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Roy Webb

 
Artist: Roy Webb
  • Period: Modern (1910-1949)
  • Country: USA
  • Born: October 03, 1888 in New York, NY
  • Died: December 10, 1982 in Santa Monica, CA

Biography

Roy Webb was a Hollywood studio film composer whose reputation as a dependable workhorse -- he scored in excess of 360 films and served as musical director on about a hundred more -- has obscured the very fine qualities of his music. Webb was the younger brother of Kenneth Webb, a popular songwriter and silent film director. Roy Webb's began his career as a songwriter and pit conductor for Broadway shows; along the way, it was Webb who gave instruction to the young Richard Rodgers in musical notation. Webb composed Columbia University's official football fight song, Roar, Lion, Roar, in 1925, and a stint with Broadway producer Herbert Fields brought Webb into contact with composer Max Steiner who would become an important collaborator and lifelong friend.

With the advent of talkies, Webb departed for Hollywood to work for Radio Pictures, later RKO-Radio, his first job being to work as musical director on the movie operetta Rio Rita (1929). Steiner arrived soon afterward, but would defect to Selznick International in 1936. Webb stayed on, and served as RKO's principal music director until the studio closed in 1955. Webb scored an impressive number of distinguished films, among them Ernest B. Schoedsack's The Last Days of Pompeii (1955), George Cukor's Quality Street (1937), Howard Hawks' Bringing Up Baby (1938), Jacques Tourneur's Experiment Perilous, and Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious. Never a winner, Webb was nonetheless nominated for an Academy Award five times. Webb's signature work is the moody, expressive music he composed for the nine films in the Val Lewton RKO horror cycle, starting with Cat People (1941). Never a proponent of bombastic film scoring, Webb was perfectly in tune with the low-key and atmospheric surroundings inherent in Lewton's horror films. Webb, along with Hugo Friedhofer, was considered by his peers as being the very best composer of music written to flow underneath dialogue. Webb also wrote a small amount of concert music, and was pleased to hear the piano concerto he wrote for the film The Enchanted Cottage played as part of a regular Hollywood Bowl concert in 1945.

Webb was already retired by 1961 when his entire life's work was incinerated in a house fire. Devastated, Webb never wrote another note of music. Afterward, Webb did find an admirer in musicologist Christopher Palmer, who interviewed him and began the process of reconstructing Webb's scores, work that continues under other hands as Palmer died in 1995. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis, All Music Guide
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Actor: Roy Webb
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  • Born: Oct 03, 1888 in New York, New York
  • Died: Dec 10, 1982 in Santa Monica, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '30s-'50s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: Out of the Past, Notorious, The Magnificent Ambersons
  • First Major Screen Credit: Professional Sweetheart (1933)

Biography

Roy Webb was a Hollywood studio film composer whose reputation as a dependable workhorse -- he scored in excess of 360 films and served as musical director on about a hundred more -- has obscured the very fine qualities of his music. Born in New York, Webb was the younger brother of Kenneth Webb, a popular songwriter and silent film director. Roy Webb began his career as a songwriter and pit conductor for Broadway shows; along the way, it was Webb who gave instruction to the young Richard Rodgers in musical notation. Webb composed Columbia University's official football fight song, "Roar, Lion, Roar," in 1925, and a stint with Broadway producer Herbert Fields brought Webb into contact with composer Max Steiner, who would become an important collaborator and lifelong friend. Just as the bottom fell out on Herbert Fields' string of Broadway successes, talking pictures made their debut. Webb departed for Hollywood to work for Radio Pictures, later RKO-Radio, his first job being to work as musical director on the movie operetta Rio Rita (1929) with Bebe Daniels. Steiner came in soon afterward, but both lost their jobs when RKO decided to stop making musicals. Nevertheless, Steiner went to bat for the concept of atmospheric music to be used in dramatic films, and when RKO agreed to make him head of the music department, the first thing Steiner did was to rehire Webb. Although Max Steiner was to defect to Selznick International in 1936, Webb stayed on, and served as RKO's principal music director until the studio closed its doors in 1955.

Roy Webb scored an impressive number of distinguished films, among them Ernest B. Schoedsack's The Last Days of Pompeii (1935), George Cukor's Quality Street (1937), Howard Hawks' Bringing Up Baby (1938), Jacques Tourneur's Experiment Perilous, and Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious. Though he never won, Webb was nominated five times for an Academy Award. His signature work, however, is the moody, expressive music he composed for the nine films in the Val Lewton RKO horror cycle, starting with Cat People (1941). Never a proponent of bombastic film scoring, Webb was perfectly in tune with the low-key and atmospheric surroundings inherent in Lewton's horror output. Webb, along with Hugo Friedhofer, was considered by his peers as being the very best composer of music written to flow underneath dialogue. Webb also wrote a small amount of concert music, and was pleased to hear the piano concerto he wrote for the film The Enchanted Cottage played as part of a regular Hollywood Bowl concert in 1945. Although he worked on a few films and television shows after RKO folded, Webb was already retired by 1961 when his entire life's work was incinerated in a house fire. Devastated, Webb never wrote another note of music. However, Webb did find an admirer in musicologist Christopher Palmer, who interviewed him and began the process of reconstructing Webb's scores, work that continued under other hands when Palmer died in 1995. ~ David Lewis, All Movie Guide
Filmography: Roy Webb
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Teacher's Pet

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Our Miss Brooks

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Blood Alley

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The Kentuckian

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Marty

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The Sea Chase

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Underwater!

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The Americano

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Track of the Cat

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Houdini

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Split Second

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Clash by Night

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At Sword's Point

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Flying Leathernecks

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Branded

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The White Tower

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Easy Living

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Holiday Affair

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Mighty Joe Young

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My Friend Irma

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The Window

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Blood on the Moon

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I Remember Mama

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Rachel and the Stranger

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Cass Timberlane

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Crossfire

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Magic Town

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Out of the Past

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Sinbad the Sailor

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They Won't Believe Me

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Notorious

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The Spiral Staircase

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Without Reservations

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Back to Bataan

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The Body Snatcher

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Dick Tracy, Detective

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The Enchanted Cottage

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Betrayal from the East

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China Sky

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The Curse of the Cat People

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The Fighting Seabees

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Higher and Higher

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The Master Race

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Murder, My Sweet

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The Seventh Cross

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Bombardier

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I Walked with a Zombie

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The Iron Major

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A Lady Takes a Chance

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Marine Raiders

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Mr. Lucky

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The Seventh Victim

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The Big Street

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Cat People

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I Married a Witch

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Journey into Fear

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The Magnificent Ambersons

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The Devil and Miss Jones

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Mr. & Mrs. Smith

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Playmates

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Tall in the Saddle

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Abe Lincoln in Illinois

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Kitty Foyle

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Little Men

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My Favorite Wife

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The Stranger on the Third Floor

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Bachelor Mother

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Five Came Back

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Love Affair

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Bringing Up Baby

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The Mad Miss Manton

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Room Service

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Quality Street

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Stage Door

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The Ex-Mrs. Bradford

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The Last of the Mohicans

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Winterset

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Sylvia Scarlett

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Wikipedia: Roy Webb
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Roy Webb (October 3, 1888December 10, 1982) was a film music composer.

Webb has hundreds of composing credits to his name, mainly with RKO Pictures, and while most of the movies he scored were fairly light in content, he is today best known for his dark horror and film noir scores. He is particularly identified with the films of Val Lewton.

Born in New York City, he orchestrated and conducted for the Broadway stage, before moving to Hollywood in the late 1920s to work as music director for Radio Pictures, later RKO Pictures, where he remained until he retired in 1955. He worked as composer or arranger on over 200 films, and received Academy Award nominations for Quality Street (1937), My Favorite Wife (1940), I Married a Witch (1942), Joan of Paris (1942), The Fallen Sparrow (1943), The Fighting Seabees (1944), and The Enchanted Cottage (1945). His piano concerto from The Enchanted Cottage was performed in concert at the Hollywood Bowl in 1945. In 1961, a house fire destroyed all Webb's film scores and unpublished concert music, after which Webb ceased composing.

Webb died in 1982 from a heart attack at the age of 94.


An alumnus of Columbia University, Webb wrote the fight song Roar, Lion, Roar for his alma mater in 1925. Several cues composed by Webb were used in the newsreel montage of Kane's life in Citizen Kane. He also composed several cues (uncredited) for This is Cinerama, the first Cinerama production in 1952.

Selected filmography

References

  • Roy Webb: music for the films of Val Lewton (A.K.A. Cat people: classic music for the Val Lewton films) / Marco Polo 8.225125 - liner notes by Scott MacQueen, with Robert Wise and John Morgan.

External links


 
 
Learn More
Roy Webb (Soundtrack Artist, '30s-'50s)
This Is Cinerama at the Movies (1996 Album by Original Soundtrack)
Cat People [Classic Music for Val Lewton Films] (2000 Album by Original Soundtrack)

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