Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Legendary ‘Zorba’ composer, musician, maverick politician

- By Derek Gatopoulos

ATHENS, Greece — Mikis Theodoraki­s, the beloved Greek composer whose rousing music and life of political defiance won acclaim abroad and inspired millions at home, died Thursday. He was 96.

His death at his home in central Athens was announced on state television and followed multiple hospitaliz­ations in recent years.

Theodoraki­s’ prolific career that started at age 17 produced a varied body of work that ranged from somber symphonies and an anthem for the Palestinia­n Liberation Organizati­on to popular television and the film scores for “Serpico” and “Zorba the Greek.”

But the towering man with trademark worker suits, hoarse voice and wavy hair also is remembered by Greeks for his opposition to postwar regimes that persecuted him and outlawed his music.

The Greek flag was lowered to half-staff at the Acropolis as three days of national mourning were declared.

“He lived with passion, a life dedicated to music, the arts, our country and its people, dedicated to the ideas of freedom, justice, equality, social solidarity,” Greek President Katerina Sakellarop­oulou said in a statement.

Born Michail Theodoraki­s on the eastern Aegean island of Chios on July 29, 1925, he was exposed to music and politics from a young age. He began writing music and poetry in his teens, just as Greece entered World War II. During the war, he was arrested by the country’s Italian and German occupiers for his involvemen­t in left-wing resistance groups.

Some of those same

groups bitterly opposed the government and monarchy that led immediatel­y Greece after the war, leading to a 1946-49 civil war in which the Communist-backed rebels eventually lost.

Theodoraki­s was jailed and sent to remote Greek islands, including the infamous “re-education” camp on the small island of Makronisso­s near Athens. As a result of severe beatings and torture, Theodoraki­s suffered broken limbs, respirator­y problems and other injuries that plagued his health for the rest of his life. He suffered tuberculos­is, was thrown into a psychiatri­c hospital, and was subjected to mock executions.

Despite the hardships, he managed to establish himself as a respected musician. He graduated from the Athens Music School in 1950 and continued his studies in Paris on a scholarshi­p in 1954. A prolific career as a composer began in earnest, as he worked in a huge range of genres from film scores and ballet music to operas, as well as chamber music, ancient Greek tragedies and Greek folk, setting the work of leading poets to music.

But it was the Oscar-winning film adaptation of Nikos Kazantzaki­s’ “Zorba

the Greek” in 1964, and the slow-to-frenetic title score by Theodoraki­s that made him a household name.

Tireless in later life, Theodoraki­s continued to work with emerging artists and compositio­ns that included music for the opening ceremony of the Barcelona Olympics in 1992, and maintained an active interest in politics.

He was a member of parliament for the Greek Communist Party for most of the 1980s but later served the cabinet of the conservati­ve government. He spoke at rallies supporting Palestinia­n statehood, against the war in Iraq and more recently in opposition to an agreement to end a name dispute between Greece and North Macedonia. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis declared three days of national mourning, posting a photograph with Theodoraki­s at his home following a recent hospitaliz­ation.

“I had the honor of knowing him for many years ... and his advice has always been valuable to me, especially concerning the unity of our people and overcoming divisions,” Mitsotakis wrote. “The best way to honor him, a global Greek, is to live by that message. Mikis is our history.”

 ?? MILOS BICANSKI/GETTY 2011 ?? Mikis Theodoraki­s composed the film scores for“Serpico” and “Zorba the Greek.”
MILOS BICANSKI/GETTY 2011 Mikis Theodoraki­s composed the film scores for“Serpico” and “Zorba the Greek.”

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