Biography
An iconic American composer, Earle H. Hagen authored the scores for countless feature films, but placed his greatest emphasis on prime-time television programs, and racked up a larger number of composition credits in that venue than almost any of his contemporaries. Born in Chicago in 1919, Hagen moved with his family during boyhood to Southern California -- where his dad worked as a plumber -- and enrolled in Hollywood High. Hagen unveiled a prodigious musical ability from an early age -- one so advanced, in fact, that it inspired him to drop out of high school at age 16 and tour with the big bands of
Benny Goodman,
Tommy Dorsey, and others, playing the trombone and baritone. Later, Hagen toured and played with the Ray Noble band (a period that witnessed him authoring the standard "Harlem Nocturne"), though shortly after he met his wife, one of her statements inadvertently encouraged him to drop playing and place his sole emphasis on composing and orchestrating.
Hagen then took a full-time assignment as an arranger for 20th Century Fox, specializing in musicals such as
With a Song in My Heart (1952) and
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), but (as indicated) found his strongest and most defining niche on the small screen, where he projected a remarkable ability to hone in on the central themes and mood at the heart of almost any series program. He penned the scores for series that have since become American institutions, such as
Make Room for Daddy,
That Girl,
I Spy, and Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. Hagen is most commonly associated, however, with his authorship of the folksy
Andy Griffith Show theme, played atop black-and-white credit footage of
Andy Griffith and
Ronny Howard on a fishing trip; in fact, Hagen was the one actually whistling the tune. Courtesy of
Daddy and
That Girl producers
Danny Thomas and
Sheldon Leonard, Hagen also snagged the assignment of composing the theme for
The Dick Van Dyke Show, with the famous riff that accompanied Van Dyke stumbling over and then sidestepping the ottoman in his living room.
Beginning in the 1970s, Hagen began to focus more heavily on authoring books about television score composition and teaching music composition courses, though his feature work continued, particularly on telemovie scores. Later credits included the made-for-television films
Having Babies (1976),
The Hustler of Muscle Beach (1980),
North Beach and Rawhide, and -- on a truly nostalgic note --
Return to Mayberry (1986). Hagen died in 2008, at the age of 88, from natural causes. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide