Mar. 29, 2009—Maurice Jarre, a French composer and conductor who netted three Oscars among his 150 movie soundtracks, died at age 84 of cancer at his villa in Malibu, Calif.
You might wonder why I picked a photo of Peter O’Toole
to illustrate a brief account of someone else. Well, it’s because that picture
instantly brings to mind the first of Jarre’s memorable Oscar-winning scores: Lawrence
of Arabia.
Accomplished film composers have existed for nearly as
long as there’s been a Hollywood, but except for John Williams, I don’t think
that one has emerged as a name brand in his own right—and the latter’s fame was
surely enhanced by his 14-year association with the Boston Pops.
But once you see that picture of O’Toole, more likely
than not, the majestic theme of Lawrence of Arabia will resound in your
head—as distinct a contribution to that epic’s grandeur as the spectacular
cinematography of Freddie Young.
So indelible were the sounds created by Jarre that his
soundtrack for the film was voted #3 on the American Film Institute’s 25 Greatest Film Scores of All Time, surpassed only by Williams’ Star Wars
and Max Steiner’s Gone With the Wind.
Yet the soundtrack that Jarre produced for Lean’s next
epic, Doctor Zhivago, produced an even more inescapable melody: “Lara’s
Theme,” a hit international single.
Oscar honors came yet again for Jarre for his work on
that 1965 film, then again 19 years later for what turned out to be Lean’s last
big-screen epic: A Passage to India.
As Jarre’s agent and friend Richard Kraft
noted in a 2009 appreciation for The Hollywood Reporter,
Jarre came to the U.S. when pioneering symphonic-oriented film composers such
as Max Steiner and Erich
Wolfgang Korngold were passing from the scene, replaced by Elmer Bernstein,
Alex North, Burt Bacharach, Henry Mancini, and Jerry Goldsmith interested in
new sounds.
Although Jarre’s conservatory training leaned heavily
on percussion, he shared the younger composers’ interest in different musical
textures, using instruments that evoked the settings of his films, as seen in:
*The Man Who Would Be King, featuring sarangi
and sarod, or Indian lutes;
*Ryan’s Daughter, with eight harps among the “lot
of little experiments in the sound, music and concept” that Jarre mentioned in an
August 1993 interview with Susan King of the Los Angeles Times;
*Witness, relying on synthesizers;
*The Dead Poets Society, with Celtic harp and
flute layered over synthesizers.
Hired by producer Sam Spiegel, Jarre found Lawrence
of Arabia a far more complex and high-stakes job than any he’d experienced
in French theater and cinema. It was on a grand scale, requiring more than two
hours of music; Lean was editing the second part of the film first, so Jarre
would have to compose out of chronological order; and he had only six weeks to
compose and conduct.
Making matters worse, as Sheila O’Malley noted in a perceptive 2007 blog post, Adrian Boult was engaged to record the
soundtrack because British subsidies would not fund a foreign conductor, even
though the first rehearsal made it plain that Boult didn’t know key aspects of
what he was about to take on, such as keep an eye on the chronometer and an eye
on the screen. (Boult ended up on the film credits, even though he didn’t
record a note.)
Early on in researching this post, I wondered what
Jarre’s personality was like—an inquiry triggered by Williams’ recent comment
in an interview with Variety Magazine in which he discussed the
older breed of film composers: “Alex North, David Raksin, Jerry Goldsmith and
others — brilliant, beautiful talents. All unhappy.”
I’ve come to think that, while Jarre might have been a
“brilliant, beautiful” talent, he was far from “unhappy”, with these traits
among his most prominent:
*Perfectionism: Lean helped instill this
characteristic, Jarre explained in commentary for a tribute concert for the director recorded with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.
*Loyal: Jarre worked on the last four films
completed by Lean and was starting on a fifth, an adaptation of the Joseph
Conrad novel Nostromo, before the project died with the director’s death
from cancer.
*Convivial: At the time of the composer’s
death, Bernard Miyet, then leader of French musicians’ guild SACEM, praised his
friend’s “eternal good nature, a way of living and a simplicity that became
legendary.” Jarre loved to regale listeners with anecdotes spotlighting the
films and personalities he had known over the years, including how during an L.A.
recording session, his entire orchestra stopped playing after spotting actress
Sophia Loren in the technician’s booth.
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