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Two-time Emmy-award
winning composer/arranger Hummie Mann has collaborated with some of Hollywood's
most celebrated directors in both theatrical and television films. His motion
pictures projects have ranged from Mel Brooks' “Robin Hood: Men in Tights”
to Peter Yates' “Year of the Comet”, the children’s film “Thomas
and the Magic Railroad” to “Wooly Boys” directed by Leszek Burzynski
starring Peter Fonda, Kris Kristofferson, Keith Carradine and Joe Mazzello.
For television, he has scored projects for Simon Wincer (the miniseries “P.T.
Barnum”), Jonathan Kaplan (the miniseries re-make of “In Cold Blood”),
Norman Jewison (“Picture Windows”), Peter Bogdanovich (“The Rescuers:
Tales of Courage - Two Women”), Joe Dante (“Masters of Horror: Homecoming”),
Jim Abrahams (“First Do No Harm”), Richard Friedenberg (“Suzanne’s
Diary for Nicholas”), William Friedkin, John Milius and Ralph Bakshi (all
part of the “Rebel Highway” series), among others.
Mann was honored with his second Emmy Award for an episode of
Showtime's Picture Windows entitled “Language of the Heart”, a love
story about a street musician and an aspiring ballerina. The composer's score
so impressed director Jonathan Kaplan that Kaplan hired him to write the music
for CBS’s “In Cold Blood” starring Anthony Edwards and Eric Roberts.
The four-hour miniseries, based on the Truman Capote classic about
two young drifters and the murder of a Midwestern family, demanded an unorthodox
musical approach. Mann took the lyrics actually written by one of the killers
(an amateur songwriter) and set them to music; the songs thus became the heart
of the score, which was played by a handful of instruments including mandolin,
dobro and bottleneck blues guitar supported by electronic textures.
Kaplan says that Oscar-winning movie-music legend Jerry Goldsmith
recommended Mann as a composer with a strong sense of melody and a genuine
command of the orchestra. Adds Kaplan: "It's very rare that you can
find someone who is as gifted as Hummie is, and as motivated and easy to work
with."
In the world of Independent films, Mann scored “Falltime”
for first time director Paul Warner starring Mickey Rourke, Stephen Baldwin
and Sheryl Lee. That film premiered in competition at the Sundance Film Festival.
Mann has also scored films by two well-known screenwriters making their initial
forays into directing. He composed a contemporary jazz-rock score for the
coming-of-age story “Sticks & Stones” by Neil Tolkin, and also
scored the short film “The Red Coat” for Little Women writer Robin
Swicord.
Twice Mann has collaborated with legendary
comedy director Mel Brooks. His first Brooks score was for “Robin Hood:
Men in Tights”, which NBC-TV critic Gene Shalit singled out for praise,
likening it to the legendary Erich Wolfgang Korngold's scores for the classic
swashbucklers of the '30s and '40s. He also scored Brooks' next film- “Dracula:
Dead & Loving It” which starred Leslie Nielsen.
The grand-scale symphonic
music for Brooks' two film parodies contrasts sharply with Mann's acoustic-guitar-based
score for the Donald Sutherland-Amy Irving thriller “Benefit of the Doubt”,
and the soaring, charming music for Peter Yates' “Year of the Comet”,
which combined orchestral sounds with Scottish ethnic elements. Yates, the
director of Bullitt and The Deep, found "a freshness and energy"
in Mann's music for “Year of the Comet”. The periodical ‘Film Score
Monthly‘ named this score as one of the “Ten Most Underrated Scores of the
Decade” and it was nominated in the category of Best Score – Drama or Romantic
Drama in the 1992 UK Moviemusic Awards.
Among Mann's most provocative
projects have been two series for Showtime: “Picture Windows”, which
Norman Jewison executive-produced and which enabled the composer to collaborate
with Jewison, Kaplan, Dante and Bob Rafelson; and “Rebel Highway”,
a series of drive-in-movie remakes by Kaplan, Friedkin, Milius, Dante, Ralph
Bakshi, John McNaughton, Mary Lambert and Uli Edel. Mann also composed the
main title theme music for both series.
Mann co-produced the Marc Shaiman scores
for such hits as “Sleepless in Seattle”, “A Few Good Men” and
“Mr. Saturday Night”, and both orchestrated and conducted the Shaiman
scores for “City Slickers” and “The Addams Family”. His orchestrations
can also heard in such films as “Speechless”, “Addams Family Values”,
“Misery”, “Sister Act”, “Dying Young”, and “For the
Boys” and he co-arranged the song “Places That Belong to You” for
Barbra Streisand's best-selling “Prince of Tides” soundtrack album.
He also composed the Carl Stalling-style underscore for “Box Office Bunny”,
the first theatrical Bugs Bunny cartoon released in 26 years.
In television, Mann composed the main
title theme and underscore for Rob Reiner's cult series “Morton & Hayes”.
He received two Emmy nominations for his arrangements on the popular “Moonlighting”
series, and received an Emmy Award for arranging Billy Crystal's opening number
for the “1992 Academy Awards” telecast.
For the legit theater, Mann arranged new material for Debbie Reynolds'
tour of “The Unsinkable Molly Brown”. He created new arrangements
for Pia Zadora in the Long Beach Civic Light Opera's production of “Funny
Girl”, and has arranged music for several other Southern California stage productions including “Babes in Toyland”,
“Kiss Me Kate”, “The Merry Widow” and Cloris Leachman's “Perfectly
Frank”. His original children’s theater musical adaptation of Prokofiev’s
“Peter and the Wolf” premiered at the Seattle Children’s Theater in
2006 for an extremely successful run of over 110 performances. In 2007 it
will be playing at Childsplay in Arizona
and the Des Moines Playhouse in Iowa.
Born in Montreal, Mann began studying music at the age of seven.
He learned to play not only the piano, but also recorder, guitar, clarinet
and oboe. He graduated magna cum laude in 1976 from Boston's prestigious Berklee
College of Music and moved in 1980 to Los Angeles, where he
began orchestrating and composing for such top-rated series as “Fame”,
“Moonlighting”, “Knots Landing”, “ALF” and “The Simpsons”.
In early 1998 Berklee Faculty member and world renowned vibraphonist Gary
Burton presented Mann with Berklee’s Distinguished Alumnus Award.
Besides his busy composing career, Mann
is also the principal instructor of the Pacific Northwest Film Scoring Program
and a guest lecturer at Napier
University in Scotland as well as Artlab in Copenhagen,
Denmark. He has twice visited China
as a guest artist of the Chinese government meeting with students, film makers
and composers. He is a board member and founding president of the Seattle
Composers Alliance and a governor of the Northwest Chapter of the National
Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.
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