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Marc Wilkinson

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Marc Wilkinson (27 July 1929 – 9 January 2022) was an Australian-British composer and conductor best known for his film scores, including Blood on Satan's Claw, and incidental music for the theatre, most notably for Peter Shaffer's The Royal Hunt of the Sun. His compositional approach has combined traditional techniques with elements of the avant-garde. After residing for most of his life in the United Kingdom, he retired from composition and lived in France.

Life and career

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Born in Paris, France, Wilkinson studied composition at Columbia and Princeton Universities; he also took some private lessons with Varèse in New York.[1] He published a number of analytical articles on works by Varèse and Boulez.[2][3] In England, he became one of the first independent composers to make use of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop after it opened in 1958.[4] For a time Wilkinson was resident composer and musical director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, then musical director of the Royal National Theatre (1963–74).[5] One of the first scores he composed in that post was for Peter Shaffer's The Royal Hunt of the Sun (1964); the result deeply impressed the playwright, who has described Wilkinson's work as "perhaps the best score for a play to be written since Grieg embellished Peer Gynt".[6] Wilkinson subsequently wrote the incidental music to Shaffer's play Equus (1973).

Other National Theatre productions for which Wilkinson wrote incidental music included Tom Stoppard's plays Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1967) and Jumpers (its premiere production, 1972). He also taught at the Royal Court Theatre studio, under the directorship of Keith Johnstone, from the autumn of 1964.[7]

Through his work at the National Theatre Wilkinson met Piers Haggard, who was working as an assistant director: the two worked together on the National Theatre production The Dutch Courtesan (1964).[8] Having directed several TV dramas, Haggard was about to direct his first feature film and invited Wilkinson to score it.[9] The result is one of Wilkinson's most celebrated film scores, Blood on Satan's Claw (1971),[10] acclaimed by Jonathan Rigby in English Gothic as "easily among the best ever composed for a British horror film".[11] Wilkinson subsequently gave crucial advice to Paul Giovanni who had been commissioned to score the film The Wicker Man.[12]

Wilkinson and Haggard subsequently worked together on further TV and film productions, including Quatermass and The Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu.

He died on 8 January 2022, at the age of 92.[13]

Selective list of works

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Incidental music for theatre

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  • Richard III (Royal Shakespeare Company, 1961)
  • Cymbeline (Royal Shakespeare Company, 1962)
  • The Royal Hunt of the Sun (1964)
  • The Storm (1966)
  • Macbeth (1966)
  • Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1967)
  • As You Like It (1967)
  • Three Sisters (1967)
  • Love’s Labour’s Lost (1968)
  • National Health (1969)
  • Cyrano de Bergerac (1970)
  • The Duchess of Malfi (1971)
  • Jumpers (1972)
  • Equus (1973)

Film scores

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Television scores

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Marc Wilkinson (27 July 1929 – 9 January 2022) was an Australian-British composer and conductor known for his film scores and incidental music for the theatre.[1][2] Born in Paris, he established a career primarily in Britain during the 1960s through the 1980s.[3] His most notable film collaborations were with director Lindsay Anderson on the satirical features ''If....'' (1968) and ''O Lucky Man!'' (1973), while he also composed the score for the horror film ''The Blood on Satan's Claw'' (1971).[4] In theatre, he created incidental music for Peter Shaffer's epic play ''The Royal Hunt of the Sun''. His work spanned radio plays, film, and stage, blending modernist influences with dramatic scoring suited to both experimental and genre cinema. Wilkinson continued composing into later decades, with credits including the Australian film ''The Mango Tree'' (1977), though he remained most associated with his contributions to British New Wave and cult horror.

Early life

Early years and education

Marc Wilkinson was born on 27 July 1929 in Paris, France, during the French Third Republic. [5] He held Australian-British nationality. [5] He studied composition at Columbia University, earning an MA degree, and at Princeton University, earning an MFA degree. [6] While in New York, he took private lessons with Edgard Varèse. [6] Wilkinson also published analytical articles on works by Varèse and Pierre Boulez. [6]

Career

Theatre contributions

Marc Wilkinson established himself as a prominent figure in British theatre as a composer and musical director. In 1963, he became the first musical director of the National Theatre (later the Royal National Theatre), holding the position until 1975.[3] His tenure at the National Theatre, then based at the Old Vic, involved composing incidental music for a wide range of productions, reflecting his central role in shaping the auditory landscape of major stage works during this formative period for the institution.[7] Wilkinson's incidental music gained particular acclaim for its integration with dramatic action. One of his earliest notable contributions was the score for Peter Shaffer's The Royal Hunt of the Sun (1964), which Shaffer described as “perhaps the best score for a play to be written since Grieg embellished Peer Gynt.”[3] He composed for Tom Stoppard's Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1967) and Jumpers (1972 world premiere).[3] His score for Peter Shaffer's Equus (1973) further demonstrated his ability to enhance psychological intensity through music.[3] Wilkinson also provided music for numerous other National Theatre productions, including many at the Old Vic and Aldwych Theatre, as documented in performance records.[7] His theatre work included collaborations with notable directors. His partnership with Piers Haggard began with the production of The Dutch Courtesan (1964).[3] Wilkinson additionally composed incidental music for plays at the Royal Court Theatre, including Julius Caesar directed by Lindsay Anderson.[3] His prolific output in incidental music during the 1960s and 1970s underscored his influence on British stage innovation, blending contemporary compositional techniques with dramatic requirements.[3]

Film scores

Marc Wilkinson began his career in feature film scoring with Lindsay Anderson's satirical drama If.... in 1968.[8] The score complemented the film's subversive tone through subtle, evocative themes that contrasted the rigidity of boarding school life with youthful rebellion.[9] His most acclaimed contribution to cinema came with the score for Piers Haggard's horror film Blood on Satan's Claw in 1971.[10] Widely regarded as one of the finest British horror film scores, it drew influence from Hector Berlioz and featured distinctive instrumentation including cimbalom and ondes Martenot to evoke a haunting pastoral dread.[3] Wilkinson conducted the recording sessions himself, employing an ensemble that included around 40 musicians for certain cues to achieve its atmospheric depth.[11] This work solidified a long-running collaboration with Haggard that spanned multiple films, originating from their earlier theatre work together.[3] Wilkinson's other notable feature film scores include The Royal Hunt of the Sun in 1969 (distinct from his earlier stage incidental music for the play), Family Life in 1971, The Triple Echo in 1972, The Hireling in 1973, Eagle’s Wing in 1979, The Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu in 1980—where he also served as conductor—and Tom Stoppard's Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead in 1990.[12][4] He also composed the score for the Australian film The Mango Tree in 1977, which earned him the Best Film Score award from the Australian Film Institute.[3] Wilkinson additionally provided advice to composer Paul Giovanni during the creation of the score for The Wicker Man.[3]

Television and other work

Wilkinson provided music for a range of British television productions, with a particular focus on drama, anthology series, and mini-series during the 1970s and 1980s.[2] He composed the score for the 1979 Quatermass series directed by Piers Haggard, a four-part science fiction revival that aired on ITV.[2] Wilkinson contributed to the BBC's Play for Today anthology, including the episode "The Lie" (1970).[2] He scored the Hammer House of Horror episode "Visitor from the Grave" in 1980, contributing to the horror anthology series.[2] He composed music for multiple episodes of Tales of the Unexpected from 1981 to 1988, including "The Way to Do It" (1981), "The Skeleton Key" (1982), "The Absence of Emily" (1982), "A Harmless Vanity" (1982), and "A Time to Die" (1988).[2] In 1982, Wilkinson composed and conducted the music for the four-episode television adaptation of The Bell.[2] He also provided scores for several episodes of Ruth Rendell Mysteries in 1987.[2] Wilkinson occasionally conducted his own television scores, as seen in projects like The Bell and other productions.[2] Beyond composing, he made a minor appearance as a conductor in the 1980 production The Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu.[2] His television work demonstrated his ability to craft atmospheric and dramatic scores for episodic and serialized formats, complementing his contributions to other media.[2]

Later life and death

Later years and legacy

In his later years, Wilkinson retired from active composition and resided in France, where he devoted much of his time to gardening when weather permitted. [3] He continued to offer occasional private lessons to selected students and expressed interest in possibly writing a book. [3] He maintained some involvement with his earlier work; a few years before 2013, he traveled to London for the National Theatre's revival of The Royal Hunt of the Sun to oversee the music and suggest alterations. [3] Interest in his film music persisted, notably with the first-ever release of his Blood on Satan's Claw soundtrack by Trunk Records in 2007, for which he supplied sleevenotes explaining his compositional choices, including the use of the Ondes Martenot, cimbalom, and the "Devil's Interval," and expressed pride in completing the low-budget recording under budget. [10] Trunk Records founder Jon Brooks described the score as "totally beautiful" and acknowledged Wilkinson's patience and help during the release process, noting the film's growing cult reputation and rumored influence on other filmmakers. [10] Wilkinson received a nomination for Best Original Music Score at the Australian Film Institute Awards for The Mango Tree (1977). [13] He also received a nomination for the BAFTA Television Craft Award for Best Original Music for A Voyage Round My Father, Mona, and The Bell. [14] His atmospheric and innovative scores, particularly in cult horror and theatre contexts, have sustained appreciation among enthusiasts and specialists in film and stage music. [10]

Death

Marc Wilkinson died on 9 January 2022 at the age of 92. [5] [15] [2] His passing was announced in a brief notice on the German film music website cinemusic.de, which reported the information as originating from a Facebook post. [5] The obituary highlighted his contributions to film and theatre but provided no further details on the circumstances of his death. [5] Contemporary notices also appeared in music databases and specialist forums, confirming the date and age. [15]
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