Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Adolph Sender Charles Deutsch (20 October 1897 – 1 January 1980) [1] was a British-American composer, conductor and arranger. Born in London, England, he emigrated to the United States in 1911, and settled in Buffalo, New York. His parents, Alex (Alexander) Deutsch and Dena née Gerst, were German Jews. In 1914, Deutsch was "a Buffalo movie ...

  2. Adolph Deutsch (1897-1980) Adolph Deutsch. London-born piano child prodigy Adolph Deutsch trained at the Royal Academy of Music from the age of eight and composed his first piece, a waltz for piano, entitled "La Charmeuse", two years later. He moved to the U.S. in 1910 and got his first job working for a publishing house, during which time he ...

    • January 1, 1
    • London, England, UK
    • January 1, 1
    • Palm Desert, California, USA
  3. Als Sohn deutscher Juden lebte Adolph Deutsch die ersten 13 Jahre seines Lebens in England. Er erhielt als Fünfjähriger Klavierunterricht und wurde 1905 in die Royal Academy of Music aufgenommen. 1910 emigrierte Deutschs Familie in die Vereinigten Staaten, wo Adolph im Jahr 1920 die US-amerikanische Staatsbürgerschaft erhielt.

  4. Academy Award (1956) Robert Russell Bennett (born June 15, 1894, Kansas City, Mo., U.S.—died Aug. 19, 1981, New York City, N.Y.) was an American composer, conductor, and Broadway orchestrator. He studied music in Berlin, London, and Paris. Beginning in the 1920s, he scored some 300 Broadway musicals over 40 years, including the works of ...

  5. Adolph Deutsch. When recalling Warner Bros. composers for dramatic scores during the "golden age" of the 1930s and 1940s, Max Steiner, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, and Franz Waxman (1940s) immediately come to mind. They were the "stars" who received the choice assignments (along with ones not so choice).

  6. Adolph Deutsch was one of those great unrecognized talents who collectively worked behind the scenes to help create the great MGM musicals of the 1950s. Deutsch worked on nearly all of them. He was nominated for Academy Awards for scoring The Band Wagon from Arthur Freed's unit, and he won Oscars for his work on two minor musical efforts, Annie Get Your Gun and Oklahoma! , as well as for Seven ...

  7. People also ask

  8. Adolph Deutsch was one of those great unrecognized talents who collectively worked behind the scenes to help create the great MGM musicals of the 1950s. Deutsch worked on nearly all of them. He was nominated for Academy Awards for scoring The Band Wagon from Arthur Freed's unit, and he won Oscars for his work on two minor musical efforts, Annie Get Your Gun and Oklahoma!