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Louis Applebaum
Louis Applebaum
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Louis Applebaum CC OOnt FRCMT(hon) (April 3, 1918 – April 19, 2000) was a Canadian film score composer, administrator, and conductor.

Key Information

Early life

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He was born in Toronto, Ontario, and studied at the Toronto Conservatory of Music with Leo Smith and the University of Toronto with Boris Berlin, Healey Willan and Ernest MacMillan. He also studied composition privately in New York.

Film composition

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Applebaum composed approximately 250 film scores for the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) between 1942 and 1960, serving as its music director from 1942 to 1948, then as a consultant from 1949 to 1953. His NFB credits include Royal Journey (1951), The Stratford Adventure (1954) and Paddle to the Sea (1966).[1][2]

He was nominated, along with co-composer Ann Ronell, for an Academy Award for the score of the 1945 war film, The Story of G.I. Joe. He won a 1968 Canadian Film Award for his non-feature music score of Athabasca.[3] He won a 1989 Gemini Award in the category Best Original Music Score for a Program or Mini-Series for Glory Enough for All.[3]

Other work

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He was the first music director of the Stratford Festival and in 1955 established the Stratford Music Festival as an offshoot of the then two-year-old theatre festival.[4] He resigned from his administrative duties at Stratford in 1960 though he continued until 1999 to provide incidental music for festival productions. He was composer, music director or sound designer for 70 productions over 46 years. His fanfares have been played prior to every performance at Stratford's main stage since 1953.[1][5]

After resigning from Stratford in 1960, he served as president of Group Four Productions, a documentary and television production company, until 1966. He was a music consultant from 1960 to 1963 for CBC Television, chairman of the music, opera and ballet advisory committee for the National Arts Centre from 1963 to 1966, and wrote a 1965 government-commissioned report which led to the formation of the National Arts Centre Orchestra, as well as a plan for the establishment of a department of music at the University of Ottawa. He served as chairman of a Composers, Authors and Publishers Association of Canada (CAPAC)/Canadian Association of Broadcasters committee for the promotion of Canadian music from 1965 to 1970, and was in charge of member relations for CAPAC (1968–1971) and served on its board. He served on an advisory arts panel and was a jury member for the Canada Council from 1970 to 1971 and was a consultant for the St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts from 1968 to 70.[1]

He was executive director of the Ontario Arts Council from 1971 to 1980. Working on behalf of the Government of Canada as chairman of the Federal Cultural Policy Review Committee, he co-authored with Jacques Hébert the influential Applebaum-Hébert Report, the first review of Canadian cultural institutions and federal cultural policy since 1951.[1] He also served as vice-president of the Canadian League of Composers.

Honours

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In 1976 he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada.[6][7] Applebaum was appointed to the Order of Ontario in 1989.[8] He was appointed to the Companion of the Order of Canada 15 November 1995.[7][9]

In 1997, Applebaum was awarded the inaugural Special Achievement Award at the SOCAN Awards in Toronto.[10]

In 1998, the Ontario Arts Foundation established the Louis Applebaum Composers Award. Originally created to honour excellence in music composition for theatre, music theatre, dance or opera, as of 2014 it is presented to recognize "excellence in a body of work by an artist in the field of music composition for film and television."[11]

References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
'''Louis Applebaum''', OC (April 3, 1918 – April 20, 2000) was a Canadian composer, conductor, and arts administrator known for his prolific film scoring, leadership in theatre music, and influential role in shaping Canadian cultural policy. He composed scores for over 250 films at the National Film Board of Canada, where he served as music director from 1942 to 1948 and as consultant thereafter, earning an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score for ''The Story of G.I. Joe'' (1945). His work at the NFB helped define the sound of Canadian documentary filmmaking during its formative years. As the founding music director of the Stratford Festival starting in 1953, Applebaum provided incidental music for dozens of Shakespearean and other productions over more than four decades, composing fanfares that have opened main-stage performances since 1953. He contributed significantly to the institution's musical identity. Beyond his creative output, Applebaum held key administrative positions, including executive director of the Ontario Arts Council from 1970 to 1979 and co-chair of the Federal Cultural Policy Review Committee, which produced the influential Applebaum-Hébert Report on Canadian culture. His honours include appointment as Officer (1976) and Companion (1995) of the Order of Canada, the Order of Ontario (1989), and the inaugural Special Achievement Award from SOCAN (1997). Applebaum's multifaceted career bridged film, theatre, broadcasting, and public policy, making him a central figure in 20th-century Canadian arts.

Early life and education

Birth and family background

Louis Applebaum was born on April 3, 1918, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. His parents were Morris and Fanny Applebaum, children of emigrants from Eastern Europe who arrived in the years before World War I. Applebaum grew up in Toronto's Jewish enclave, an area around the present Kensington Market where hundreds of Jewish people settled.

Education and early musical training

Louis Applebaum received his formal musical education in Toronto at the Conservatory of Music and the University of Toronto, where his principal mentors included Boris Berlin for piano and Healey Willan, Leo Smith, and Ernest MacMillan for theory. This training provided a solid grounding in performance and theoretical disciplines, supporting his early development as a composer. Applebaum began composing at the age of 15, marking the onset of his creative activity during his formative years. He pursued advanced compositional study on scholarship in New York during 1940–1941 with Roy Harris and Bernard Wagenaar. This period represented the culmination of his early musical training before entering his professional career.

National Film Board of Canada

Entry and role at the NFB

Louis Applebaum began his association with the National Film Board of Canada in 1941, initially contributing as a composer for its films. He was appointed Music Director in 1942, a role he held until 1948, establishing him as one of the institution's first official music directors during a formative period. As Music Director, Applebaum served as staff composer and oversaw music production across numerous NFB documentaries throughout the wartime and immediate postwar years. His leadership elevated the effectiveness of film scoring at the Board compared to earlier efforts by predecessors. Applebaum later returned to the NFB as a consultant from 1949 to 1953. Through his extended involvement with the organization, he composed approximately 250 scores between 1942 and 1960, significantly shaping the musical landscape of Canadian documentary filmmaking during this era.

Key film scores and contributions

Applebaum composed over 250 film scores during his time with the National Film Board of Canada, primarily between 1942 and 1960, contributing to a wide range of documentaries and other productions, many of which received awards and recognition. His notable NFB scores include those for the royal tour documentary Royal Journey (1951) and the children's adventure film Paddle to the Sea. Early in his career, Applebaum also scored the Hollywood war film The Story of G.I. Joe (1945), which earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture, shared with Ann Ronell. These works highlighted his ability to blend orchestral and innovative musical elements to enhance documentary storytelling and dramatic narratives at the NFB.

Stratford Festival

Appointment and long-term role

Louis Applebaum was appointed the first music director of the Stratford Festival in 1953, coinciding with the organization's founding as the Stratford Shakespearean Festival. He composed the fanfares that have opened every performance at the festival's main stage since its inaugural season. Applebaum maintained a long-term association with the Stratford Festival, serving in music leadership roles and contributing as a composer for decades. Widely regarded as the dean of Canadian theatre composers for his foundational and sustained work at the festival, he remained actively involved until near his death on April 20, 2000.

Theatre compositions and innovations

Applebaum composed incidental music for more than 75 Stratford Festival productions, creating scores for a wide array of plays from the company's inaugural 1953 season through his final contribution to The School for Scandal in 1999. His early work included music for the opening productions of Richard III and All's Well That Ends Well, establishing a foundation for original theatre music at the festival. Applebaum's compositions often featured versatile song settings that spanned diverse styles and conventions, with several later adapted for concert use in his 1987 publication A Folio of Shakespearean Songs for voice and piano. He created the foyer fanfares in 1953, short heraldic pieces that became an enduring tradition played before every performance at the Festival Theatre. These fanfares have remained a signature element of the Stratford experience for decades. In 1955, Applebaum established the Stratford Music Festival as a separate entity from the main theatre festival, expanding the organization's scope to include concerts and other musical events alongside dramatic productions. Applebaum introduced notable innovations in his theatre scoring, particularly through the integration of electroacoustic techniques beginning with King Lear in the mid-1960s and continuing through productions such as Hamlet in 1991. This approach drew on his film experience to blend electronic elements with traditional orchestration, enhancing the sonic landscape of Shakespearean and other classical works at Stratford.

Broadcasting and other media work

CBC positions and contributions

Louis Applebaum served as a consultant for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, providing expertise to the organization alongside his roles with other institutions like the National Film Board and the Canada Council. As one of Canada's most prolific composers, he wrote and conducted hundreds of scores for radio and television drama, contributing significantly to the musical content of CBC productions in these formats. These contributions overlapped with his broader work in broadcasting and media.

Other radio, television, and concert works

Applebaum produced a substantial body of concert music and ballet scores throughout his career, frequently on commission for specific occasions, ensembles, or ceremonies, even as he balanced extensive administrative duties. These compositions range from solo and chamber pieces to large-scale orchestral and vocal works, earning performances worldwide. His ballet output includes three commissioned scores. Dark of the Moon, later revised as Barbara Allen, was created for the National Ballet of Canada, with an excerpt titled Revival Meeting and Finale scored for medium orchestra in 1964. Legend of the North (1957) was written for the Janet Baldwin Ballet of Toronto, using piano and percussion. Homage (1969) was composed for the National Ballet's appearance at the National Arts Centre opening ceremonies, set for full orchestra, with additional electronic curtain music provided for the event. Representative concert works feature orchestral compositions such as East by North (1947) for full orchestra, Concertante for Small Orchestra commissioned by the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, Place Setting (1973) for the Hamilton Place opening, Dialogue With Footnotes (1984) for big jazz band and orchestra, and Play On! (1987) for soli, chorus, and orchestra to mark the Royal Conservatory of Music and Opera centennial. Chamber and solo pieces include Essay (1971) for solo flute, Touch Wood (1969) and Keep Moving (1973) for piano, and Four Dances in a Nineteenth Century Style (1987) for brass quintet. Among vocal works are Cry of the Prophet (1951, revised 1952) for baritone and piano on a biblical text, and A Folio of Shakespearean Songs (1954–87) adapted for medium voice and piano. Later compositions encompass The Harper of the Stones (1987), a musical ghost story with libretto and narration by Robertson Davies for narrator and chamber ensemble, notable for its spectral dance episode accompanied on spoons and its striking passacaglia finale, as well as the opera Erewhon with libretto by Mavor Moore, commissioned by Pacific Opera Victoria and premiered in February 2000 as his final major work. In addition to his CBC contributions, Applebaum composed for radio and television series and specials on other networks including BBC, CBS, NBC, and United Nations Radio, contributing to several hundred scores for dramas and documentaries across these outlets. He also provided music for the television mini-series Glory Enough For All produced by Gemstone Productions, which received a Gemini Award in 1990.

Arts administration and cultural policy

Leadership roles in arts organizations

Louis Applebaum held several prominent leadership positions in Canadian arts organizations, where he played a central role in administering funding, advocating for artists, and strengthening cultural infrastructure across the country. From 1971 to 1979, he served as Executive Director of the Ontario Arts Council, overseeing provincial arts funding and support programs during a formative period for the organization. His tenure in this role allowed him to apply his extensive experience in music, broadcasting, and theatre to guide grants and initiatives that benefited a wide range of artistic disciplines in Ontario. Applebaum also served as Vice-President of the Canadian League of Composers, contributing to efforts that promoted the creation, performance, and recognition of Canadian music. He additionally acted as an advisor on the Canada Council Advisory Council, providing expertise to shape national approaches to arts support. Through these and other board involvements, Applebaum established himself as a vital force in Canada's cultural life over six decades, fostering greater stability and growth for the arts sector.

Federal cultural policy contributions

Applebaum's most notable contribution to federal cultural policy came as co-chair of the Federal Cultural Policy Review Committee, alongside Senator Jacques Hébert. Appointed in 1981 by the Minister of Communications, the committee undertook a comprehensive examination of the federal government's role in supporting culture and published its final report in November 1982. Known as the Applebaum-Hébert report, the document presented recommendations aimed at renewing Canada's cultural policy framework, including greater autonomy for cultural agencies, increased support for individual artists and creators, and a shift toward policies that promote cultural diversity and public access rather than direct government administration of cultural activities. The report emphasized arm's-length funding mechanisms and highlighted the need for federal policies to foster Canadian cultural expression in the face of increasing foreign influence, particularly in broadcasting and publishing. The Applebaum-Hébert report represented the first major review of federal cultural policy since the Massey Commission of 1951 and served as a foundational document for subsequent policy developments. Its recommendations influenced reforms in areas such as broadcasting regulation, arts funding structures, and the relationship between government and cultural institutions throughout the 1980s and beyond, contributing to a more decentralized and creator-centered approach to cultural support in Canada. While not all proposals were immediately implemented, the report's analysis and vision helped shape the discourse on cultural sovereignty and federal responsibility in the arts for decades.

Awards and honours

Death and legacy

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