NEW YORK, NY.- Remo Saraceni, a sculptor, toy inventor and technological fantasist best known for creating the Walking Piano that Tom Hanks and Robert Loggia danced on in a beloved scene of the hit 1988 movie Big, died June 3 in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. He was 89.
The cause was heart failure, said Benjamin Medaugh, his assistant and caretaker. Saraceni died at Medaughs home, where he had been living in recent years.
Saracenis specialty was interactive electronics, he told New York magazine in 1976. His other inventions included a clock that could reply aloud when you asked it the time, a stethoscope stereo system that could boom out your heartbeat, and plexiglass clouds that lit up at the sound of a whistle with a pastel color appropriate for a rooms lighting. All were powered by what Saraceni (pronounced SAR-ah-SAY-nee) called people energy: the voice, touch and heat of the human body.
The power of this sort of technology to enchant its users became a pivotal plot element of Big, and in turn the central prop in one of the most fondly recalled scenes in recent movie history.
After wishing to be big at a magical Zoltar fortunetelling machine, the movies main character, Josh Baskin, transforms from a 12-year-old boy into a young adult (played by Hanks). He gets a clerical job at a toy company whose owner, Mac (Loggia), recognizes Josh as his employee one Saturday at FAO Schwarz. Mac is a shrewd capitalist surveying his industry in action; Josh is a boy exulting in the world of toys, albeit in a mans body.
As Josh impresses Mac with his close knowledge of FAO Schwarzs wares, they happen upon Saracenis nearly 16-foot-long Walking Piano. With childlike absorption, Josh begins hopping on it to the tune of Heart and Soul. Mac, inspired by Joshs unselfconscious delight, joins him, making the performance a duet. To an awestruck crowd, the two of them then do a rendition of Chopsticks.
Mac names Josh vice president of product development at the company, setting the rest of the movies plot in motion.
It was like jumping rope for three and a half hours every time we did the scene, Hanks told Playboy in 1989. We rehearsed until we dropped.
The film grossed over $150 million and supercharged Hanks status as a Hollywood star, earning him his first Academy Award nomination, for best actor. It also inspired decades of visitors to FAO Schwarz, where it was normal for hundreds of people in a single day to line up to play the keys with their sneakers, sandals and loafers.
Even if you dont know how to play the piano with your fingers, you can play it with your feet, Saraceni told The New York Post in 2013.
He introduced the earliest form of the piano at the Philadelphia Civic Center Museum in 1970, according to the sports and pop culture site The Ringer. Called Musical Daisy, it was an interactive sculpture with eight pillowy petals that played different notes when sat on. He kept experimenting with the idea, turning the daisy into a musical carpet before he unveiled the piano concept at his Philadelphia studio in 1982.
FAO Schwarz acquired a Walking Piano not long after. In 1985, new management at the store sought to make it a destination for film and television shoots. Anne Spielberg, sister of Steven Spielberg and a co-writer of the Big script, paid a visit and came back raving about the piano, the other writer, Gary Ross, told The Ringer.
At the request of the director, Penny Marshall, Saraceni made a new version of the piano with three octaves instead of one and keys that lit up upon being played.
Though no other invention of Saracenis became even remotely as well known as his piano, many others inspired similar delight.
Remo Saraceni was born on Jan. 15, 1935, in Fossacesia, a city on the southern coast of Italy. His father, Giuseppe, worked with relatives to make shoes and other leather goods, and his mother, Filomena Carulli, managed the home.
Remo began inventing as a boy. His father got into trouble, he told The Chestnut Hill Local, when Remo turned a poster of dictator Benito Mussolini into a kite.
He took classes in electronics in Milan and worked as a radar specialist in the Italian military, but as a civilian he worked as a television repairman. He also started his own brand of large portable suitcaselike turntables. He came to the United States in 1964 for the Worlds Fair and to seek a better livelihood even though he spoke no English and had no American friends and no savings.
He again found work repairing TVs and affixed a note to his bathroom mirror: America is where everything is possible.
He married Maria Francione in 1965. They divorced in 1976 but remarried in 1995, when she was ill, and she died shortly after. He is survived by their sons, Ugo and Luca, and two grandchildren.
At the height of his success in the early 1990s, Saraceni had a 20,000-square-foot workshop in Philadelphia with about 20 employees. Children particularly loved visiting, and many of Saracenis clients were childrens museums around the world. He made them devices like a musical hand: motion sensors hooked up to a sheet of music. Children could wave their hands like conductors and hear classical music coordinated to their movements.
After Big, Saracenis work exploded in popularity. But he was also forced to spend time chasing down copycat manufacturers and suing companies for trademark infringement.
At the end of his life, he was in a legal battle with a firm called ThreeSixty Group, which acquired FAO Schwarz in 2016. Medaugh, Saracenis heir and executor, said he will continue the suit, which accuses the store of selling knockoffs of Saracenis work without properly compensating him and says that this left him destitute.
Saracenis pianos may still be purchased for between $6,000 and $16,500, depending on size, by emailing info@bigpiano.com, Medaugh said. They represent the possibility of a wholesome, fanciful relationship between people and technology.
Technology should live and breathe with you, Saraceni told the Daily News in 1983. It should respond to you, not you to it.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.