Henry Mancini(1924-1994)
- Music Department
- Composer
- Actor
Born in Cleveland, Ohio, but brought up in Pennsylvania, where he
played the flute in a local band, as a youth, before sending some
arrangements to Benny Goodman.
Goodman offered him a job and, after serving in WWII, he joined the
rearranged Glenn Miller band. In
1952, he was given a two-week assignment at Universal to work on an
Bud Abbott and
Lou Costello film and ended up
staying for six years. Success with
The Glenn Miller Story (1954)
allowed him to score many other films, helping along the way to change
the style of film background music by injecting jazz into the
traditional orchestral arrangements of the 1950s. He was nominated for
18 Oscars and won four; in addition, he won 20 Grammys and 2 Emmys,
made over 50 albums and had 500 works published. Mancini collaborated
extensively with Blake Edwards --
firstly on TV's Peter Gunn (1958),
then on
Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961),
which won him two Oscars; he won further Oscars for the titles song for
Days of Wine and Roses (1962)
and the score for
Victor/Victoria (1982); he will
be best-remembered for the theme tune for
The Pink Panther (1963).