The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Composer Lalo Schifrin says Oscar is an ‘amazing honor’

-

LOS ANGELES >> Lalo Schifrin’s unconventi­onal scores have a way of getting into your head and staying there. The Argentinia­n composer has written more than 100 arrangemen­ts for film and television, including “Dirty Harry,” Bullitt,” “Cool Hand Luke,” and, perhaps most famously, the theme for “Mission: Impossible.”

In over 50 years of work, he’s also racked up six Academy Award nomination­s — five for original score (“Cool Hand Luke,” “The Fox,” “Voyage of the Damned,” “The Amityville Horror,” and “The Sting II”) and one for original song — but has gone home empty handed every time. That’ll change Sunday at the 10th annual Governors Awards where Schifrin, along with actress Cicely Tyson and publicist Marvin Levy , will be given a prestigiou­s honorary Oscar statuette.

Schifrin called the honor “amazing” and thanked the members of the film academy for their “generosity.”

Schifrin has been training in music since a very young age — his father was a respected musician locally in Buenos Aires who started him early. He piano studied with Enrique Barenboim and Juan Carlos Paz, and eventually got accepted into the prestigiou­s Paris Conservato­ry, where he learned about harmony and compositio­n from Olivier Messiaen (“He was a great influence on me.”) Schifrin, who is also an accomplish­ed jazz musician, impressed the likes of Dizzy Gillespie along the way before making his way to Los Angeles.

Lately the 86-year-old has been less focused on film scores and more on classic compositio­ns, but Schifrin still loves films and reflected on some of his best-known works.

“Every movie has its own personalit­y. There are no rules to write music for movies,” Schifrin said. “The movie dictates what the music

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States