Five-time Academy Award-winning composer John Williams, the man
without whom Superman would have been average, the lost Ark would have
stayed lost and Darth Vader would have been a guy in black longjohns who
couldn't catch his breath, turns 80 years old today.
Not
only did Williams compose the music for some of the most iconic
blockbusters of movie history -- in addition to Superman, Raiders
of the Lost Ark and Star Wars as mentioned above he scored
several Harry Potter movies, Jaws, Close Encounters of the
Third Kind and E.T. -- he also wrote for some of the most
important movies of the late 20th and early 21st centuries such as
Schindler's List, created the theme music for four separate Olympic
games, conducted the Boston Pops Orchestra for 13 years and wrote
concertos for clarinet and cello which were performed by world-famous
artists of both instruments such as Yo-Yo Ma.
You could
make a good argument that Williams' music went a long way in helping
the Star Wars movies succeed. Harrison Ford, Alec Guiness and
James Earl Jones aside, the original trilogy was not blessed by great
actors in its leading roles (I've heard some people say that the acting
talent displayed by Anakin Skywalker portrayer Hayden Christiansen is
the most convincing proof imaginable that he is the father of Luke
Skywalker, played with equal skill by Mark Hamill). Nor did George "Hold
me, Ani" Lucas give them the greatest words to say.
But
surrounded by and supported by Williams' evocative and brilliant music,
they managed to carry us a long time ago to a galaxy far away. Watch the
Return of the Jedi scene where Darth Vader finally passes,
finally seeing his son "through (his) own eyes." Hamill's blank-faced
mooning doesn't sadden us at that death, but the bare piano chords of The
Imperial March in the front over the muted sounds of a collapsing
Death Star do. Hayden Christiansen's leaden attempts at fury over his
mother's death in Revenge of the Sith are more pitiful than
enraged, but as that same Imperial March begins to creep forward
into the Anakin's Theme Williams composed first for The
Phantom Menace we can believe we're watching the Dark Side start to
lay its claim on Anakin's soul.
Well, that may be more
analysis than a couple of blockbuster popcorn flicks need, so let's just
close by wishing the astounding Mr. Williams a happy 80th and prepare
to sing "Happy Birthday to You."
Accompanied by a
100-piece orchestra, of course.
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