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Leo Erdody

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Birth name
  
Leo Erdody

Genres
  
Film score

Role
  
Film composer

Name
  
Leo Erdody


Born
  
December 17, 1888 Chicago, United States (
1888-12-17
)

Died
  
April 5, 1949, Los Angeles, California, United States

Nominations
  
Academy Award for Best Original Musical

Music director
  
Detour, Girls in Chains, Money Madness, Dead Men Walk, White Pongo

Similar People
  
Edgar G Ulmer, Sam Newfield, Ferde Grofe, Joseph H Lewis, William Lava

Occupation(s)
  
Composer, conductor

Lydia Thompson Rare Photosets * Music by Leo Erdody * Albert Garzon (piano)


Leo Erdody (December 17, 1888 – April 5, 1949) was an American film composer of Hungarian descent. He studied music in Germany, and later went to Hollywood, scoring his first film in 1921. He later joined Producers Releasing Corporation and scored several films for them. For his work on Minstrel Man, he was a nominee for an Academy Award for Best Original Score.

Contents

Early life and career

Erdody was born in Chicago on December 17, 1888. His father was a conductor in Hungary. It was possible that Leo had noble ancestry, which is why he occasionally billed himself solely by his surname. Erdody studied in Berlin under teachers including Joseph Joachim and Max Bruch. He worked in Europe for an early part of his career, but soon returned to the United States.

Erdody's first work as composer was the 1928 film Lilac Time. In 1941, he scored the film Under Fiesta Stars. He joined Producers Releasing Corporation in 1942 and scored several films for them, creating music for Tomorrow We Live, Overland Stagecoach, Queen of Broadway, Hitler – Dead or Alive, and Baby Face Morgan that year. In 1943, he scored several films including Jive Junction, Western Cyclone, Wild Horse Rustlers, and Isle of Forgotten Sins.

Erdody had a noted collaboration with director Edgar G. Ulmer, with Erdody scoring several of Ulmer's films, including Bluebeard, Strange Illusion, and Detour. In 1944, Erdody, along with composer Ferde Grofé, received Academy Award for Best Original Score nominations for their work on Minstrel Man. He continued scoring films for another four years. His final film was the Sam Newfield-directed Miraculous Journey.

Death

Erdody died of arteriosclerosis in 1949, in Los Angeles. His death was noted to have occurred "very suddenly". It was noted that Erdody's death was a "tragedy" for Edgar G. Ulmer and that Ulmer "didn't really get over it ever."

Selected filmography

  • Gas House Kids (1946)
  • Dead Men Walk (1943)
  • References

    Leo Erdody Wikipedia