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Biography

Austrian-born film composer Max Steiner was the grandson of the musical impresario who discovered Strauss and brought Offenbach to Vienna. Growing up with a rich heritage of opera and symphony all about him, Steiner developed into a musical prodigy; at the age of thirteen he graduated from the Imperial Academy of Music, completing the course in one year and winning the Gold Medal of the Emperor. Already a composer at 14 and conductor at 16, Steiner moved from Austria to England in 1905, remaining there to conduct at His Majesty's Theatre until 1914. With the outbreak of the war, Steiner emigrated to America, where he kept busy with Broadway musicals and operettas. One of his most beneficial American jobs was to compose the music to be conducted during screenings of the silent film The Bondman (1915); he became a friend of William Fox, the film's producer, giving Steiner early entree into the Hollywood that would so gainfully employ him in later years. In 1929, he was brought to fledgling RKO Radio Studios to orchestrate the film adaptation of Ziegfeld's Rio Rita (1929). Always confident in his talents, Steiner was realistic enough to understand that he was hired by RKO because he cost a tenth of what someone like Stowkowski would charge. While at RKO, Steiner developed his theory that music should be a function of the dramatic content of a film, and not merely background filling. His scores for such films as Symphony of Six Million (1932), The Informer (1935), and, especially, King Kong (1933) are carefully integrated works, commenting upon the visual images, augmenting the action, and heightening the dramatic impact. While Steiner's detractors would characterize his spell-it-out technique as "Mickey Mousing" (in reference to the music heard in animated cartoons), producers, directors, and stars came to rely upon Steiner to make a good film better, and a great film superb. After 111 pictures at RKO, Steiner was hired by David O. Selznick, who assigned the composer to write the score for Gone with the Wind (1939). Virtually 75 percent of this 221-minute epic required music of some sort, and Steiner rose to the occasion with what many consider his finest work. One concept refined in Gone with the Wind was to give each important character his or her own separate musical motif -- quite an undertaking when one realizes how many speaking parts there were in the film. Around that time Steiner began working at Warner Bros, where he penned the studio's famous "opening logo" fanfare and also provided evocative scores for such classics as Now Voyager (1941), Casablanca (1942) and Mildred Pierce (1945). A proud, vain man, Steiner frequently found himself the butt of good-natured practical jokes from his fellow composers, but at Oscar time it was usually Steiner who had the last laugh. Steiner remained active until 1965, contributing scores to The Caine Mutiny (1954), The Searchers (1955), A Summer Place (1959) and many other films. It was only at the very end of his career, with such retrogressive scores as Youngblood Hawke (1964), that Max Steiner's once-revolutionary technique began to sound old hat. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide


Awards

Best Drama or Comedy Score (nom)
Battle Cry 1955
Academy

 

Best Drama or Comedy Score (nom)
The Caine Mutiny 1954
Academy

 

Best Musical Score (nom)
The Jazz Singer 1952
Academy

 

Best Drama or Comedy Score (nom)
The Miracle of Our Lady of Fatima 1952
Academy

 

Best Drama or Comedy Score (nom)
The Flame and the Arrow 1950
Academy

 

Best Drama or Comedy Score (nom)
Beyond the Forest 1949
Academy

 

Best Drama or Comedy Score (nom)
Johnny Belinda 1948
Academy

 

Best Score - Musical (nom)
My Wild Irish Rose 1947
Academy

 

Best Score - Drama or Comedy (nom)
Life With Father 1947
Academy

 

Best Original Score (win)
Life With Father 1947
Golden Globe

 

Best Score - Musical (nom)
Night and Day 1946
Academy

 

Best Score - Musical (nom)
Rhapsody in Blue 1945
Academy

 

Best Score - Drama or Comedy (nom)
The Adventures of Mark Twain 1944
Academy

 

Best Score - Drama or Comedy (win)
Since You Went Away 1944
Academy

 

Best Score - Drama or Comedy (nom)
Casablanca 1943
Academy

 

Best Score - Drama or Comedy (win)
Now, Voyager 1942
Academy

 

Best Dramatic Score (nom)
Sergeant York 1941
Academy

 

Best Original Score (nom)
The Letter 1940
Academy

 

Best Original Score (nom)
Gone With the Wind 1939
Academy

 

Best Original Score (nom)
Dark Victory 1939
Academy

 

Best Score (nom)
Jezebel 1938
Academy

 

Best Score (nom)
The Charge of the Light Brigade 1936
Academy

 


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