Bronislau Kaper(1902-1983)
- Music Department
- Composer
- Actor
Born: February 5, 1902 in Warsaw, Poland Died: April 25, 1983 in Los
Angeles, California, USA Kaper displayed musical talent as early as the
age of seven when his family acquired a piano. His inclination to music
led him to study both piano and composition, while also taking courses
in law to satisfy his father. At twenty-one he graduated from The
Chopin Music School. To continue his musical education he went to
Berlin. In order to support himself during this period he began writing
songs for a cabaret. Later he worked as an arranger and a composer for
both stage and film productions. In 1933, as the Nazis rose to power in
Germany, Kaper moved to Paris and worked in the French film industry.
This phase of his career lasted only two years, for in 1935 MGM
executive Louis B. Mayer was on vacation in Europe and happened to hear
one of Kaper's songs. Mayer offered the composer a contract, and Kaper
soon found himself working in Hollywood. One of his first efforts for
MGM was the title tune for the film San Francisco (1936), a song which
was so appealing to the American public that it became a standard.
During his early years at MGM, the studio kept Kaper busy as a
songwriter. But the composer looked for opportunities to write complete
background scores. In the forties he did provide music for dramatic
films such as Gaslight (1944), Green Dolphin Street (1947) and Act of
Violence (1949). This last film, a disturbing thriller directed by Fred
Zinneman, shows how sophisticated and daring Kaper's music could be.
Drawing on his knowledge of modern composition, he was surprisingly
successful at incorporating dissonant, abstract sounds into his film
scores considering the conservative tastes that prevailed in Hollywood.
But it is important to note that the composer always depended on others
to orchestrate his work. Kaper wrote his scores at the piano. Then he
would give what he'd written to an orchestrator and they would discuss
how to expand on the piano reduction. In the fifties Kaper was given
more opportunities to show his range. He created edgy, modern scores
for films like Them! (1954) and rich, romantic scores for films like
The Brothers Karamazov (1958), while still turning out catchy melodies
for musicals like Lili (1953). By the end of the decade, though, it was
clear that the Hollywood studios were in decline and that the days of
in-house music departments were over. When the ax fell at MGM, Kaper
went on working as a freelance film composer. One of his last major
film assignments was Lord Jim (1965), an adaptation of the Conrad
novel. To complement the epic scope of the film, Kaper used not only a
large symphony orchestra but also many instruments indigenous to the
story's Asian setting. Like most Hollywood composers of the studio era,
Kaper found himself working on fewer movies during the sixties. His
last credit on a theatrical release was A Flea in Her Ear (1968).
Though he was later hired to work on The Salzburg Connection (1972),
his score was discarded. Kaper died at his home in Los Angeles in 1983.
by Casey Maddren Bibliography The Film Music of Bronislaw Kaper, notes
by Tony Thomas, Delos Records, 1975 Variety, obituary, May 4, 1983
Interview with Pete Rugolo conducted by the author, 1998