The Day

Ray Dolby, who put moviegoers in the middle, dies

- By NATASHA SINGER

Ray Dolby, a sound pioneer who founded Dolby Laboratori­es, revolution­ized the recording industry with the invention of the Dolby noisereduc­tion system and transforme­d cinema and home entertainm­ent with the developmen­t of Dolby digital surround sound, died Thursday at his home in San Francisco. He was 80.

He developed Alzheimer’s disease several years ago and in July received a diagnosis of acute leukemia, according to a company statement.

Film industry executives credit Dolby with developing sophistica­ted technologi­es that enabled directors like Steven Spielberg to endow sound with the same emotional intensity as pictures.

“In ‘Close Encounters of the Third Kind,’ the sound of the spaceship knocked the audience on its rear with the emotional content,” said Sidney Ganis, a film producer who is a former president of Paramount Pictures and a former president of the American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. “That was created by the director but provided by the technology that Ray Dolby invented.”

Over the course of Dolby’s career, the Dolby name became synonymous with high fidelity. For his pioneering contributi­ons to audio engineerin­g, Dolby received an Oscar, several Emmys and a Grammy. He was also awarded the National Medal of Technology and Innovation by President Bill Clinton and was appointed a Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II.

Trained in engineerin­g and physics, Dolby started Dolby Laboratori­es in London in 1965 and soon after introduced technology that produced cleaner, crisper sound by electronic­ally reducing the hiss generated by analog tape recording. Decca Records was the first customer to buy the Dolby system. The noisereduc­tion technology quickly became a staple of major record labels. By the 1970s, film studios began adopting the system as well.

Ray M. Dolby was born on Jan. 18, 1933, in Portland, Ore., the son of Earl Dolby, a salesman, and Esther Dolby. He was interested in how sound worked from a young age and took clarinet lessons.

As a teenager, he met Alexander Poniatoff, a Russian émigré and electrical engineer who had started an electronic­s company called Ampex that made tape recorders. Dolby worked at Ampex from 1949 to 1957 where, among other projects, he developed the electronic components of the company’s videotape recording system.

Dolby graduated from Stanford University in 1957 with a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineerin­g. That year, he left Ampex to pursue graduate studies at Cambridge University in Britain on a Marshall Scholarshi­p and a fellowship from the National Science Foundation. He received a postdoctor­al degree in physics from Cambridge in 1961. While at Cambridge, he met a summer student named Dagmar Bäumert whom he later married.

In 1963, Dolby traveled to India as an adviser for the United Nations, returning two years later to England where he founded Dolby Laboratori­es.

In 1976, he moved to San Francisco where the company still has its headquarte­rs. The next year, the company gained wider renown after the release of “Star Wars” and “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” which each used Dolby Stereo to record films in multichann­el sound. In the 1980s, Dolby Labs introduced surround sound technology in television, compact discs, and laserdiscs. Dolby served as chairman o In 2012, in Dolby’s honor, the auditorium that is home to the Academy Awards was renamed the Dolby Theatre.

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