Ray Heindorf
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ray Heindorf (August 25, 1908 – February 3, 1980) was an American songwriter, composer, conductor, and arranger.
Born in Haverstraw, New York, Heindorf worked as a pianist in a movie house in Mechanicville in his early teens. In 1928, he moved to New York City, where he worked as a musical arranger before heading to Hollywood. He gained his first job as an orchestrator at MGM, where he worked on Hollywood Revue of 1929, and subsequently went on the road playing piano for Lupe Vélez.
After completing this engagement, he joined Warner Bros., composing and/or arranging and conducting music exclusively for the studio for nearly forty years. Heindorf, along with Georgie Stoll at MGM, were jazz aficionados well known in the black entertainment community for employing minority musicians in their studio music departments.
He undertook the musical direction of Judy Garland's comeback film A Star is Born (1954) and made a cameo appearance as himself in the premiere party sequence where Jack Carson's character congratulates him on a great score.
Among Heindorf's other screen credits are 42nd Street, Gold Diggers of 1935, The Great Lie, Knute Rockne All American, Kings Row, Night and Day, Tea for Two, A Streetcar Named Desire, The Jazz Singer, No Time for Sergeants, The Helen Morgan Story, Marjorie Morningstar, Damn Yankees, Auntie Mame, Finian's Rainbow, and his final musical for Jack L. Warner, 1776.
Between 1943 and 1969 he was nominated for eighteen Academy Awards, 17 nominations for Best Score and 1 nomination for Best Song. Heindorf won three, in the category of Best Score of a Musical, for Yankee Doodle Dandy, This is the Army, and The Music Man. His wins for the former two films made him the first to accomplish consecutive wins in a musical category.
Heindorf died in Tarzana, California, aged 71, and reputedly was buried with his favorite conducting baton.
Acting (4 movies)
| Title | Year | Job | 
|---|---|---|
| Crooner | 1932 | Original Music Composer | 
| Big City Blues | 1932 | Original Music Composer | 
| Desirable | 1934 | Original Music Composer | 
| A Lost Lady | 1934 | Original Music Composer | 
| Murder in the Clouds | 1934 | Original Music Composer | 
| Dangerous | 1935 | Original Music Composer | 
| Gold Diggers in Paris | 1938 | Original Music Composer | 
| The Roaring Twenties | 1939 | Original Music Composer | 
| Yankee Doodle Dandy | 1942 | Original Music Composer | 
| Rhapsody in Blue | 1945 | Original Music Composer | 
| My Wild Irish Rose | 1947 | Original Music Composer | 
| April Showers | 1948 | Original Music Composer | 
| It's a Great Feeling | 1949 | Original Music Composer | 
| The West Point Story | 1950 | Original Music Composer | 
| Come Fill the Cup | 1951 | Original Music Composer | 
| Three Sailors and a Girl | 1953 | Original Music Composer | 
| A Star Is Born | 1954 | Original Music Composer | 
| Young at Heart | 1954 | Original Music Composer | 
| Pete Kelly's Blues | 1955 | Original Music Composer | 
| Sincerely Yours | 1955 | Original Music Composer | 
| Serenade | 1956 | Original Music Composer | 
| The Helen Morgan Story | 1957 | Original Music Composer | 
| -30- | 1959 | Original Music Composer | 
| Finian's Rainbow | 1968 | Original Music Composer | 
| O'Hara, United States Treasury: Operation Cobra | 1971 | Original Music Composer | 



