Korla Pandit(1921-1998)
- Music Department
- Actor
- Composer
Korla Pandit was a musician and a Mesmerist, famous for his lips, his
eyes, his turban with the Smokey Topaz jewel and hypnotic dangling
Diamond, his beautifully-inspirational music, and the fact that for all
his years on radio and Television, he never spoke a word, gazing
dreamily, instead, into the camera and into the hearts and imaginations
of millions upon millions of viewers over the years. Pandit was born
John Roland Redd September 16, 1921 in St. Louis, Missouri, to Doshia
O'Nina Johnson Redd 1885-1977, and Baptist Minister Rev. Ernest S. Redd
1883-1966. One of seven children, young John displayed incredible
musical abilities by the age of two. In 1937 he graduated from high
school in Columbia, Missouri, and moved to Omaha, Nebraska. In 1938 he
moved to Ottumwa, Iowa, and worked for the Central Broadcasting Company
in Des Moines, Iowa. By 1939 he was living in Los Angeles, California
with his sister Frances, an actress in The Midnight Shadow, Sack Film
Company, 1938, wearing what would become his trademark turban, similar
to the one worn by Black actor John Criner in his sister's film,
playing in clubs under the name Juan Rolando. He became known for
playing both the organ and grand piano at the same time, the piano with
his right hand and the organ with his left, and was first billed as
Juan Rolando, the One-Man Combo. In 1941 Juan Rolando, nee John Roland
Redd, yet to become Korla Pandit, met and developed a life-long love
affair with statuesque blonde Beryl June DeBeeson, a Disney artist,
whom he married on July 21, 1944, in Tijuana, Mexico due to the fact
mixed marriages were not yet allowed in California. They remained
married until his death in 1998. Under Beryl's artistic direction, Juan
Rolando became Korla Pandit, and Korla Pandit in turn became the
mysterious symbol for and creator of Exotica, in 1948 conjuring up
musically on radio as organist for Chandu, the Magician, all manner of
inventive, never-before-heard orchestration, first on the Nova Chord
Organ, then on the Hammond C-3 Electronic Organ.) At the age of
twenty-two, he was discovered by Television pioneer Klaus Landsberg,
creator of KTLA Television Station, and in February of 1949 the
handsome young man in a turban was captivating audiences as Korla
Pandit with his own Universal Language of Music KTLA Television show,
playing his self-styled music of the Exotic East with a blend of
waltzes, tangos, cha-cha-cha's and other tunes of the 40s and 50s, as
well as an occasional classic like Claire de Lune or The Swan. He never
uttered a single word on his show, leaving the talking to an off-screen
announcer who would quote poetry and introduce and close the program.
Viewers were entertained by alternating shots of Pandit's face, the
musician seated at his instruments, and shots of Pandit's hands on the
keyboards. He frequently played both organ and piano simultaneously.
During this time he also supplied the music for Bob Clampett's hit
KTLA-TV puppet show Time For Beany. When Korla split with KTLA, San
Francisco Television station KGO signed him. His KGO Adventures In
Music show was directed by newcomer Marty Pasetta, who would later gain
fame directing the Academy Awards shows in Hollywood from 1970 to 1979.
Six months after his show left the air in 1957, Korla Pandit's immense
popularity was declared by his fan following when a TV Guide Most
Popular Performer poll voted him the local personality most deserving
of national recognition. Eventually Pandit was seen and heard around
the world with his organ and piano music segments, by way of the
fledgling Louis D. Snader Telescriptions filmed at Hollywood's Goldwyn
Studios in August of 1951. It was on these filmed musical clips
produced for Television that Pandit preceded Liberace, eventually
giving the glitzy pianist his big break when the young organist broke
ties with Snader, who then hired Liberace to take Korla's place. By the
mid-seventies Pandit had for the most part disappeared from Television
screens, but cashed in on his sizable fan following by performing live
in theater organ concerts, giving lecture/concert seminars and
individual instruction, in home organ concerts, and, eventually,
playing at super market openings, automobile dealership promotional
events, organ and piano trade shows, and popular Pipes & Pizza
Parlours. He appeared in several motion pictures, most prominent among
them Tim Burton's 1994 Ed Wood starring Johnny Depp, with whom Korla
Pandit shares a scene. In what can only be described as a comeback near
the end of his life, he performed in small clubs and restaurants, then,
in January of 1996, with entrepreneur Joey Seehee Cheezhee, headlined
The Wonderful World Of Joey lounge revival show at Bimbos 365 in San
Francisco, California, followed by similar shows at retro nightspots
such as Kelbos, and the House of Blues jazz club, both in Southern
California. His final public performance was February 14, 1997, at The
Luna Park Club in Los Angeles, California. He passed away October 1,
1998, at the age of 76 in a Petaluma, California nursing home of
myocardial infarction/coronary disease.