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Elliot Goldenthal

Elliot Goldenthal (born May 2, 1954) is an American composer of contemporary classical music and film and theatrical scores. A student of Aaron Copland and John Corigliano, he is best known for his distinctive style and ability to blend various musical styles and techniques in original and inventive ways. He won the Academy Award for Best Original Score in 2002 for his score to the motion picture Frida, directed by his longtime partner Julie Taymor.

Elliot Goldenthal

(1954-05-02) May 2, 1954
New York City, U.S.

  • Composer
  • songwriter

1978–present

Early life and education[edit]

Goldenthal was born on May 2, 1954, the youngest son of a Jewish housepainter father and a Catholic seamstress mother in Brooklyn, New York City, where he was influenced from an early age by music from all cultures and genres. Both pairs of Goldenthal's grandparents emigrated to the United States from Bucharest and Iași, Romania.[1] Goldenthal lived in a multi-cultural part of town, and this is reflected in his works.[2] He attended John Dewey High School in Brooklyn where, at the age of 14, he had his very first ballet Variations on Early Glimpses performed; he continued to display his eclectic musical range, performing with rock bands in the seventies.[3]


He then studied music full-time at the prestigious Manhattan School of Music, where he studied with composer John Corigliano (whom he greatly admired), to earn his Bachelor of Music degree (1977) and Master of Music degree (1979) in musical composition.[4][5]

Career[edit]

Goldenthal has written works for concert hall, theater, dance and film. His work includes music for films such as Pet Sematary, Alien 3, Michael Collins, Batman Forever, Heat and the Academy Award-winning score for Julie Taymor's Frida, a movie in which Goldenthal had a small acting part as a "Newsreel Reporter". Incidentally he also had a small part in the stage show Juan Darièn as a "Circus Barker / Streetsinger".[6]


The Tony Award-winning Juan Darién: A Carnival Mass (1988/'96) and The Green Bird (1999), based on a story by Carlo Gozzi, are two of the composer's theatre works. In 2006, Goldenthal completed his original three-act opera with Taymor entitled Grendel an adaptation of the John Gardner novel of the same name which told the story of Beowulf from the monster Grendel's point of view. It had its world premiere in early June 2006 at the Los Angeles Opera, the role of Grendel performed by Eric Owens, with an audience that included John Williams and Emmy Rossum; the opus was added to the Los Angeles Opera's permanent repertoire and earned Goldenthal a nomination in April 2007 for the Pulitzer Prize for Music.[7][8] In 2008 Goldenthal reunited with Michael Mann to score 1930s gangster movie Public Enemies and in 2009 he scored another Julie Taymor Shakespeare adaptation, The Tempest.[9] He cites Japanese composer Tōru Takemitsu as an influence and someone he styles his own career on; Goldenthal has said that the lines between traditional concert music and orchestral film score have become more blurred which is the way he thinks it should be.[10] He has also collaborated four times with Irish director Neil Jordan, including on his films Interview with the Vampire and In Dreams.

Personal life[edit]

He lives in New York City "happily unmarried", as he once put it,[11] with his partner Julie Taymor, whom he met in 1980 through a mutual acquaintance, who told him, "I know a person whose work is just as grotesque as yours". They have an office/apartment where they both live and work.[12]

(2007) Nomination for his acclaimed "Grendel" opera

Pulitzer Prize for Music

(2004) Awards Nomination, "Great Performances: Dance in America" – Outstanding Music Composition for a Miniseries, Movie or a Special (Dramatic Underscore)

Emmy

(2004) Film and Television Music Awards Win, "S.W.A.T." – Top Box Office Film Score

ASCAP

(2003) Win, "Frida" – Best Original Soundtrack of the Year

World Soundtrack Awards 2003

(2003) World Soundtrack Awards 2003 Win, "Frida" – Soundtrack Composer of the Year

(2003) World Soundtrack Awards 2003 Nomination', "Burn It Blue" from "Frida" – Best Original Song Written for a Film

(2002) Win, "Frida" – Best Original Score

Academy Awards

(2002) Academy Awards Nomination, "Frida", "Burn It Blue" – Best Original Song

(2002) Win, "Frida" – Best Original Score

Golden Globes

(2002) Nomination, "The Dream Within" from "Final Fantasy: The Sprits Within" – Best Original Song Written for a Film

World Soundtrack Awards 2002

(1999) awards Nomination, "The Butcher Boy" – Best Original Score

Chicago Film Critics Association

(1998) ASCAP awards Win, "Batman & Robin" – Top Box Office Film Score

(1998) Nomination, "The Butcher Boy" – Best Original Score

Chicago Film Critics Awards

(1998) Win, "The Butcher Boy" – Best Original Score

Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards 1998

(1997) Nomination, "Juan Darien: A Carnival Mass" (Broadway Production) – Best Original Musical Score

Tony Awards

(1997) ASCAP awards Win, "A Time to Kill" – Top Box Office Film Score

(1997) Nomination, "Defile and Lament" from "A Time to Kill"

Grammy

(1996) Academy Awards Nomination, "Michael Collins" – Best Original Score

(1996) Golden Globe Nomination, "Michael Collins" – Best Original Score

(1996) ASCAP awards Win, "Batman Forever" – Top Box Office Film Score

(1995) Grammy Nomination, "Batman Forever" – Best Instrumental Composition

(1995) ASCAP awards Win, "Interview with the Vampire" – Top Box Office Film Score

(1995) Golden Globe Nomination, "Interview with the Vampire" – Best Original Score

(1994) Academy Awards Nomination, "Interview with the Vampire" – Best Original Score

(1994) ASCAP awards Win, "Demolition Man" – Top Box Office Film Score

(1990) Win, "Juan Darien: A Carnival Mass" – Best Music

Edinburgh Festival Critics Choice Award

(1990) Richard Rodgers Award Win, "Juan Darien: A Carnival Mass" – Best Music

American Academy of Arts and Letters

(1988) Win, "Juan Darien: A Carnival Mass" (Original Production) – Best Music

Obie Award

Among others including the Arturo Toscanini Award, the New Music for Young Ensembles composition prize, the Stephen Sondheim Award in Music Theater and a New York Foundation for the Arts fellowship.[22]

Avant-garde

Modernism (music)

Edit this at Wikidata

Official website

at IMDb

Elliot Goldenthal

at the Internet Broadway Database

Elliot Goldenthal

at the Internet Off-Broadway Database

Elliot Goldenthal

at Rate Your Music

Elliot Goldenthal

discography at Discogs

Elliot Goldenthal

at Allmusic

Elliot Goldenthal

"A Website for the Composer"

Elliot Goldenthal at Moviemusicuk.us

An Interview with both Taymor and Goldenthal by the New York Times

An indepth interview from 2003