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Miklós Rózsa

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Hungarian-American composer (1907–1995)
The native form of thispersonal name isRózsa Miklós. This article usesWestern name order when mentioning individuals.
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Miklós Rózsa
Rózsa holding his Oscar at the18th Academy Awards (1946)
Born(1907-04-18)April 18, 1907
Budapest, Austria-Hungary
(now Hungary)
DiedJuly 27, 1995(1995-07-27) (aged 88)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
OccupationsComposer, conductor
Years active1918–1989
Spouse
Margaret Finlason
(m. 1943)
Children2
Websitemiklosrozsa.org

Miklós Rózsa (Hungarian:[ˈmikloːʃˈroːʒɒ]; April 18, 1907 – July 27, 1995)[1] was a Hungarian-Americancomposer trained in Germany (1925–1931) and active in France (1931–1935), the United Kingdom (1935–1940), and the United States (1940–1995), with extensive sojourns in Italy from 1953 onward.[2] Best known for his nearly one hundred film scores, he nevertheless maintained a steadfast allegiance to absolute concert music throughout what he called his "double life".[3]

Rózsa achieved early success in Europe with his orchestralTheme, Variations, and Finale (Op. 13) of 1933, and became prominent in the film industry from such early scores asThe Four Feathers (1939) andThe Thief of Bagdad (1940). The latter project brought him to Hollywood when production was transferred from wartime Britain, and Rózsa remained in the United States, becoming an American citizen in 1946.

During his Hollywood career, he received 17Academy Award nominations including three Oscars forSpellbound (1945),A Double Life (1947), andBen-Hur (1959), while his concert works were championed by such major artists asJascha Heifetz,Gregor Piatigorsky, andJános Starker.

Early life

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Miklós Rózsa was born inBudapest and was introduced to classical and folk music by his mother, Regina (née Berkovits), a pianist who had studied with pupils ofFranz Liszt, and his father, Gyula, a well-to-do industrialist and landowner who loved Hungarianfolk music. Both parents were of Jewish origin. Gyula's father, Moritz Rosenberg, had changed the family name toRózsa in 1887.[4] Gyula Rózsa had inherited from his father a Budapest shoe factory, which brought him to the capital around 1900. Like his father, and despite his landowning status, Gyula had socialist leanings, which he expressed in a pamphlet entitledTo Whom Does the Hungarian Soil Belong? Young Miklós grew up in a home of enlightened values and musical culture. His only sibling, Edith, was born seven years later.

Rózsa's maternal uncle Lajos Berkovits, violinist with the Budapest Opera, presented young Miklós with his first instrument at the age of five. He later took up theviola andpiano. By the age of eight he was performing in public and composing.[1] He also collectedfolksongs from the area where his family had a country estate north of Budapest in an area inhabited by thePalóc Hungarians. While deeply admiring the folk-based nationalism ofBéla Bartók andZoltán Kodály, Rózsa sought to find his own way as a composer. Fearing that Kodály's dominance at Budapest'sFranz Liszt Academy tended to suppress individualism, he sought to study music in Germany. He enrolled at theUniversity of Leipzig in 1925,[1] ostensibly to study chemistry at the behest of his practical-minded father. Determined to become a composer, he transferred to theLeipzig Conservatory the following year. There he studied composition withHermann Grabner, successor toMax Reger. He also studied choral music with (and later assisted)Karl Straube at theThomaskirche, whereJohann Sebastian Bach had once been the kapellmeister. Rózsa emerged from these years with a deep respect for the German musical tradition, which would always temper the Hungarian nationalism of his musical style.

Rózsa's first two published works, the String Trio, Op. 1, and the Piano Quintet, Op. 2, were issued in Leipzig byBreitkopf & Härtel. In 1929, he received his diplomascum laude.[5] During the Leipzig years he essayed a single-movement Violin Concerto and a lengthy Symphony, Op. 6. Neither work was published, and Rózsa was discouraged on a trip to Berlin whenWilhelm Furtwängler did not find time to consider the Symphony. Rozsa suppressed both works, but eventually allowed the Symphony (minus its lost scherzo) to be recorded in 1993.

For a time he remained in Leipzig as Grabner's assistant, but at the suggestion of the Frenchorganist and composerMarcel Dupré, he moved to Paris in 1931. There he composed chamber music and aSerenade for small orchestra, Op. 10 (later greatly revised asHungarian Serenade, Op. 25). It was premiered in Budapest byErnő Dohnányi, who had advised Rózsa to offer a shorter work than the Symphony.Richard Strauss was in the audience, and his approval meant more to the young composer than the presence of Habsburg royalty and the prince regent,Miklós Horthy. The subsequentTheme, Variations, and Finale, Op. 13, was especially well received and was performed by conductors such asCharles Munch,Karl Böhm,Georg Solti,Eugene Ormandy,Bruno Walter andLeonard Bernstein.

Film scoring career

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Rózsa was introduced to film music in 1934 by his friend, the Swiss composerArthur Honegger. Following a concert which featured their respective compositions, Honegger mentioned that he supplemented his income as a composer of film scores, including the filmLes Misérables (1934). Rózsa went to see it and was greatly impressed by the opportunities the film medium offered. However, no film scoring opportunities presented themselves in Paris, and Rózsa had to support himself by reliance on a wealthy patron and by composing light music under the pseudonym Nic Tomay. It was not until Rózsa moved toLondon that he was hired to compose his first film score forKnight Without Armour (1937), produced by his fellow HungarianAlexander Korda.[1] Around the same time he also scoredThunder in the City (1937) for another Hungarian filmmaker,Ákos Tolnay, who had previously urged Rózsa to come to England. While the latter film was the first to open, Rózsa always cited the more prestigious Korda project as his film debut. He joined the staff of Korda'sLondon Films, and scored the studio's epicThe Four Feathers (1939).[1] Korda and the studio's music director,Muir Mathieson, brought Rózsa onto their Arabian Nights fantasyThe Thief of Bagdad (1940) when the operetta-style approach of the original composer,Oscar Straus, was deemed unsuitable. Production was transferred to Hollywood when the war broke out, and Rozsa completed his score there in 1940.

The music earned him his first Academy Award nomination. While Korda remained in Hollywood, Rózsa was effectively the music director of his organization. In his capacity, he supervised the scoring ofTo Be or Not to Be (1942), and contributed at least one sequence of his own music. His own U.S. scores for Korda includedLydia (1940),That Hamilton Woman (1941) andThe Jungle Book (1942). From the last of these emergedThe Jungle Book Suite for narrator and orchestra, which became popular as narrated by the film's star,Sabu, and was soon recorded in New York by RCA. The 78-rpm album became the first substantial recording of Hollywood film music. It was later recorded with Rózsa conducting the Frankenland State Orchestra of Nuremberg andLeo Genn as narrator.

In 1943, now associated withParamount, Rózsa scored the first of several collaborations with directorBilly Wilder,Five Graves to Cairo.[1] That same year he also scored the similarly themedHumphrey Bogart filmSahara. In 1944, his scores for a second Wilder collaboration,Double Indemnity,[1] and forThe Woman of the Town, both received Academy Award nominations.

In 1944, Rózsa was hired by producerDavid O. Selznick to compose the score for Alfred Hitchcock's filmSpellbound. The scoring process was contentious, with producer, director and composer all expressing considerable dissatisfaction with each other. Numerous changes were made in the editing by Audray Granville, Selznick's assistant and de facto music director. The almost farcical history of artists at cross-purposes has been documented by Jack Sullivan (Hitchcock's Music, 2006) and especially Nathan Platte (Making Music in Selznick's Hollywood, 2018). Nevertheless, the film was a hit after its release in late 1945. The combination of lush melody for the romance and frenzied expressionism for the suspense scenes proved irresistible. Rózsa's pioneering (for Hollywood) use of thetheremin contributed to the effect, and the attention it generated likely influenced his Academy Award nomination. Two of his other 1945 scores were also nominated,The Lost Weekend andA Song to Remember, but the Oscar was awarded toSpellbound. Although Selznick was unhappy with the score, his innovative radio promotion of the music contributed to both the film's and the composer's success. Rózsa eventually arranged his themes as theSpellbound Concerto, which (in multiple versions) has enjoyed lasting success in concerts and recordings. The composerJerry Goldsmith citedSpellbound as a key influence in his decision to seek a career in film music.

Rózsa enjoyed a fruitful three-film collaboration with the independent producerMark Hellinger. ForThe Killers (1946) he wrote an ominous rhythmic figure that later became famous as the "dum-da-dum-dum" signature theme of the radio and television programDragnet. A lawsuit eventually resulted in shared credit for Rózsa and theDragnet composer,Walter Schumann. The affair is documented in Jon Burlingame'sTV's Biggest Hits (1996). The prison dramaBrute Force followed in 1947. OnThe Naked City (1948), Hellinger, on the day before he died, asked Rózsa to replace another composer's music. Rózsa later compiled a six-movement suite of music from these three films in tribute to the producer. TheMark Hellinger Suite was later recorded asBackground to Violence.

Rózsa received his second Oscar forA Double Life (1947), in whichRonald Colman, as a Shakespearean actor playing Othello, becomes murderously disturbed in his offstage life. Rózsa later adopted the title for his own memoir, signifying his desire to keep his personal music distinct from his movie career. That same year Rózsa andEugene Zador arranged music byNikolai Rimsky-Korsakov for the filmSong of Scheherazade, about a fictional episode in the composer's early life. Zador, a fellow Hungarian immigrant and a noted composer in his own right, assisted with the orchestration of most of Rózsa's Hollywood film music. Also in 1947, Rózsa scored the music for the psychological thrillerThe Red House.[1]

In 1948 Rózsa signed his only long-term studio contract withMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer (Double Life, p. 159). Previous associations with Paramount and Universal had been on a picture-to-picture basis. He was able to stipulate time off for his "serious" or personal composing, the right to decline assignments, and the right to teach a course on film music at theUniversity of Southern California. The M-G-M affiliation, which lasted until 1962, resulted in new musical approaches for the studio's output of historical romances and biblical "epics."Quo Vadis (1951) initiated the composer's historical period. For this massive production, Hollywood's most expensive film to that date, Rózsa went back to ancient Greek sources in an effort to simulate the music of antiquity. His account of this research was published inFilm Music Notes 11:2 (1951) and has been reprinted frequently since.[6] Other historical pictures from this era were set in Antiquity:Julius Caesar (1953),Ben-Hur (1959) andKing of Kings (1961); in the Middle Ages:Ivanhoe (1952) andKnights of the Round Table (1953); in the Renaissance:Young Bess (1953) andDiane (1956); and in the nineteenth century:Madame Bovary (1949) andLust for Life (1956).

Ben-Hur, widely considered Rózsa's cinemusical masterpiece, is one of the longest film scores ever composed. Its intricate Wagnerian web ofleitmotifs has received extensive study. Roger Hickman describes it as "the last universally acknowledged score created in the classical Hollywood tradition prior toStar Wars (1977)... and one of the most influential scores on theStar Wars generation."[7] The film was Hollywood's greatest success sinceGone with the Wind, and Rózsa's Academy Award was one of its record total of eleven. The "Parade of the Charioteers" became popular with bands across the country.

In 1968, he was asked to scoreThe Green Berets, afterElmer Bernstein turned it down due to his political beliefs. Rózsa initially declined the offer, saying, "I don't do westerns." However, he agreed to compose the score after being informed, "It's not a Western, it's an 'Eastern'." He produced a strong and varied score, which included a nightclub vocal by a Vietnamese singer, Bạch Yến. However, one cue which incorporated stanzas of "Onward, Christian Soldiers", was deleted from the film's final edit.[1]

His popular film scores during the 1970s included his last two Billy Wilder collaborationsThe Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970) andFedora (1978), theRay Harryhausen fantasy sequelThe Golden Voyage of Sinbad (1973), the latter-dayfilm noirLast Embrace starringRoy Scheider and the time-travel fantasy filmTime After Time (1979), for which Rózsa won a Science Fiction Film Award. In his televised acceptance speech, Rózsa said that, of all the film scores he had ever composed, it was the one he had worked on the hardest.

For his first film in English,Providence (1977),Alain Resnais turned to Rózsa, whom he had admired especially for his work on the 1949 version ofMadame Bovary. Rózsa later cited Resnais as one of the few directors in his experience who really understood the function of music in film.

After completing work on the music for the spy thrillerEye of the Needle (1981), Rózsa's last film score was for the black-and-whiteSteve Martin filmDead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982), a comic homage to thefilm noir films of the 1940s, a genre to which Rozsa himself had contributed scores.[1] Although Rózsa's career as a composer for films ended following a stroke he suffered while on holiday in Italy later that year, he continued to compose various concert pieces thereafter; one of his last works being Sonata for Ondes Martenot, op. 45 (1989).[8]

He returned to California at the behest of his son, and remained sequestered at his home for the remainder of his life.

Death

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Rózsa died on July 27, 1995.[1] His wife, Margaret, died in 1999, aged 89.

Works

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Main article:List of compositions by Miklós Rózsa

Rózsa's first major success was the orchestralTheme, Variations, and Finale, Op. 13, introduced in Duisburg, Germany, in 1934 and soon taken up byCharles Munch,Karl Böhm,Bruno Walter,Hans Swarowsky, and other leading conductors. It was first played in the United States by theChicago Symphony Orchestra underHans Lange on October 28–29, 1937, and achieved wide exposure through a 1943 New York Philharmonic concert broadcast whenLeonard Bernstein made his famous conducting debut.

By 1952, his film score work was proving so successful that he was able to negotiate a clause in his contract with MGM that gave him three months each year away from the film studio so that he could focus on concert music.

Rózsa's Violin Concerto, Op. 24, was composed in 1953–54 for theviolinistJascha Heifetz, who collaborated with the composer in fine-tuning it. Rózsa later adapted portions of this work for the score ofBilly Wilder'sThe Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970). Rózsa's Cello Concerto, Op. 32 was written much later (1967–68) at the request of thecellistJános Starker, who premiered the work in Berlin in 1969.

Between his violin and cello concertos, Rózsa composed his Sinfonia Concertante, Op. 29, for violin, cello, and orchestra. The commissioning artists, Heifetz and his frequent collaboratorGregor Piatigorsky, never performed the finished work, although they did record a reduced version of the slow movement, calledTema con Variazoni, Op. 29a.

Rózsa also received recognition for his choral works. His collaboration with conductor Maurice Skones and The Choir of the West atPacific Lutheran University inTacoma, Washington, resulted in a commercial recording of his sacred choral works—To Everything There is a Season, Op. 20;The Vanities of Life, Op. 30; andThe Twenty-Third Psalm, Op. 34—produced by John Steven Lasher and recorded by Allen Giles for theEntr'acte Recording Society in 1978.

In popular culture

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The seventh variation (after the theme) of hisTheme, Variations and Finale, Op. 13, was used as part of the soundtrack in four episodes—most notably "The Clown Who Cried"—of 1950s television seriesAdventures of Superman.

In theTom Clancy novelRed Rabbit, a fictional cousin of Rózsa's, "Jozsef Rozsa", appears as a minor character who is famous in-universe as a conductor of classical music.[9]

Bibliography

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  • Miklós Rózsa:"Quo Vadis?" Film Music Notes, Vol. 11, No. 2 (1951)
  • Miklós Rózsa:Double Life: The Autobiography of Miklós Rózsa, Composer in the Golden Years of Hollywood, Seven Hills Books (1989) –ISBN 0-85936-209-4
  • Miklós Rózsa:Double Life: The Autobiography of Miklós Rózsa, Composer in the Golden Years of Hollywood, The Baton Press (1984) –ISBN 0-85936-141-1 (Softcover edition)
  • Miklós Rózsa:Életem történeteiből (Discussions withJános Sebestyén, edited by György Lehotay-Horváth). Zeneműkiadó, Budapest (1980) –ISBN 963-330-354-0

References

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  1. ^abcdefghijkColin Larkin, ed. (1997).The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.).Virgin Books. pp. 1042/3.ISBN 1-85227-745-9.
  2. ^"Biography". Miklós Rózsa Society. Archived fromthe original on June 4, 2019. RetrievedMarch 11, 2012.
  3. ^Rózsa, Miklós (1982).Double Life: The Autobiography of Miklós Rózsa. Tunbridge Wells: Baton Press. p. 9.ISBN 0-85936-209-4.
  4. ^Steven Dwight Wescott. "Miklós Rózsa: A Portrait of the Composer as Seen Through an Analysis of His Early Works for Feature Films and the Concert Stage." Ph.D. Diss.: University of Minnesota, 1990. Wescott's dissertation, based on interviews with the composer and family archival documents, is the primary source for Rózsa's family background and early life.
  5. ^Raksin, David (1995)."David Raksin Remembers his Colleagues - Miklós Rózsa".American Composers Orchestra. Archived fromthe original on December 3, 2019. RetrievedMarch 11, 2012.
  6. ^Rózsa, Miklós; DeWald, Frank K. (January 12, 2010)."Quo Vadis: Archival Music".Film Score Monthly. RetrievedAugust 18, 2025.
  7. ^Hickman, Roger (March 15, 2011).Miklós Rózsa's Ben-Hur: A Film Score Guide. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. p. 2.ISBN 978-0810881006.
  8. ^"Miklós Rózsa (1907–1995)". Pytheas Center for Contemporary Music. RetrievedOctober 27, 2013.
  9. ^Clancy, Tom (2002).Red Rabbit. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. p. 363.ISBN 0-399-14870-1.Jozsef Rozsa is in Berlin right now, and then he's going to Budapest...Hungarian native, cousin of Miklos Rozsa, Hollywood composer—Ben Hur, and like that.

Further reading

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  • Christopher Palmer:Miklós Rózsa. A Sketch Of His Life And Work. With a foreword byEugene Ormandy. Breitkopf & Härtel, London, Wiesbaden (1975)
  • Miklós Rózsa andMiklós Rózsa on Film Music inTony Thomas:Film Score. The Art & Craft of Movie Music, Riverwood Press (1991) –ISBN 1-880756-01-3, pp. 18–32
  • Miklós Rózsa in William Darby und Jack Du Bois:American Film Music. Major Composers, Techniques, Trends, 1915 – 1990. McFarland (1990) –ISBN 0-7864-0753-0 – pp. 307–344
  • Miklós Rózsa in Christopher Palmer:The Composer In Hollywood. Marion Boyars (1993) –ISBN 0-7145-2950-8 – pp. 186–233
  • From 1950 to the Present in Roy M. Prendergast:Film Music. A Neglected Art. A Critical Study of Music in Films. Second Edition. Norton (1992) –ISBN 0-393-30874-X – pp. 98–179 (in this chapter, the author analyzes Rózsa's score fromQuo Vadis (pp. 126–130), on a few pages more, he also discussesJulius Caesar andKing of Kings, a couple of other film works by Miklós Rózsa are merely mentioned)
  • Jeffrey Dane: "A Composer's Notes: Remembering Miklós Rózsa", iUniverse (2006) –ISBN 0-595-41433-8

External links

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