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Walter Jurmann

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Walter Jurmann (October 12, 1903 – June 17, 1971) was an Austrian-born composer of popular music renowned for his versatility who, after immigrating to the United States, specialized in film scores and soundtracks.

Biography

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Born in Vienna, Jurmann received a classical education, taking his Matura exams in 1921. For some time he studied medicine but in 1924, after working as a lounge pianist in a posh hotel in the Semmering area of Lower Austria, abandoned his studies altogether in order to pursue a career in music. He moved to Berlin and soon became successful with tunes such as "Du bist nicht die Erste". Probably his most famous 1920s song is "Veronika, der Lenz ist da", popularized by the all-male a cappella ensemble, the Comedian Harmonists. With the arrival of sound movies Jurmann also began writing film music, starting with Ihre Majestät, die Liebe (Her Majesty, Love) (1930). Jurman's melodies were so charming and easy to remember that a contemporary paper reported that cinemagoers were humming the new tunes already on the morning following the release of a new film.

In 1933, after the Nazis had come to power, Jurmann left Berlin for Paris, France, where he continued writing songs, occasionally incorporating elements of the French chanson. In 1934 he met Louis B. Mayer, who offered him a seven-year contract with MGM. Subsequently, Jurmann and his partner, Polish-born composer Bronisław Kaper (1902 - 1983), went to Hollywood. Jurmann's successful films include Mutiny on the Bounty (1935) ("Love Song of Tahiti"), the 1936 movie San Francisco ("Theme from San Francisco"), the Marx Brothers films A Night at the Opera ("Cosi Cosa," 1935) and A Day at the Races ("All God's Chillun Got Rhythm," 1937), and Presenting Lily Mars (1943) starring Judy Garland.

In the early 1940s Jurmann, who had settled down in Los Angeles, withdrew from the film business although he continued writing Ohrwürmer up to his death. In 1953 he married Yvonne Jellinek, a Hungarian fashion designer whom he had met at a party in the U.S. In 1971, during a trip to Europe, he died unexpectedly of a heart attack in Budapest, his wife's home town. He is interred in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood, California.

Selected filmography

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See also

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References

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from Grokipedia
''Walter Jurmann'' is an Austrian composer and songwriter known for his popular music compositions in 1920s and 1930s Europe and his contributions to Hollywood film scores and songs after emigrating to the United States. [1] [2] Born on October 12, 1903, in Vienna, Austria-Hungary (now Austria), Jurmann began his career as a pianist in Austria before moving to Berlin in 1927, where he worked as a hotel pianist and composed hit songs in collaboration with lyricists such as Fritz Rotter and fellow composer Bronisław Kaper. [1] His early successes included memorable tunes like "Veronika, der Lenz ist da," first released in 1930 by the Comedian Harmonists. [3] With the arrival of sound films, he transitioned to composing for German and French cinema in the early 1930s, often using pseudonyms such as Pierre Candel. [1] [2] Following the Nazi seizure of power in 1933, Jurmann relocated to Paris and, in 1934, accepted an invitation from MGM's Louis B. Mayer to move to Hollywood with Kaper. [2] [1] In the United States, he specialized in film music, contributing songs to MGM productions including A Night at the Opera (1935), San Francisco (1936), and A Day at the Races (1937), with notable compositions such as "Cosi Cosa," the title song "San Francisco," and "All God's Chillun Got Rhythm." [2] [4] His versatile melodies were recorded by prominent artists and orchestras of the era, including Tommy Dorsey and Paul Whiteman. [4] After the mid-1940s, Jurmann largely withdrew from film work to pursue freelance composition, including songs celebrating American cities such as San Antonio and Los Angeles. [1] He was married to Yvonne Jellinek from 1953 until his death on June 17, 1971, in Budapest, Hungary. [2]

Early life

Birth and education in Vienna

Walter Jurmann was born on October 12, 1903, into a solidly middle-class family in Vienna, Austria-Hungary (now Austria). [5] [6] He showed early signs of musical talent and by his teens had become an accomplished singer and pianist. [5] Jurmann received a classical education at Gymnasium in Vienna and passed his Matura examinations in 1921. [5] Although he aspired to pursue music professionally, he followed his parents' wishes and began studying medicine at the University of Vienna shortly thereafter. [5]

Shift to professional music

Following his parents' wishes, Walter Jurmann initially enrolled in medicine at the University of Vienna after completing his Matura. [7] However, his path changed due to a bout of pleurisy that required recuperation at the health resort of Semmering in Lower Austria. [7] There, he began playing piano at the fashionable Hotel Panhans, quickly gaining popularity among guests and receiving an offer from the management to perform professionally as a lounge pianist. [7] [8] This positive experience as a pianist prompted him to abandon his medical studies and commit fully to a career in music. [7] Jurmann's time in Semmering marked the decisive turning point, as the enjoyment and success he found in performing light music confirmed his preference for a professional life in the arts over medicine. [7] He later relocated to Berlin to advance his musical ambitions. [7]

Career in Berlin

Jurmann moved to Berlin in 1927, building on his early experience as a pianist in Vienna to establish himself as a prominent composer of popular songs. [9] He took a position as a pianist at the Hotel Eden and quickly gained traction in the city's dynamic entertainment scene through his prolific output of catchy melodies. [9] Collaborating closely with lyricist Fritz Rotter (a connection from his Austrian days) and composer-arranger Bronisław Kaper, Jurmann produced a steady stream of successful light music that helped define the sound of the Weimar Republic. [9] Several of their joint compositions were recorded by celebrated tenor Richard Tauber, broadening their reach through concerts, radio, and records. [9] Early successes included songs such as "Du bist nicht die Erste." [10] His most celebrated work from this period is "Veronika, der Lenz ist da," composed in 1930 with lyrics by Fritz Rotter and popularized by the Comedian Harmonists, whose recording turned it into an immediate and lasting evergreen of German popular music. [9] Jurmann developed a strong reputation for his gift for creating memorable, infectious melodies that captured the optimism and vitality of Berlin's popular music landscape in the late 1920s and early 1930s. [9] Around 1930 he began transitioning toward film music composition. [9]

Entry into film music

Walter Jurmann entered the field of film music with the rise of sound films in Germany, beginning with his composition work for the 1930 comedy "Ihre Majestät, die Liebe" (Her Majesty, Love), directed by Joe May. [11] The film featured popular songs such as "Du bist nicht die Erste" and proved successful internationally. [12] Jurmann's melodies for the picture quickly caught on with audiences. [7] He followed this debut with contributions to several notable German-language films, including "The Big Attraction" (1931) and "Salto Mortale" (1931), establishing himself as a key composer in the early sound era. [13] His work during this period, spanning multiple productions through 1933, earned him recognition for creating catchy tunes that audiences hummed immediately after screenings. [14] Jurmann's German film career concluded in 1933 amid rising political pressures that prompted his exile. [13]

Exile in Paris

Escape from Nazi Germany

In 1933, following the Nazi seizure of power in Germany, Walter Jurmann left Berlin and emigrated to Paris, France. [15] He was forced to emigrate due to the rise of the Nazi regime, which targeted Jewish artists and professionals in the cultural sphere. [15] [14] As a Jewish composer prominent in Berlin's popular music and film scene, Jurmann was part of the broader wave of Jewish creative figures who fled Nazi persecution during this period. [16] Jurmann's relocation to Paris marked the beginning of his exile from Germany, where he had built his reputation as a leading songwriter in the late 1920s and early 1930s. [14] He undertook this move together with his frequent collaborator Bronisław Kaper, seeking safety and opportunities away from the increasingly hostile environment in Nazi Germany. [15] In Paris, he continued his songwriting activities. [14]

Work in France

After fleeing Berlin in 1933, Walter Jurmann settled in Paris, France, where he resided briefly until 1934.[17] During this short exile period, he continued composing songs and film music, frequently collaborating with Bronisław Kaper, and published primarily through the Parisian firm Éditions Coda.[17] His work occasionally incorporated elements of French chanson style, reflecting the local musical environment.[18] Jurmann contributed to several French film productions as a composer, including "Tout pour l'amour" (1933), "A Man Has Been Stolen" (1934), and "Moscow Nights" ("Les Nuits moscovites," 1934).[2] For "Moscow Nights," directed by Alexis Granowsky, he co-composed the music with Kaper, with lyrics by André de Badet.[19] "A Man Has Been Stolen" represents another key credit from this phase, showcasing his continued activity in film scoring despite the uncertainties of exile.[20] This Paris interval marked a transitional period of sustained creativity before his departure for the United States.[2]

Hollywood career

MGM contract and move to the United States

In 1934, while living in exile in Paris, Walter Jurmann met Louis B. Mayer, the head of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios, who recruited him and offered a seven-year contract to compose for the studio's film productions. [17] [15] The offer extended to Jurmann's longtime collaborator Bronisław Kaper, as the pair had continued their songwriting partnership in France after fleeing Berlin in 1933. [15] [21] Jurmann arrived in the United States in late 1934, relocating to Hollywood with Kaper to begin work under the MGM contract in early 1935. [15] From that point onward, he specialized in creating film scores and original soundtracks for the studio's motion pictures. [17]

Collaboration with Bronisław Kaper

Walter Jurmann formed a long-term and highly successful collaboration with Polish-born composer Bronisław Kaper that began in Berlin in 1931 and continued through their exile in Paris before extending into their Hollywood careers.[7][17] In Berlin, Kaper provided arrangements and orchestrations for Jurmann's melodies, and the duo worked jointly on songs and film music for several German productions during the early 1930s.[7][13] After both emigrated to Paris in 1933–1934 amid rising persecution, their partnership persisted seamlessly until Louis B. Mayer personally recruited them as a team for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1934.[7][17] They arrived in the United States at the end of October 1934, initially in New York, and began working at MGM studios in February 1935, where they were described in contemporary reports as "Vienna’s most sensational team of composers."[7] The partnership, which spanned 12 years overall, proved one of the most enduring and productive of its kind, encompassing contributions to some 24 films across Germany, France, and the United States, with Jurmann typically providing melodies and Kaper handling arrangements and orchestrations.[13] Under their MGM contract, Jurmann and Kaper jointly composed songs and contributed to film scores, establishing a key creative dynamic during the studio's mid-1930s musical output.[17][22] Their collaborative work in Hollywood included songs for notable MGM films such as San Francisco (1936) and A Day at the Races (1937).[22]

Notable film contributions

Jurmann's most prominent Hollywood contributions came through his songwriting for MGM films in the 1930s, frequently in collaboration with Bronisław Kaper and lyricists such as Ned Washington and Gus Kahn. His compositions often featured in major productions, adding memorable musical moments to both comedies and dramas. [2] He co-composed "Cosi Cosa" for A Night at the Opera (1935), a lively number performed in the Marx Brothers film. [23] In 1936, Jurmann co-wrote the title song "San Francisco" (with Kaper and Kahn) for the film San Francisco, which became an enduring anthem associated with the city. [24] His partnership with Kaper continued with "All God's Chillun Got Rhythm" in the Marx Brothers comedy A Day at the Races (1937). [25] Jurmann's later Hollywood work included contributions to Presenting Lily Mars (1943), starring Judy Garland. He also held various music department roles across MGM projects during this period. [2] His active film scoring largely ceased in the early 1940s.

Later life and death

Withdrawal from the film industry

In the early 1940s, Walter Jurmann withdrew from the film industry after a productive period of composing for Hollywood features, with records indicating his retirement from the film business in 1943. [26] [8] No formal retirement announcement or explicit reasons for the departure are documented in available sources, suggesting a gradual retreat as his screen credits diminished following contributions to films like Presenting Lily Mars (1943) and His Butler's Sister (1943). [8] Although Jurmann largely stepped away from active film work, he briefly resumed professional involvement between 1948 and 1950, serving as production manager on Zyankali (1948) and Liebe Freundin (1949) before producing and providing his final film composition for Kill or Be Killed (1950). [26] [8] After this limited return, he ceased industry participation and continued composing catchy popular tunes privately until his death.

Marriage and final years

In 1953, Walter Jurmann married Hungarian fashion designer Yvonne Jellinek, whom he had met at a party in the United States. [27] At that gathering, Jurmann was playing songs on the piano, prompting Yvonne to approach him and remark that he was playing all the music she liked. [28] In his later years, Jurmann continued to compose music privately, including a collection of songs dedicated to his wife composed between 1953 and 1967. [29] He lived in retirement until his death in 1971 during a trip to Europe. [30]

Death in Budapest

Walter Jurmann died unexpectedly of a heart attack on June 17, 1971, in Budapest, Hungary, while on a trip to Europe to visit his wife's hometown. [2] His remains were later interred at Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood, California.

References

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