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He was a composer, conductor and songwriter born John
Waldo Green in New York, New York to a musical family. He gained acceptance into Harvard
when he was fifteen, studying music, history, economics and government and after
his Harvard Gold Coast Orchestra was heard by Guy Lombardo he was asked to
arrange dance music for his orchestra.
He became a stockbroker on his father's wishes but his wife
urged him to pursue his obvious talent in music. He arranged for orchestras and
accompanied stars including Libby Holman and Ethel Merman and wrote the extremely
successful song "Body and Soul" for Gertrude Lawrence. He was later commissioned to write orchestral
works for by Paul Whiteman and Nathaniel Shilkret, wrote scores for Paramount,
was a musical director while touring vaudeville and conducted on the East
Coast. He established Joohny Green, His Piano and Orchestra when he was 25
and they made several recordings for the Columbia
and Brunswick labels. He later starred in the Socony Sketchbook with Virginia Verrill and a regular cast of film and stage vocalists. He moved to Hollywood
in the 1940s and worked with MGM where he is known to be highly involved in
changing the sound of the orchestra in 1944 by re-seating members and
thereby changing the orchestral sound that had been heard from 1929. His works can be heard on the
soundtracks for Raintree
Country, Easter Parade, An American in Paris, West Side
Story, High Society and Royal Wedding
among numerous others. He was a
member of ASCAP's board, and a guest conductor with orchestras such
as the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Hollywood Bowl, the Philadelphia Orchestra
and Detroit Symphony. He was
the recipient of 5 Academy Awards with a further 8 nominations, a Golden
Globe, a Grammy Award and honoured with a star on the Hollywood Walk of
Fame. He died in Beverly Hills,
California, in 1989 aged 80.
The Manhattan Transfer Recordings
Body and Soul
(Edward Heyman/Johnny Green/Robert Sour/Frank Eyton)
Sources:
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnny_Green
- http://imdb.com/name/nm0338004/bio
- http://www.jazzstandards.com/biographies/johnny_green.htm
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