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Never Too Late: The Doc Severinsen Story
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Never Too Late: The Doc Severinsen Story
A film by Kevin Bright & Jeff Consiglio
Just Bright Productions
2020
Never Too Late (Just Bright Productions, 2020) is a meticulously produced and emotion-grabbing documentary portrait of the musical career and life of trumpeter

Doc Severinsen
trumpetb.1927

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974
Every weeknight for 30 years the Tonight Show Band -comprised of the best of the best -was led by a hands-down G.O.A.T. It wailed away with both bumper and intermittent audience-directed music. The resplendent Severinsen, brighter and more fun than NBC's iconic peacock, dazzled audiences with flamboyant outfits that out-sizzled Elvis, Liberace, and Elton John. But, it was that soaring trumpeting and those dynamic performances that gave viewers probably more excitement and passion than was happening in their bedrooms. With respect to Lawrence Welk, Severinsen's All-Star band was the last of the talk show large ensembles. It was, as you will see, an integral element to the success of the show. Today's nighttime viewing offers superb smaller ensembles whose makeup and repertoire are dictated by budgets, advertisers, and audiences' changed musical tastes.
Doc's relationship with Carsonnot an easy man with whom to become intimateis a core of the film. Their symbiotic relationship and comedic ménage a trois with Carson foil Ed McMahon displayed mutual admiration, respect, and understanding. Carson, an amateur musician himself, knew too well the demands that celebrity marriages required. Scenes of Severinsen discussing Carson's passing draw tearshis and probably the film's viewers. It did mine.
No hagiography, the film details the trumpeter's multiple failed marriages, some of which were the result of the Siren calls of the road, the strain of a bi-coastal marriage, and the far from 9-to-5 jazz musician lifestyle. Yet, we see through his family's cameos and loving comments from greats such as

Arturo Sandoval
trumpetb.1949

Chris Botti
trumpetb.1962
The film, brilliantly produced and edited, is shot with heavy emphasis on extreme close-ups, and with the pacing of a swinging jazz chart. It zips us through Doc's humble beginnings, his early fascination and development with the trumpet (as opposed to his father, "Big Doc's" insistence on violin), and his diving head-first into the world of the big bands, round-the-clock New York studio recordings, and, in some cases, too many cocktails. In clips of his intimate and revealing discussion with Dinah Shoreanother NBC iconhe opens up. His former spouse Emily provides additional insights into the Severinsen psyche. Finally in a relationship with "someone who understands me"celebrated trumpeter and educator, Cathy Leachwe see the pair enjoying life now in a beautiful Tennessee farmhouse.
What made and still makes Doc tick isn't really the questionit's the answer here. In the film, jazz saxophone great

Ernie Watts
saxophone, tenorb.1945
Never Too Late is currently being released at various locations online.
Tags
Film Review
Doc Severinsen
Nicholas F. Mondello
Publisher
duke ellington
arturo sandoval
Chris Botti
ernie watts
Never Too Late: The Doc Severinsen Story
Never Too Late
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