I would like to extend season’s greetings here to all my friends on C & F with whom I have not been in contact for a while. Also, season’s greetings to the many fine whistle makers out there, without whom us old duffers (and some young ones too, I guess) would not have the instruments we need to keep at it. I will refrain from enumerating the makers because I inevitably leave someone out. You know who you are.

BOGART-RELATED TRIVIA QUESTION: How many WW II-related movies was Bogey in that had him at loggerheads with and thwarting either the Axis powers or their collaborators and surrogates? (CLUE: Casablanca is not the only one that took place in Northern Africa!)

BE WELL!!

Tom Dowling

The latest instalment of Come West Along the road on RTE last friday showed a never released movie made during the early 60s with many of the regulars of O’Donohue’s in Capel street. It was hilarious for it’s wooden acting and senseless plot (based on a very young Johnny Moynihan singing ‘The night Larry was stretched’, acted out by Ronnie Drew, the Dubliners and more patrons of the pub).

It was interesting from a whistle point of view maybe for the two Dubliners playing whistles (Clarkes if you must know) but the highlight for me was Seamus Ennis playing the whistle while in session with Barney McKenna and John Sheehan, playing the whistle from one side of his mouth and smoking a fag from the other (and never missing a beat).

From memory, and memory can prove to be very wrong at the best of times, a movie mentioned earlier ‘Waking Ned Devine’ or another movie named ‘Agnes Browne’ starring Angelica Houston (doing a very good Irish accent) featured a funeral procession with a whistle player in attendance.
All I can remember is that one of these two movies featured the tune ‘Banish misfortune’ played at many different speeds and in varying styles throughout the movie.
The more I think of it, I am leaning more towards Agnes Browne.
I’m going to the video shop to see if I can dig the movie up.

I’m pretty sure Bogey didn’t wear dentures… His upper light was partially paralyzed due to an injury he sustained while serving in the Navy, hence his scar.

As for Tom Dowlings question about WWII related Bogart movies, you’ve got Casablanca, To Have and Have Not, All Through the Night, Passage to Marseilles, Across the Pacific, Action in the North Atlantic, Sahara, and the Caine Mutiny.

Just so that I’m not completely off topic, it was indeed To Have and Have Not.

The series was “Sharpe’s” but I can’t remember the episode. Sgt. Harper plays “Salamanca”. The Turner Network movie “One Man’s Hero,” with Tom Berenger, about the San Patricio regt. during the Mexican-American war has a whistle playing scene. The whistle looks too modern for the period, black with a tuning slide or large bulge (sorry dont know the technical term) three quarters of the way up the tube.

On TBS right now, there is some Pierce Brosnon movie on with Parker Posey that has whistle music.