The way he is
Young Chang
Marvin Hamlisch talks fast and perhaps even listens fast.
He spits out thoughtful answers without taking a moment to think. The
hurriedness is born more of brilliance than of rudeness. It’s a gesture
from a genius whose thoughts race faster than his words, by a composer
who is too busy communicating universal emotions through music to dawdle
on things like newspaper interviews.
“I just get interested in something and I want to do it,” said
Hamlisch, of how he chooses his projects.
With that quick line, the composer, who will perform his famed
Broadway and pop tunes today and Saturday with the Pacific Symphony Pops,
summarized more than four decades of how he made musical history.
In the early 1950s, the composer/conductor/producer/actor (then just
7) was the first such youngster to be accepted into the Juilliard School
of Music.
He composed the scores for Broadway shows, including “They’re Playing
Our Song,” “The Goodbye Girl” and “A Chorus Line.” He’s written music for
more than 40 films, including “Frankie and Johnny,” “The Sting,” “The Way
We Were,” “Ordinary People” and “Three Men and a Baby.”
He’s won a few of everything: four Grammys, three Oscars (for “The
Sting” and “The Way We Were”), three Golden Globes, two Emmys and one
Tony.
And at 57 (the Gemini will turn 58 next week), Hamlisch is enjoying
the sweet success of his latest project, “The Sweet Smell of Success,” as
it has received seven Tony Award nominations, one for best original
score.
His most recent work, scoring “Imaginary Friends” with Craig Carnelia,
can be heard in September at the Old Globe Theatre in San Diego.
Hamlisch said his goal now is the same as it’s always been.
“To keep doing what I’m doing,” the New York native said.
Hamlisch put it succinctly: The role of music in films is to highlight
the emotion; the role of music in theatrical works is to continue to tell
the story.
“I love writing for the stage,” said the composer, when asked if he
prefers a medium. “I find it the most exciting, and also because I’m
involved in the project from the very beginning as opposed to coming in
later on, particularly with a movie.”
Damien Lorton, who is directing the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse’s
production of “A Chorus Line,” to open Thursday, said musical scores can
make or break a piece when it comes to musical theater.
“The music is just as important as the dialogue,” Lorton said. “It
takes dance, music and acting to push the story along, and if the music
is weak then you’ve destroyed the piece.”
Lorton calls Hamlisch one of the most prolific composers -- and one
whose music stands almost as its own orchestral concert.
“When he writes music, it’s the entire arrangement of the piece,”
Lorton said. “He has his own style and his own flow with music. And
although it’s a completely different style from Stephen Sondheim, he
really cares about the singer and he cares about the instrument.”
The local director added that Hamlisch’s music never places
limitations on vocalists.
“He doesn’t write for altos or bass or tenors,” Lorton said. “He just
writes. It’s absolutely beautiful.”
FYI
WHAT: Marvin Hamlisch with the Pacific Symphony Pops
WHEN: 8 p.m. today and Saturday
WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
COST: $25-$77
CALL: (714) 755-5799
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