Alfred Newman


Born: 03/17/1901 New Haven, CT
Decades Active:
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  1890    1900    1910    1920    1930    1940    1950    1960    1970    1980    1990    2000    2010  
Biography: American film composer/conductor/adaptor Alfred Newman was a child prodigy -- and none too modest about the fact. Making his professional debut at seven (after taking private lessons from the great Arnold Schoenberg), Newman was billed as "the Marvelous Boy Pianist." He was later known variously as "the Boy Conductor" and "the Youngest Conductor in the United States." By the time he entered films with the 1930 Goldwyn production Whoopee!, Newman had a decade's worth of experience conducting symphonies and Broadway orchestras. His first important film composition was the Gershwyn-esque title theme for Goldwyn's Street Scene (1931) which he later expanded into a suite and utilized as the credit music for several 20th Century Fox films, notably I Wake Up Screaming (1941) and Cry of the City (1948); in the prologue to 1953's How to Marry a Millionaire, Newman can be seen conducting this classic piece.


DVDs that Alfred Newman worked on "behind the scenes"...

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