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Carmine Coppola

 
Artist: Carmine Coppola
  • Period: Contemporary (1950- )
  • Country: USA
  • Born: June 11, 1910 in Brooklyn, NY
  • Died: 1991 04

Biography

Carmine Coppola was an outstanding orchestral flute player and a composer who obtained some success in film scoring. He was also the founder of one of the major movie dynasties of the last third of the twentieth century. His son, Francis Ford Coppola, is one of Hollywood's most individual and brilliant major directors. His daughter, Talia Shire, is a gifted character actress. Francis Ford Coppola's daughter Sofia has acted and written screenplays, and another of Carmine's grandchildren is Nicolas Cage, among the most talented actors of his generation. Yet another grandchild, Cage's brother Christopher Coppola, is a screenwriter, director, and producer.

Carmine was the son of August Coppola, who emigrated from southern Italy to the United States in 1904. August had seven sons, of whom Carmine was the second.

Carmine showed musical aptitude early, and the family brought him a wooden flute to play. He joined a New York marching band comprising 400 boys as members. But his musical studies were more serious, and after graduating from Brooklyn's Stuyvesant High School he received a scholarship to the Juilliard School of Music.

After graduation from Juilliard, Carmine went to work as a staff musician at a Connecticut radio station. He married an fellow Brooklynite, an actress named Italia Pennino, daughter of a composer who wrote Neapolitan songs. His next job was with the orchestra of the Radio City Music Hall, one of the largest theaters in the United States. He worked there for several years as first flute, then joined the Detroit Symphony Orchestra.

It was while living in Detroit that Francis Ford Coppola was born in April 1939. By 1941, Carmine moved the family back to New York, where he had been personally engaged by Arturo Toscanini to join the maestro's hand-picked NBC Symphony Orchestra. He remained in that prestigious ensemble for ten years.

But Carmine's ambition was to compose and to conduct. He conducted some operas at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and was also a staff conductor for the David Merrick theatrical organization, which gave him an opportunity to conduct musical comedy touring companies.

In 1967, Francis Ford Coppola, who had already written successful screenplays and directed small films, was assigned to direct the movie version of the play Finian's Rainbow. Carmine was touring with Half a Sixpence at the time, but accepted his son's invitation to come to Hollywood to assist with the music of the film. Finian's Rainbow was a flop that nearly wrecked Francis' career. But then he co-wrote one of the most brilliant and difficult screenplays in Hollywood history with Edmund North for the film biography Patton. This put him back in position to take on a major directing project, the grandiose and highly personal film adaptation of Mario Puzo's best-seller The Godfather. Once again Carmine collaborated with his son, assisting the great Italian film composer Nino Rota.

The great success of the film opened doors for both father and son, and they went on to make The Godfather Part II, one of the rare cases when a film and its sequel have both won Best Picture Academy Awards. Now Carmine and Nino Rota shared credit as composer. When they won the Oscar for Best Musical Score, Carmine said in his acceptance speech, "I want to thank my son Francis, because without him I wouldn't be here. But then if I wasn't here, he wouldn't be, either."

Carmine went on to score The Godfather Part III, The Black Stallion, Apocalypse Now, The Outsiders, and the work he considered his best, a three-and-a-half hour complete score for the great Abel Gance silent film Napoleon. ~ Joseph Stevenson, All Music Guide
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Actor: Carmine Coppola
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  • Born: Jun 11, 1910 in Brooklyn, New York
  • Died: Apr 26, 1991 in Northridge, California
  • Active: '70s-'80s
  • Major Genres: Crime, Comedy Drama
  • Career Highlights: The Godfather Part II, The Black Stallion, Gardens of Stone
  • First Major Screen Credit: Tonight for Sure (1961)

Biography

Flautist and film scorist Carmine Coppola studied flute and composition at Juilliard and later at the Manhattan School of Music. For a long time Coppola worked under Arturo Toscanini and his NBC Symphony Orchestra. Later he went on to score several films for his son, legendary filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola, including Godfather, Part II (1974) and Apocalypse Now (1979). Coppola's daughter is actress Talia Shire. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Carmine Coppola
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Carmine Coppola
Born June 11, 1910
New York City, New York
Died April 26, 1991 (aged 80)
Northridge, California
Spouse(s) Italia Coppola

Carmine Coppola (June 11, 1910 - April 26, 1991) was an American composer, editor, musical director, and songwriter. Coppola was a composer and conductor who contributed to many of the musical scores in The Godfather, The Godfather Part II, The Godfather Part III, and Apocalypse Now directed by his son Francis Ford Coppola.

Contents

Biography

Personal life

Coppola was born in New York City, the son of Marie (née Zasa) and Agostino Coppola. His brother is Maestro Anton Coppola. He was the father of August Coppola, Francis Ford Coppola and Talia Shire and grandfather of Nicolas Cage, Sofia Coppola, Jason Schwartzman and Robert Schwartzman. His wife, Italia Coppola, died in 2004 in Los Angeles. Coppola died in Northridge, California at the age of 80. Upon his death, Coppola's grandson Robert Schwartzman changed his last name to 'Carmine' in his grandfather's honor.

Career

Coppola played the flute. He studied at Juilliard and later at the Manhattan School of Music. During the 1940s, Coppola worked under Arturo Toscanini with the NBC Symphony Orchestra. Then in 1951, Coppola left the Orchestra to pursue his dream of composing music. During that time he mostly worked as an orchestra conductor on Broadway and elsewhere, working with his son, legendary filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola, on additional music for his Finian's Rainbow. Later, his son called him to provide additional music for The Godfather Part II, in which he and his father received an in-movie tribute with the characters Agostino and Carmine Coppola, who appear in a deleted scene from the young Vito Corleone flashback segments. Together with Nino Rota, Carmine composed music for The Godfather, and for The Godfather Part II, for which they won Oscars for Best Score. Carmine then scored Francis' Apocalypse Now, for which he won a Golden Globe award for best original score. He also composed three and a half hour score for Francis' 1981 reconstruction of Abel Gance's 1921 epic Napoleon.

Filmography

See also

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Carmine Coppola" Read more

 

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