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Maurice Jarre

 
Artist: Maurice Jarre

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  • Born: September 13, 1924, Lyon, France
  • Died: March 29, 2009, Los Angeles, CA
  • Active: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Soundtrack
  • Instrument: Producer, Arranger, Synthesizer
  • Representative Albums: "Doctor Zhivago," "Doctor Zhivago," "Lawrence of Arabia"
  • Representative Songs: "Lara's Theme," "Building the Barn," "Arrival at Auda's Camp"

Biography

Film music composer Maurice Jarre attended the University of Lyons, then went to Paris, where he studied engineering at the Sorbonne before entering the Paris Conservatoire to study composition and percussion. He became musical director of the Théâtre National Populaire and composed his first film score for the short Hôtel des Invalides in 1951. He worked mostly on short films through the mid-'50s before graduating to mostly full-length features in the late '50s. By the early '60s, he had begun to attract international attention, getting assignments from British and American directors, and with that he embarked on a remarkably prolific career that found him scoring an average of over three films per year during the 40-year period 1960-1999.

Jarre's first major international success came with British director David Lean's 1962 epic Lawrence of Arabia. The soundtrack album containing the composer's appropriately lush and exotic music just missed topping the American LP charts, and when the film swept the Academy Awards, Jarre received his first Oscar for best original score. The following year, he was nominated for the award for best adapted score for the French film Sundays and Cybèle. He repeated his success with Lawrence of Arabia by scoring Lean's next mammoth production, Doctor Zhivago (1965). Again, he won the best original score Oscar, and the soundtrack album, stimulated by Ray Conniff's Top Ten vocal recording of "Lara's Theme" under the title "Somewhere, My Love," topped the charts and went gold. It was one of only a handful of all-instrumental recordings of movie scores ever to hit number one.

Jarre had his third soundtrack album in the charts in March 1967 with Grand Prix, the music for director John Frankenheimer's 1966 racing film, which spent more than six months among the LP best-sellers, and though the disappointing critical response to David Lean's 1970 effort Ryan's Daughter probably robbed Jarre of another Oscar, the soundtrack album of his music did get into the charts. The motion picture academy bestowed nominations on Jarre for The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean in 1977 and Mohammad, Messenger of God in 1977, and he finally won a third Oscar for his music to David Lean's return to filmmaking and final work, A Passage to India, in 1984.

The 1980s were even busier for Jarre than the '70s had been, and he adapted himself to the expanded opportunities offered by technological innovations, composing and performing electronic music for such scores as the one for Peter Weir's The Year of Living Dangerously (1983) and Witness (1985). The latter earned an Oscar nomination, while Jarre's music for Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome produced a soundtrack album that reached the Top 40. There were further Academy Award nominations for Gorillas in the Mist in 1988 and Ghost in 1990. The composer slowed his busy pace after turning 70 in 1994, but he entered the new century still working, with I Dreamed of Africa released in 2000. (Jarre's son, Jean-Michel Jarre, is also a composer.) ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
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Discography: Maurice Jarre
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Grand Prix/Ryan's Daughter

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Caduta degli Dei (The Damned)

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Lean by Jarre

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Gorillas in the Mist: The Adventure of Dian Fossey

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Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome

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Uprising

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Sunshine [Original Score]

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I Dreamed of Africa

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Essential Maurice Jarre Film Music Collection: Dr. Zhivago & Other Classical Themes

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Season in Hell

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Walk in the Clouds [Bonus Track]

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Lean by Jarre: A Musical Tribute To Sir David Lean [DualDisc]

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Lean by Jarre: A Musical Tribute To Sir David Lean [DualDisc]

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Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome

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Doctor Zhivago & The Classic Film Music of Jarre

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Gaby

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Film Music

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Film Music by Maurice Jarre

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Crossed Swords [Original Soundtrack]

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Emotion & The Strength

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Film Music Masterworks

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Ghost [Silver Screen Edition]

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Jesus of Nazareth

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Dead Poets Society/The Year of Living Dangerously

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Lawrence of Arabia

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Tribute to David Lean [CD/DVD]

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Tribute to David Lean [CD/DVD]

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Jesus of Nazareth [Castle]

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Maurice Jarre at the Royal Festival Hall

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Doctor Zhivago [Rhino]

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Walk in the Clouds

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Year of Living Dangerously

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Shadow of the Wolf

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Maurice Jarre Conducts the Royal Philharmonic at Abbey Road

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Seville Film Music Concerts

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Only the Lonely

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After Dark, My Sweet

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Ghost [Bonus Tracks]

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Doctor Zhivago

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Jacob's Ladder

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Lion of the Desert/The Message

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Ghost

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Fatal Attraction

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Fatal Attraction

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Jarre by Jarre (Film Themes of Maurice Jarre)

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Mosquito Coast

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Enemy Mine

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Witness

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Passage to India

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Dreamscape

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Shogun

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Mohammad: Messenger of God

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Soleil Rouge

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Professionals

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Is Paris Burning?

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Lawrence of Arabia [Varese]

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Actor: Maurice Jarre
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  • Born: Sep 13, 1924 in Lyons, France
  • Died: Mar 30, 2009
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '60s-'90s
  • Major Genres: Drama
  • Career Highlights: To Die in Madrid, Witness, A Passage to India
  • First Major Screen Credit: Generation du desert (1957)

Biography

A hugely prolific composer best known for his multiple collaborations with director David Lean, Maurice Jarre is one of the most well-respected personalities in the film industry. A student of the Paris Conservatoire, Jarre, who was born in Lyons on September 13, 1924, was the musical director at Paris' Theatre National Populaire in the early 1950s, when he became intrigued with film work. His first movie assignment was the Georges Franju-directed short subject, Hotel des Invalides (1952). Here, as in future projects, Jarre preferred to avoid the obvious in his scores, opting for muted and romantic effects where other film musicians might rely upon bombast. He gained worldwide prominence and three Oscars, for his collaborations with director Lean on Lawrence of Arabia (1962), Doctor Zhivago (1965), and A Passage to India (1984). The composer's Zhivago leitmotif "Lara's Theme" became a best-selling single, though it caused a brief rift with Lean, who disapproved of hit songs that detracted from the films themselves. Jarre has also scored the films of directors as diverse as Alfred Hitchcock (Topaz, 1969), John Huston (The Man Who Would Be King, 1975), Peter Weir (The Year of Living Dangerously, 1982, Witness, 1985) and even satirist Jerry Zucker (Top Secret!, 1984). When Zucker decided to forego parody for romantic fantasy in 1990's Ghost, he engaged Jarre for the score -- and the composer had yet another hit (with the help of Alex North's "Unchained Melody"). Jarre is the father of Jean-Michel Jarre, a popular composer in his own right. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Filmography: Maurice Jarre
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Uprising

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I Dreamed of Africa

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Sunshine

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New York, Episode 2: 1825-1865 - Order and Disorder

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New York, Episode 3: 1865-1898 - Sunshine and Shadow

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New York, Episode 4: 1898-1918 - The Power and the People

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New York, Episode 5: 1919-1931 - Cosmopolis

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The Sunchaser

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A Hundred and One Nights

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A Walk in the Clouds

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Fearless

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Mr. Jones

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School Ties

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Shadow of the Wolf

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Fires Within

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Only the Lonely

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After Dark, My Sweet

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Almost an Angel

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Ghost

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Jacob's Ladder

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Solar Crisis

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Chances Are

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Dead Poets Society

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Enemies: A Love Story

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Prancer

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Buster

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Distant Thunder

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Gorillas in the Mist

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Moon over Parador

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Fatal Attraction

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Gaby: A True Story

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Julia and Julia

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The Murder of Mary Phagan

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No Way Out

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Apology

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The Mosquito Coast

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Solarbabies

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Tai-Pan

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The Bride

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Enemy Mine

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Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome

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Witness

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Dreamscape

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A Passage to India

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Samson and Delilah

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Top Secret!

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Coming Out of the Ice

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Don't Cry, It's Only Thunder

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Firefox

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The Year of Living Dangerously

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Young Doctors in Love

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Chu Chu and the Philly Flash

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Lion of the Desert

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Taps

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Circle of Deceit

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Enola Gay: The Men, the Mission, the Atomic Bomb

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The Last Flight of Noah's Ark

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Resurrection

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Shogun

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The Black Marble

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The Magician of Lublin

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The Tin Drum

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Winter Kills

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The Users

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Jesus of Nazareth

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March or Die

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The Prince and the Pauper

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The Last Tycoon

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The Message

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Shout at the Devil

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The Man Who Would Be King

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Mandingo

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Posse

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The Island at the Top of the World

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Great Expectations

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Ash Wednesday

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The Mackintosh Man

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The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean

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Plaza Suite

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Red Sun

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El Condor

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Ryan's Daughter

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The Damned

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Topaz

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Five Card Stud

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Isadora

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Villa Rides

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The Fixer

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The Night of the Generals

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Gambit

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Grand Prix

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Is Paris Burning?

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The Professionals

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The Collector

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Doctor Zhivago

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The Train

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Behold a Pale Horse

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Lawrence of Arabia

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The Longest Day

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Les Dimanches de Ville d'Avray

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Eyes Without a Face

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Wikipedia: Maurice Jarre
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Maurice Jarre
Born Maurice-Alexis Jarre
September 13, 1924(1924-09-13)
Lyon, France
Died March 28, 2009 (aged 84)
Los Angeles, California
Years active 1952–2001
Spouse(s) Francette Pejot (?-?)
Dany Saval (1965-1967)
Laura Devon (1967-1984)
Fong F. Khong (1984-2009)

Maurice Jarre (13 September 1924 – 28 March 2009)[1][2][3][4] was a French composer and conductor. Although he composed several concert works, he is best known for his film scores for motion pictures, particularly those directed by David Lean: Lawrence of Arabia (1962), Doctor Zhivago (1965), and A Passage to India (1984). All three of these scores won Academy Awards. Other notable scores of his include The Message (1976), Dead Poets Society (1989) and Ghost (1990). Jarre was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[5]. His U.K. singles chart record so far reads as thus. Three hits and forty two weeks on the chart with the biggest being 'Somewhere My Love' by the Michael Sammes Singers with lyrics by Paul Francis Webster reaching number fourteen in 1966 and spending thirty eight weeks on the chart.[6]

Contents

Early life

Maurice-Alexis Jarre was born in Lyon, France, in 1924. He began to study music at a later age than many musicians. He first enrolled in the engineering school at the Sorbonne, but decided to pursue music courses instead. He left the Sorbonne, against his father's will, and enrolled at the Conservatoire de Paris to study composition, harmony and chose percussion as his major instrument.[3] He became director of the Théâtre National Populaire and recorded his first movie score in France in 1951.[7]

Film scoring

In 1961 Jarre's music career experienced a major change when the movie producer Sam Spiegel asked him to write the score of Lawrence of Arabia[8], which won Jarre his first Academy Award.[5] He followed with The Train (1964) and Grand Prix (1966), the iconic racing film for director John Frankenheimer, and in between had another great success in Doctor Zhivago, which included the lyricless tune "Lara's Theme" (later the tune for the song "Somewhere My Love"), and which earned him his second Oscar. His score for David Lean's Ryan's Daughter (1970), set in Ireland, completely eschews traditional Irish music styles, owing to Lean's preferences. The song "It was a Good Time," from Ryan's Daughter went on to be recorded by musical stars such as Liza Minnelli who used it in her critically acclaimed television special Liza with a Z as well as by others during the 1970s. He contributed the music for Luchino Visconti's The Damned (1969) and John Huston's The Man Who Would Be King (1975).

He was again nominated for an Academy award for scoring The Message (aka Mohammad, Messenger of God) in 1976 for the director and producer Moustapha Akkad. He followed with Top Secret! (1984), Julia and Julia (1987), Dead Poets Society (1989)—for which he won a British Academy Award—and Jacob's Ladder (1990).

In the 1970s and 1980s, Jarre turned his hand to science fiction, with scores for The Island at the Top of the World (1974), Enemy Mine (1985) and Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985). The latter is written for full orchestra, augmented by a chorus, four grand pianos, a pipe organ, digeridoo, fujara, a battery of exotic percussion and three ondes Martenot (which feature in several of Jarre's other scores, including Lawrence of Arabia, Jesus of Nazareth, The Bride) and Prancer (1989).

In 1990 Jarre was again nominated for an Academy Award scoring the supernatural love story / thriller Ghost. His music for the final scene of the film is based on "Unchained Melody" composed by fellow film composer Alex North.[3] Other films for which he provided the music include Witness (1985), his passionate love theme from Fatal Attraction (1987), and the moody electronic soundscapes of After Dark, My Sweet (1990). He was well-respected by other Academy Award-winning composers including John Williams, who stated on Jarre's passing, "(He) is to be well remembered for his lasting contribution to film music...we all have been enriched by his legacy."[9]

His television work includes the score for the miniseries Jesus of Nazareth (1977), directed by Franco Zeffirelli, Shogun (1980), and the theme for PBS's Great Performances.[3]

Jarre scored his last film in 2001, a TV movie about the Holocaust entitled Uprising.[3]

Music style

Jarre wrote mainly for orchestras, but began to favour synthesized music in the 1980s. Jarre pointed out that his electronic score for Witness was actually more laborious, time-consuming and expensive to produce than an orchestral score. Jarre's electronic scores from the 80s also include Fatal Attraction, The Year of Living Dangerously, Firefox and No Way Out. A number of his scores from that era also feature electronic/acoustic blends, such as Gorillas in the Mist, Dead Poets Society, The Mosquito Coast and Jacob's Ladder.

Family

Jarre is the father of Jean Michel Jarre, a French composer who is one of the pioneers in the electronic music field.

His youngest son, Kevin Jarre, is a screenwriter, with credits on such movies as Tombstone and Glory.

Jarre was married four times: his first three marriages ended in divorce, the last marriage in his death from cancer:[10]

  • to Francette Pejot (in the 1940s, after World War II), who is Jean Michel Jarre's mother.
  • to French actress Dany Saval (1965-1967), who is Stephanie Jarre's mother.
  • to American actress Laura Devon (1967-1984), who is Kevin Jarre's mother.
  • to Fong F. Khong (1984-2009).

Filmography and awards

Year Film Role Notes
1958 Head Against the Wall
1959 Eyes Without a Face
1962 Sundays and Cybele Academy Nomination for Best Music, Scoring of Music, Adaptation or Treatment
1962 Lawrence of Arabia Winner, 1962 Academy Award for Best Music, Score - Substantially Original
1963 Judex
1965 The Collector
1965 Doctor Zhivago Winner, Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack Album for a Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media in 1967; Winner, 1965 Academy Award for Best Music, Score
1966 Is Paris Burning?
1966 Grand Prix
1966 The Professionals
1968 Isadora
1969 Topaz
1970 Ryan's Daughter
1971 Plaza Suite
1972 The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean Academy Nomination for Best Music, Song for the song "Marmalade, Molasses & Honey"
1972 The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds
1973 Ash Wednesday
1974 The Island at the Top of the World
1976 The Last Tycoon
1977 Mohammad, Messenger of God Academy Nomination for Best Music, Original Score
1980 Shōgun (TV miniseries)
1982 Firefox
1982 The Year of Living Dangerously
1984 A Passage to India Winner, 1984 Academy Award for Best Score
1984 Top Secret!
1985 Witness Academy Nomination for Best Music, Original Score
1985 Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome
1985 Enemy Mine
1986 The Mosquito Coast
1986 Solarbabies
1987 No Way Out
1987 Fatal Attraction
1987 Gaby: A True Story
1988 Cocktail
1988 Gorillas in the Mist: The Story of Dian Fossey Academy Nomination for Best Music, Original Score
1989 Dead Poets Society Winner, British Academy Awards, 1989, Best Original Music Score
1989 Prancer
1990 Jacob's Ladder
1990 Ghost Academy Nomination for Best Music Academy Award
1993 Fearless
1993 Mr. Jones
1995 A Walk in the Clouds Winner, Golden Globe, 1995, Best Original Score
1996 The Sunchaser
1999 Sunshine
2000 I Dreamed of Africa
2001 Uprising

See also

References

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 "Maurice Jarre" Read more