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 Posted:   Nov 26, 2022 - 6:43 PM   
 By:   filmusicnow   (Member)

When the San Francisco Examiner did a special on famous San Franciscans for the newspaper’s 100th anniversary, they didn’t even mention Friedhofer.

 
 Posted:   Nov 27, 2022 - 3:30 AM   
 By:   Sehnsuchtshafen   (Member)

When the San Francisco Examiner did a special on famous San Franciscans for the newspaper’s 100th anniversary, they didn’t even mention Friedhofer.


Does this surprise you? Hugo was not a 'famous' man in a general sense. Not even among film music afficinados today.

 
 Posted:   Nov 27, 2022 - 3:45 AM   
 By:   Sehnsuchtshafen   (Member)

Thank you all for your interest in Hugo Friedhofer and the information shared. I have collected a good deal of biographical information about my cousin and am willing to share what I have. Any information that might come my way also would be greatly appreciated.

You might be interested to know that since your cousin was from San Francisco, "In Love And War" had another San Franciscan who starred in the film: Bradford Dillman.


Hugo indeed had deep San Francisco roots. His grandfather Paul and great uncle August came out in a covered wagon in the 1850's. Hugo was born before the Great Earthquake but missed it because his mother Eva had taken him to Germany on an extended trip.



Thanks, Jim, for sharing some biographical trivia on your distant cousin Hugo Friedhofer. I often wondered if he spoke any German or was fluent in it. Could he speak it or even write it? I guess he must have learnt the language at some point through his parents when he was a child.

I've discovered his music when I bought the new recording of The Best Years Of Our Lives as an LP with that large booklet containing all those interesting notes as well as a single with a spoken tribute (read by Richard Hatch) to Hugo on the A side and the Homecoming excerpt from the original film sound track on the B side. It was obvious to me then that he was a film composer of great significance even though he wasn't as 'famous' as Bernard Bernard Herrmann, Max Steiner, Dimitri Tiomkin or a John Williams. But it took a few more years to watch any of his films he scored. Before that LP purchase I've seen This Land Is Mine and One Eyed Jacks on TV, maybe some others as well, but the music didn't registered back then. I've played that LP to a then friend who was quite snobbish against film music. But this one recording he did like, praising the great quality of the music on it.

Did Hugo have any children? I believe he was married, wasn't he?

 
 Posted:   Nov 27, 2022 - 3:47 AM   
 By:   Nicolai P. Zwar   (Member)

When the San Francisco Examiner did a special on famous San Franciscans for the newspaper’s 100th anniversary, they didn’t even mention Friedhofer.


Does this surprise you? Hugo was not a 'famous' man in a general sense. Not even among film music afficinados today.





Yes, while Friedhofer is a well respected composer within the field of colleagues and fans, he is not much of a name known outside the film score community, not like Rozsa, Herrmann, or Tiomkin.

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 27, 2022 - 2:25 PM   
 By:   filmusicnow   (Member)

When the San Francisco Examiner did a special on famous San Franciscans for the newspaper’s 100th anniversary, they didn’t even mention Friedhofer.


Does this surprise you? Hugo was not a 'famous' man in a general sense. Not even among film music afficinados today.


Despite being one of three native born San Franciscans to win an Oscar (after Hal Mohr and before Clint Eastwood)?

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 27, 2022 - 2:25 PM   
 By:   filmusicnow   (Member)

When the San Francisco Examiner did a special on famous San Franciscans for the newspaper’s 100th anniversary, they didn’t even mention Friedhofer.


Does this surprise you? Hugo was not a 'famous' man in a general sense. Not even among film music afficinados today.


And Friedhofer even scored an episode of "Rawhide"'s eighth and final season when Clint Eastwood took ever ("Six Weeks At Bent Fork", conducted by C.B.S.' newly appointed West Coast Musical Director Morton Stevens), which was included on that C.B.S. episode Western scores compilation released by the Film Music Society.

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 28, 2022 - 12:27 PM   
 By:   Howard L   (Member)

Second cousin twice-removed! I'm one of the last three Friedhofers (direct male descendants) of our common ancestor Johann Gottfried Friedhofer who arrived in the US from Baden-Württemberg in 1851. I never met Hugo because he died in 1981 a month before I graduated HS. I had hoped to visit him after I got my music degree but fate intervened. I have had the privilege of talking with a few who knew him. Though I did not make music my profesison after getting my degree, I still compose for my own enjoyment and sing in a major symphony chorus. I am so pleased that so many still remember and appreciate Hugo.

Hey JF, this one's for you--

https://www.filmscoremonthly.com/board/posts.cfm?threadID=1715&forumID=1&archive=1

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 28, 2022 - 1:21 PM   
 By:   Rollin Hand   (Member)

Friedhofer wrote only one score for The FBI: The Traitor (season 6).

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 28, 2022 - 1:27 PM   
 By:   Rollin Hand   (Member)


He was very good during the first season of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea.
“The Fear-Makers” (1964)
“The Mist of Silence” (1964)
“The Price of Doom” (1964)
“Turn Back the Clock” (1964)

 
 Posted:   Nov 28, 2022 - 1:53 PM   
 By:   Justin Boggan   (Member)

Friedhofer wrote only one score for The FBI: The Traitor (season 6).

The IMDb credits may still be incomplete. I went through the first two or four seasons a few months ago, and added some missing composer credits myself.

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 28, 2022 - 1:57 PM   
 By:   Steve Vertlieb   (Member)

I've read with interest some of the recent discussions and threads concerning the measure of Hugo Friedhofer's importance as a composer, and it set my memory sailing back to another time in a musical galaxy long ago and far away. I have always considered Maestro Friedhofer among the most important, if underrated, composers of Hollywood's golden era. His contributions to this lyrical art form have placed him high above most contemporary artists and musicians in my estimation and he will, perhaps,live on as one of the unsung immortals of film scoring.

I recall conversations with Miklos Rozsa regarding Friedhofer's contribution to motion picture music forty five years ago. Rozsa found Hugo Friedhofer an enormously gifted composer who had contributed more to the world of music than he would ever know. Indeed, Friedhofer's assessment of his own accomplishments was, to put it bluntly, derogatory and self punishing. Whenever the two spoke on the matter, Friedhofer would ridicule his own achievements and describe his career as miniscule and inadequate.

Friedhofer,as Rozsa discovered,lambasted the studio system and ridiculed his own significance within the industry. He had serious issues concerning his own self worth, and grew increasingly morose and cynical. He turned ever frequently to alcohol as a temporary cure for his depression and, during these bouts with feelings of inadequacy, became sadly impossible to reach. Rozsa told me that he had often tried to bolster Friedhofer's sense of worth by commiserating with him, and reminding him of his many successes but that Friedhofer simply refused to accept his value and importance as an artist. Finally, it grew too painful to broach the subject. If Friedhofer felt more comfortable in his escalating self flagellation, there was little that Rozsa could do to lift him out of it. He couldn't allow his own positive attitude to be pulled down by someone who could only continue to wallow in self pity and emotional suicide.

A year later, I decided to try to track Friedhofer down and attempt to repay the gift of beauty he had bestowed upon my life. I found his address and wrote him a long, loving letter of genuine admiration for his work and artistry. In late February, 1980, I received a reply written on an old, rickety typewriter. The page appeared stained with tears. The letter remains one of the most treasured pieces of correspondence that I've ever received. If I may, I'd like to share it with you.


2/28/1980

My Dear Steve Vertlieb:-

Thanks no end for your generous letter as well as for your review of 'The Best Years' album (plus mini-biography, in the #2 issue of Cinemacabre') and I must beg your forgiveness for my seemingly laggard response. Fact is, I am just now recovering from a series of tiresome ailments which have kept me under wraps and out of circulation for the past two years. Now that I'm feeling somewhat better I find myself confronted by an accumulation of unanswered correspondence which simply must be attended to,-hence the relative brevity of this rejoinder.....

Your words about my being 'an authentic original in a world of smugly defiant carbon copies' I find highly reassuring. Something over a half-century of involvement with films and film music tends to breed considerable uncertainty, particularly since that involvement has always been born of economic necessity;not aesthetic conviction. Consequently, the fact that you have singled out a number of my scores as being perhaps something more than merely expensive background noise is, to say the least, heartening; that I've perhaps not sold myself down the river. At least not entirely. The fact that the score for 'The Barbarian and the Geisha',- a far from box-office stand-out, got across to you as having not inconsiderable merit in its own right did much to dispel my doubt as to whether anyone actually listens to film music. Evidently you do, and for this assurance I am immeasurably grateful.


Yours, with warmest good wishes,-



Hugo Friedhofer


The last time Miklos Rozsa had seen Hugo Friedhofer was in a small restaurant in Hollywood. Friedhofer was seated, alone, at a table in a darkened corner of the room. His head was bowed and resting within his arms. Before him was a drink, half consumed. As Friedhofer weakly lifted his head from the table, he saw Rozsa walking in. Rozsa waved. Friedhofer managed merely a feeble attempt at raising his own arm in response.

I think of the Oscar winning triumph and majestic beauty of his music for William Wyler's The Best Years of Our Lives. I hear the exquisite strains of his love themes for The Barbarian and the Geisha and Soldier of Fortune. I experience the rapturous joy of listening to his music for Boy On A Dolphin, and I am moved to tears by the gentle expression of a man's inner depth and creativity. Would that HE might have seen the value and importance of his contribution to this wondrous and magical art form while he lived.

A little more than a year after I received his letter, Hugh Friedhofer suffered complications from a fall and passed away. His incomparable gift to the world of film and film music will, I believe, endure and flourish for many joyous years to come.


Steve Vertlieb

 
 Posted:   Nov 28, 2022 - 2:07 PM   
 By:   Nicolai P. Zwar   (Member)

Wow, thanks for sharing this, Steve.

 
 Posted:   Nov 28, 2022 - 2:14 PM   
 By:   Justin Boggan   (Member)

Posts like Steve's above, are one of the things that makes this place worth coming to.

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 28, 2022 - 2:42 PM   
 By:   filmusicnow   (Member)

Friedhofer wrote only one score for The FBI: The Traitor (season 6).

The IMDb credits may still be incomplete. I went through the first two or four seasons a few months ago, and added some missing composer credits myself.


Hey Justin, did Friedhofer ever score an episode of "Wagon Train"? I keep thinking he did, but can't seem to find it on I.D.M.B..

 
 Posted:   Nov 28, 2022 - 2:46 PM   
 By:   Justin Boggan   (Member)

No, he didn't. That's one of the shows I covered:
https://www.filmscoremonthly.com/board/posts.cfm?threadID=138522&forumID=1&archive=0

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 28, 2022 - 5:18 PM   
 By:   Howard L   (Member)

Posts like Steve's above, are one of the things that makes this place worth coming to.

Amen. Keep ‘em coming Steverino!

 
 Posted:   Nov 29, 2022 - 1:29 AM   
 By:   Nicolai P. Zwar   (Member)

I'm wondering... has there ever been a new recording of an older Hugo Friedhofer score? Composers like North, Herrmann, Rózsa, Tiomkin etc. all had new recordings of various scores, but has anyone ever recorded a Friedhofer film score anew?

I remember there was a Marco Polo recording (re-issued on Naxos) conducted by William Stromberg with (extended) suites of THE ADVENTURES OF MARCO POLO etc...

 
 Posted:   Nov 29, 2022 - 3:00 AM   
 By:   Amer Zahid   (Member)

I'm wondering... has there ever been a new recording of an older Hugo Friedhofer score? Composers like North, Herrmann, Rózsa, Tiomkin etc. all had new recordings of various scores, but has anyone ever recorded a Friedhofer film score anew?

I remember there was a Marco Polo recording (re-issued on Naxos) conducted by William Stromberg with (extended) suites of THE ADVENTURES OF MARCO POLO etc...


Yes, I believe this came out on Marco Polo re-recording as well as a splendid 2CD Set from Krizterland featuring the original recordings and only recently acquired a sealed copy of it much to my delight. Im big fan of his RANCHIPUR score!



Kritzerland is proud to present a new limited edition soundtrack – three great scores on one 2-CD set at a 1-CD price:
THE RAINS OF RANCHIPUR/SEVEN CITIES OF GOLD/THE BLUE ANGEL

http://www.kritzerland.com/ranchipur.htm



Dear Steve: That was a lovely tribute to Friedhofer and thank you for sharing the intmacy of that letter. What a profound treasure it is for you! Good to hear from you here!

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 29, 2022 - 5:07 AM   
 By:   TerraEpon   (Member)

I'm wondering... has there ever been a new recording of an older Hugo Friedhofer score? ..

Best Years of Our Lives got one, of course.

 
 Posted:   Nov 29, 2022 - 6:11 AM   
 By:   Yavar Moradi   (Member)

Yup, that was the first! I think the Morgan/Stromberg disc with four suites is the only other one, and apparently it sold quite poorly. frown

I still think Joan of Arc might have decent sales potential…

Yavar

 
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