Ernest Gold

Ernest Gold

Known For: Sound

Date Of Birth:1921-07-13

Place Of Birth:Vienna, Austria

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Ernst Sigmund Goldner (July 13, 1921 – March 17, 1999), known professionally as Ernest Gold, was an Austrian-born American composer. He is most noted for his work on the film Exodus produced in 1960. Career NBC Orchestra performed Gold's first symphony in 1939, only a year after he moved to the United States. In 1941, he composed a symphony that was later played at Carnegie Hall in 1945. Gold moved to Hollywood in the same year to work with Columbia Pictures, his first significant role being the score for the melodrama Girl of the Limberlost (1945). After this opportunity, Gold wrote scores for other minor films. For the next ten years, he continued to work on B movies, mainly orchestrating and arranging music for western movies and melodramas. He was asked by Stanley Kramer to orchestrate Not as a Stranger (1955). The music for the film was written by George Antheil. This production opened the door for Gold to work with other scores written by Antheil and to orchestrate more of Kramer's films. Gold worked on almost every film Kramer made, including A Child Is Waiting and It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World. Gold produced his first original film score in 1958 for Too Much, Too Soon. His big break came in 1959, when he was asked to score On the Beach (1959 film) after Antheil became ill and he recommended Gold for the job. Gold is most widely recognized for his work on Exodus (1960). He was contracted by Otto Preminger and, atypically, was able to watch the filming of the movie. Gold spent time in Israel to write the score. In 1968, Gold wrote a Broadway musical called I'm Solomon. He also wrote music for television including Fun with Dick and Jane. In his later life, Gold was the musical director of the Santa Barbara Symphony Orchestra. He also founded the Los Angeles Senior Citizens Orchestra. His concert works include a piano concerto, a string quartet, and a piano sonata. Ernest Gold's "Fight for Survival" from Exodus was sampled by Moby in his song Porcelain. Gold's contributions were recognized with Academy Award nominations and Golden Globe nominations. He won a Golden Globe in 1960 for Best Motion Picture Score for 1959's On the Beach. This film was also nominated for a Music Academy Award that same year. In 1960, Gold's Exodus was nominated for a Golden Globe under the Best Original Score category. The film won an Academy Award for Best Music and a Grammy for Best Soundtrack Album. For his contributions, Gold had his name engraved in the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He was the first composer to receive this honor.

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Judgment at Nuremberg
Inherit the Wind
Exodus
Cross of Iron
The Defiant Ones
The Naked Street
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
Affair in Havana
The Young Philadelphians
Bells of San Angelo
The Other Woman
Philo Vance's Secret Mission
Safari 3000
A Child Is Waiting
The Assignation
The Gay Ranchero
Too Much, Too Soon
Running Target
Pressure Point
Knock on Any Door
Unknown World
Wink of an Eye
Footsteps
Jennifer
Cross of Iron
The Screaming Skull
Under California Stars
Marciano
Madonna of the Desert
A Fever in the Blood
Tarzan's Fight for Life
Passion & Poetry: Sam Peckinpah's War
Fun with Dick and Jane
The Wild McCullochs
The Runner Stumbles
Tom Horn
Good Luck, Miss Wyckoff
Exposed
Dreams of Gold: The Mel Fisher Story
The Last Sunset
On the Beach
Ship of Fools
The Screaming Skull
Edge of Hell
The Young Don't Cry
The Secret of Santa Vittoria
Witness for the Prosecution
Insurance Investigator
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
Betrayal
Letters from Frank
Karamoja
Fragment of Seeking
The Small Miracle
Walt Whitman: Poet for a New Age