Philip Green (composer)
Philip Green (19 July 1911 – 6 October 1982), sometimes credited as Harry Philip Green, was a British film and television composer and conductor.
Philip Green | |
---|---|
Born | Harry Philip Green 19 July 1911 |
Died | 6 October 1982 71) | (aged
Early life
Green was born on 19 July 1911 in Whitechapel, London. His father was Philip Green, a boot clicker, and his mother was Elizabeth Vogel.[1]
Career
Green's first credited work was on 1943's The Sky's the Limit. He was a house arranger and conductor for Decca and accompanied many of their vocalists such as Gracie Fields, Donald Peers and Anne Shelton. He was later appointed resident musical director of the Rank Organisation.[2] He continued to compose and conduct for film and television until his retirement in 1966. Philip, along with his wife, Dorothy, established the Philip and Dorothy Green Music Trust to help young musicians and composers.
Works
He composed more than 150 film scores including The Yellow Balloon (1952), Carry on Admiral (1957), The Square Peg (1958, together with several other Norman Wisdom films), The League of Gentlemen (1960), Victim (1961), The Singer Not the Song (1961), and The Intelligence Men (1965). His themes for John and Julie (1954) and The March Hare (1956) both won Ivor Novello Awards.[2] He also composed the themes for the popular 1960s television crime series Ghost Squad and Sergeant Cork.
Like many composers of film music and light music, he also wrote prolifically for production music libraries and as a result, a number of his compositions are familiar through their use in film, radio and television programmes. Many of these works are now published by Carlin Production Music. His short composition "Horse Feathers" was used for the radio series Meet the Huggetts,[3] for example, and a number of his pieces were used in Night of the Living Dead, Looney Tunes theatrical shorts (such as in 1958 when the musicians were on strike, or later added as part of TV prints for Freudy Cat.)
Death
He died in 1982 of cerebral metastasis.[1][2] After his death, his stock music could again be heard in The Ren and Stimpy Show, The World's Greatest Magic and SpongeBob SquarePants.
Selected filmography
- Landfall (1949)
- The Yellow Balloon (1952)
- Conflict of Wings (1954)
- John and Julie (1954)
- Who Done It? (1956)
- The March Hare (1956)
- The Extra Day (1956)
- Carry on Admiral (1957)
- The Square Peg (1958)
- Operation Amsterdam (1959)
- Life in Emergency Ward 10 (1959)
- Sapphire (1959)
- Don't Panic Chaps! (1959)
- Upstairs and Downstairs (1959)
- Follow a Star (1959)
- Bobbikins (1959)
- The Shakedown (1959)
- Inn for Trouble (1960)
- And the Same to You (1960)
- Your Money or Your Wife (1960)
- The League of Gentlemen (1960)
- Piccadilly Third Stop (1960)
- Man in the Moon (1960)
- The Bulldog Breed (1960)
- The Singer Not the Song (1961)
- The Secret Partner (1961)
- Flame in the Streets (1961)
- Victim (1961)
- She'll Have to Go (1962)
- Tiara Tahiti (1962)
- The Devil's Agent (1962)
- On the Beat (1962)
- Two Left Feet (1963)
- The Girl Hunters (1963)
- The Man Who Finally Died (1963)
- A Stitch in Time (1963)
- The Intelligence Men (1965)
- Masquerade (1965)
- Joey Boy (1965)
References
- Philip Green on IMDb
- David Ades, Biography Archived 19 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine at the Robert Farnon Society, accessed 20 November 2010
- David Ades, Notes to The Great British Light Experience (EMI, 1997), p.9
External links
- Philip Green on IMDb
- Biography at the Robert Farnon Society