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Biography
One of the most popular and successful American
orchestral composers of the modern age, John
Williams is the winner of five Academy Awards, 17
Grammys, three Golden Globes, two Emmys and five
BAFTA Awards from the British Academy of Film and
Television Arts. Best known for his film scores
and ceremonial music, Williams is also a noted
composer of concert works and a renowned
conductor.
Williams’ scores for such films as Jaws,
E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, Schindler's
List, as well as the Indiana Jones
series, have won him multiple awards and produced
best-selling recordings, and his scores for the
original Star Wars trilogy transformed the
landscape of Hollywood film music and became icons
of American culture.
Williams has composed the music and served as
music director for nearly eighty films, including Saving
Private Ryan, Amistad, Seven Years
in Tibet, The Lost World, Rosewood,
Sleepers, Nixon, Sabrina, Schindler's
List, Jurassic Park, Home Alone,
Far and Away, JFK, Hook, Presumed
Innocent, Always, Born on the Fourth
of July, the Indiana Jones trilogy, The
Accidental Tourist, Empire of the Sun, The
Witches of Eastwick, the Star Wars
trilogy, E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, The
Empire Strikes Back, Superman, Close
Encounters of the Third Kind, Jaws and Goodbye
Mr. Chips.
Williams has been awarded several gold and
platinum records, and his score for Schindler's
List earned him both an Oscar and a Grammy. In
2000, at the ShoWest Convention USA, he was
honored as Maestro of the Year by the National
Association of Theater Owners.
John Williams was born in New York and moved to
Los Angeles with his family in 1948. There he
attended UCLA and studied composition privately
with Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco. After service in
the Air Force, Mr. Williams returned to New York
to attend the Juilliard School, where he studied
piano with Madame Rosina Lhevinne. While in New
York, he also worked as a jazz pianist, both in
clubs and on recordings. He then returned to Los
Angeles, where he began his career in the film
industry, working with such composers as Bernard
Herrmann, Alfred Newman, and Franz Waxman. He went
on to write music for many television programs in
the 1960s, winning two Emmy Awards for his work.
In January 1980, Williams was named nineteenth
Conductor of the Boston Pops Orchestra since its
founding in 1885. He assumed the title of Boston
Pops Laureate Conductor, following his retirement
in December 1993, and currently holds the title of
Artist-in-Residence at Tanglewood.
Williams has written many concert pieces,
including a symphony, a sinfonietta for wind
ensemble, a cello concerto premiered by Yo-Yo Ma
and the Boston Symphony Orchestra at Tanglewood in
1994, concertos for the flute and violin recorded
by the London Symphony Orchestra, concertos for
the clarinet and tuba, and a trumpet concerto,
which was premiered by the Cleveland Orchestra and
their principal trumpet Michael Sachs in September
1996. His bassoon concerto, The Five Sacred
Trees, which was premiered by the New York
Philharmonic and principal bassoon player Judith
LeClair in 1995, was recorded for Sony Classical
by Williams with LeClair and the London Symphony.
In addition, Mr. Williams has composed the
well-known NBC News theme "The Mission,"
"Liberty Fanfare" composed for the
re-dedication of the Statue of Liberty,
"We're Lookin' Good!," composed for the
Special Olympics in celebration of the 1987
International Summer Games, and themes for the
1984, 1988, and 1996 Summer Olympic games. His
most recent concert work Seven for Luck –
for soprano and orchestra – is a seven-piece
song cycle based on the texts of former U.S. Poet
Laureate Rita Dove. Seven for Luck was
given its world premiere by the Boston Symphony
under Mr. Williams with soprano Cynthia Haymon.
John Williams has led the Boston Pops Esplanade
Orchestra on United States Tours in 1985, 1989 and
1992 and on a tour of Japan in 1987. He led the
Boston Pops Orchestra on tours of Japan in 1990
and 1993. In addition to leading the Boston
Symphony Orchestra at Symphony Hall and at
Tanglewood, Williams has appeared as guest
conductor with a number of major orchestras,
including the London Symphony, the Cleveland
Orchestra, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Chicago
Symphony, the Pittsburgh Symphony, the Dallas
Symphony, the San Francisco Symphony and the Los
Angeles Philharmonic. Williams holds honorary
degrees from fourteen American universities,
including Berklee College of Music in Boston,
Boston College, Northeastern University, Tufts
University, Boston University, the New England
Conservatory of Music and the University of
Massachusetts at Boston. On June 23, 2000, he
became the first inductee into the Hollywood Bowl
Hall of Fame
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