- Herschel Burke Gilbert
Herschel Burke Gilbert (
April 20 ,1918 -June 8 ,2003 ) was a prolific composer of television andfilm theme song s, including the musical scores ofChuck Connors ' "The Rifleman ", "Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater ",Robert Taylor's "The Detectives ",Gene Barry 's "Burke's Law ", andBob Denver 's "Gilligan's Island ". Gilbert once estimated that his compositions had been used in at least three thousand individual episodes of various televisionseries .Early years and education
Gilbert was born in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin . At the age of nine, he began studying theviolin in Shorewood in Milwaukee County. By the time he was fifteen, he had formed his own dance band. He attended Milwaukee State Teachers College (nowUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee ) and studied for four years, two undergraduate and two graduate, from 1939–1943 at theJuilliard School of Music inNew York City . After Juilliard, Gilbert won a music scholarship to the Berkshire Music Festival inMassachusetts , where he studied underAaron Copland andLeonard Bernstein .Film scores
After a two-year stint with the
Harry James band, as bothviola player and arranger, brought him toHollywood . He arranged and orchestrated forDimitri Tiomkin onJimmy Stewart 's "It's a Wonderful Life " and "Duel in the Sun " (both 1946). He composed the scores for some three dozen films throughout the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, including "The Jackie Robinson Story " (1950), "Comanche " (1956), "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue " (1957), and "Sam Whiskey " (1969).Gilbert was nominated for three
Academy Award s in consecutive years: the original score for "The Thief " (1952), his title tune for The Moon Is Blue (1953), and for his direction on Carmen Jones (1954). Gilbert assignedopera starMarilyn Horne her first professional job as the voice of Carmen. "The Thief", aspy film starringRay Milland , relied heavily on Gilbert's music because the picture lacked dialogue.Gilbert was president of the Film Music Society, also known as the Society for the Preservation of Film Music, from 1989–1992. He also served on the society's board until his death. In 1998, Gilbert was presented the organization's "Film Music Preservation Award".
Four Star Television
As music director for
Dick Powell 'sFour Star Television , Gilbert also wrote themes for "The Dick Powell Show ", Robert Taylor's "The Detectives", "The Westerner" starringBrian Keith , and the DuPont Show with Powell's wife,June Allyson . At Four Star, Gilbert supervised the music of an estimated 1,500 television program over a six-year period. Two of his "The Dick Powell Show" scores were nominated for musicEmmy Award s. He also handled the composition for "The Rogues " and "The Gertrude Berg Show ". Gilbert also did the music for "The Loretta Young Show " onNBC . He produced a popular LP entitled "Dick Powell Presents Themes from Four Star Television", one of the first television soundtrack albums to feature the actual music heard weekly on various series.One of his last assignments at Four Star resulted in another memorable television theme: "Burke's Law" (1963–1966), with its breathy female voice and jazzy brass opening for the Rolls Royce-chauffeured police detective Amos Burke. (Ironically "Burke" was also Gilbert's middle name.) Gilbert thereafter did the theme songs for
Gilligan's Island , a series about comical castaways, andClint Eastwood 's "Rawhide", both onCBS . He went toOklahoma City in 1964 to receive theNational Cowboy Hall of Fame 's "Western Heritage Award" for "Damon's Road", a two-part episode of "Rawhide".While in Europe in the early 1950s, Gilbert composed music libraries. Many of these works became the underscore of classic television programs, including "
The Adventures of Superman ", "M Squad " starringLee Marvin , "Topper ", "Sky King ", and "Ramar of the Jungle ". His association with producersArthur Gardner ,Jules Levy , andArnold Laven led to his music for "The Rifleman", which ran on ABC from 1958-1963. In addition to his famous theme, he wrote a library of dramatic music for "The Rifleman", which was recorded inMunich, Germany .Gilbert retired from television in 1966 to form Laurel Records, which eventually produced more than sixty LPs and nearly thirty CDs, mostly of contemporary American chamber music. Laurel became one of the nation's premier classical labels, acclaimed for its outstanding engineering.
His later years
In his last years, Gilbert was joined by his son, John Gilbert of Berkeley, to produce more than sixty LPs and twenty-eight CDs featuring the music of
Ernest Bloch ,Henri Lazarof ,Paul Hindemith ,David Baker , andRobert Muczynski .Gilbert was heavily involved in civic affairs. Through his
Rotary International chapters in both Hollywood and West Hollywood, he sponsored classical musical competitions forhigh school students. He was a strong supporter of theBoy Scouts of America .Gilbert suffered a
stroke onMarch 23 , 2003. He died some three months later, at the age of eighty-five, atCedars-Sinai Hospital inLos Angeles . Survivors included his wife of sixty years, Trudy; two daughters, Toby G. Bernstein of Los Angeles and Gwen Olson of Poway in San Diego County; another son, Paul Gilbert of Los Angeles, and three grandchildren. Gilbert was cremated. The family requested memorials to the Juilliard School, of which Gilbert headed the alumni association for fifteen years.References
http://www.filmmusicsociety.org/news_events/features/2003/061303_2.html
http://ssdi.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi
http://www.laurelrecord.com/herschel_bio.html
http://www.laurelrecord.com/herschel_obit.html
http://movies.go.com/herschel-burke-gilbert/f1074074
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