Alexander Courage - Career

Career

Courage began as an orchestrator/arranger at MGM studios, which included work in such films as the 1951 Show Boat ("Life Upon the Wicked Stage" number), The Band Wagon ("I Guess I'll Have to Change My Plan"), Gigi (the can-can for the entrance of patrons at Maxim's), and the barn-raising dance from Seven Brides for Seven Brothers.

He frequently served as an orchestrator on films scored by André Previn (My Fair Lady, the "The Circus is a Wacky World", and "You're Gonna Hear from Me" production numbers for Inside Daisy Clover), Adolph Deutsch (Funny Face, Some Like It Hot), John Williams (The Poseidon Adventure, Superman, Jurassic Park, and the Academy Award-nominated musical films Fiddler on the Roof and Tom Sawyer), and Jerry Goldsmith (Rudy, Mulan, The Mummy, et al.). Courage succeeded Arthur Morton as primary orchestrator for Goldsmith in the 1990s. Ironically, with Star Trek: The Motion Picture he was orchestrating Goldsmith's adaptation of his own original theme. In fact, Courage was hired by Gene Roddenberry to score the original Star Trek TV show at Jerry Goldsmith's suggestion, after the latter turned the job down.

Apart from his work as a respected orchestrator, Courage also contributed original dramatic scores to films, including two 1950s westerns, Arthur Penn's The Left Handed Gun and André de Toth's Day of the Outlaw. He continued writing music for movies throughout the late 1980s and 1990s, including the score for Superman IV: The Quest for Peace which incorporated three new musical themes by John Williams, in addition to Courage's adapted and original cues for the film. Courage's score for Superman IV: The Quest for Peace was released on CD in early 2008 by the Film Music Monthly company as part of its boxed set Superman - The Music.

Courage is probably best known for writing the theme music for Star Trek, and some other music for the series, but he also worked as a composer on such TV shows as Daniel Boone, The Brothers Brannagan, Lost in Space, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, Judd, for the Defense (this was the only TV series besides Star Trek for which he composed the main theme), and Daniel Boone.

Courage reportedly became alienated from Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry over the latter's claim for half of the music royalties. (Roddenberry wrote words for Courage's Star Trek theme song, not because he expected the lyrics to be sung on TV, but so that by claiming credit as the song's co-writer, Roddenberry could receive half of the royalties from the song.)

The composer Jerry Goldsmith and Courage teamed on the long-running TV show The Waltons in which Goldsmith composed the theme and Courage the Aaron Copland-influenced incidental music. In 1988 Courage won an Emmy Award for his music direction on the special Julie Andrews: The Sound of Christmas.

Courage frequently collaborated with John Williams during the latter's tenure with the Boston Pops Orchestra.

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