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Jeff Alexander

 
Artist: Jeff Alexander

Formal Connection With:

Mario Lanza, Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley
  • Born: July 02, 1910, Seattle, WA
  • Died: December 23, 1989, Seattle, WA
  • Active: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s
  • Genres: Vocal Music
  • Instrument: Arranger

Biography

Jeff Alexander (born Myer Goodhue Alexander was a classically-trained composer, arranger, and conductor who enjoyed a 28 year career in Hollywood and on television (where his work included such popular series as My Three Sons and episodes of The Twilight Zone). In the course of his movie work, he wrote some songs in a popular idiom, including "Soothe My Lonely Heart", "The Wings of Eagles", and "Blues About Manhattan", and also wrote classical pieces for the concert hall. Alexander was also responsible for arranging the choral music on some theater-related recordings of the 1950's, including the 1951 cast recording of The Vagabond King, reissued on CD in the early twenty-first century by Decca. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Actor: Jeff Alexander
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  • Born: Jul 02, 1910 in Seattle, Washington
  • Died: Dec 23, 1979 in Seattle, Washington
  • Active: '50s-'60s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Western
  • Career Highlights: Support Your Local Sheriff, It Started with a Kiss, Why Man Creates
  • First Major Screen Credit: Westward the Women (1951)

Biography

Jeff Alexander was a classically trained composer/arranger/conductor who spent almost 30 years working in movies and television. He was born Myer Goodhue Alexander in Seattle, WA, in 1910 and studied at the Brecker Conservatory -- his teachers included Edmund Ross and Joseph Schillinger. Alexander joined the movie industry at the outset of the '50s and joined ASCAP as a composer in 1952. His earliest credited assignments in movies were as an arranger and/or vocal director for Call Me Mister and On the Riviera, both 20th Century Fox films. He also wrote the score of Westward the Women (all 1951) at MGM. At the latter studio, he worked variously as an arranger, conductor, or vocal music supervisor on Singin' in the Rain and a string of second-tier vehicles, including Small Town Girl, The Affairs of Dobie Gillis, and Athena -- thanks to the movie's constant revival and its use of perennially popular Freed/Brown songs, his vocal arrangements on "Singin' in the Rain" remain some of Alexander's most familiar work a half-century or more later. In his scoring of the Western Escape From Fort Bravo (1953), he wrote the popular song "Soothe My Lonely Heart," the first in a string of songs that he authored in association with movies, usually in collaboration with Jack Brooks or Larry Orenstein. Alexander wrote two film scores a year and served as conductor or musical supervisor on others (including Kismet and Jailhouse Rock). In 1958, however, he had a bumper crop of soundtracks, including The Sheepman, The High Cost of Loving, and Party Girl ;one of his scores ended up getting dropped, however, when the Western Saddle the Wind had to be partly reshot and recut and resulted in Elmer Bernstein's replacing his music.

Alexander moved into television at the end of the '50s, scoring My Three Sons, Sam Benedict, and episodes of The Twilight Zone (among them "Come Wander With Me"), in between vehicles such as The Gazebo (1959) and the Elvis Presley vehicles Kid Galahad, Clambake, and Speedway. Following the ironic Western comedy Support Your Local Sheriff (1969) and the partial Western misfire Dirty Dingus Magee (1970) he worked entirely in television, on made-for-TV features, and individual series episodes, closing out his career with More Wild, Wild West (1980). He passed away in 1989. Alexander also wrote a fair-size body of serious concert works from the '50s onward, but his film and television work remains his best-known music. In 2004, his unused score for Saddle the Wind was found in the vaults and issued on CD in tandem with the Elmer Bernstein score. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
 
 

 

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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