Edward Ward (composer)
Encyclopedia
Edward Ward was a film composer
Film score
A film score is original music written specifically to accompany a film, forming part of the film's soundtrack, which also usually includes dialogue and sound effects...

 and music director
Music director
A music director may be the director of an orchestra, the director of music for a film, the director of music at a radio station, the head of the music department in a school, the co-ordinator of the musical ensembles in a university or college , the head bandmaster of a military band, the head...

 who was nominated for seven Academy Awards during a career that spanned thirty-seven years and included more than 150 projects.

Academy Award nominations

  • 1939 Best Original Song for "Always and Always" from Mannequin
    Mannequin (1937 film)
    Mannequin is 1937 film directed by Frank Borzage, and starring Joan Crawford, Spencer Tracy and Alan Curtis. In the film, Crawford plays Jessie, a young working class woman who seeks to improve her life by marrying her boyfriend, only to find out that he is no better than what she left behind...

  • 1942 Best Scoring of a Dramatic Picture (Cheers for Miss Bishop
    Cheers for Miss Bishop
    Cheers for Miss Bishop is a film based on the novel Miss Bishop by Bess Streeter Aldrich. It was directed by Tay Garnett and stars Martha Scott in the title role. The other cast members include William Gargan, Edmund Gwenn, Sterling Holloway, Dorothy Peterson, Marsha Hunt, Don Douglas, and Sidney...

    )
  • 1942 Best Scoring of a Dramatic Picture (Tanks a Million)
  • 1942 Best Scoring of a Musical Picture (All-American Co-Ed)
  • 1943 Best Original Song for "Pennies for Peppino" from Flying with Music
  • 1943 Best Scoring of a Musical Picture (Flying with Music)
  • 1944 Best Scoring of a Musical Picture (Phantom of the Opera
    Phantom of the Opera (1943 film)
    Phantom of the Opera is a 1943 Universal horror film starring Nelson Eddy, Susanna Foster and Claude Rains, directed by Arthur Lubin, and filmed in Technicolor. The original music score was composed by Edward Ward....

    )

Additional credits

  • No No Nanette
    No No Nanette (1930 film)
    No, No, Nanette is a musical comedy film with Technicolor sequences. It was adapted from the play of the same title by Otto A. Harbach and Frank Mandel...

    (1930)
  • Kismet
    Kismet (1930 film)
    Kismet was a 1930 costume drama photographed entirely in an early widescreen process using 65mm film that Warner Bros. called Vitascope. The film was based on Edward Knoblock's play Kismet, and was previously filmed as a silent film in 1920 which also starred Otis Skinner.-Production:Warner Bros....

    (1930)
  • Great Expectations
    Great Expectations (1934 film)
    Great Expectations is a 1934 adaptation of the Charles Dickens novel of the same name. Filmed with mostly American actors, it was the first sound version of the novel and was produced in Hollywood by Universal Studios and directed by Stuart Walker. It stars Phillips Holmes as Pip, Jane Wyatt as...

    (1934)
  • The Mystery of Edwin Drood
    The Mystery of Edwin Drood (1935 film)
    The Mystery of Edwin Drood was the third film adaptation and first sound film version of Charles Dickens's unfinished novel of the same name. It starred Claude Rains in the role of the villainous John Jasper...

    (1935)
  • San Francisco
    San Francisco (film)
    San Francisco is a 1936 musical-drama directed by Woody Van Dyke, based on the April 18, 1906 San Francisco earthquake. The film, which was the top grossing movie of that year, stars Clark Gable, Jeanette MacDonald, and Spencer Tracy. The then very popular singing of MacDonald helped make this film...

    (1936)
  • Camille
    Camille (1936 film)
    Camille is an American romantic drama film directed by George Cukor and produced by Irving Thalberg and Bernard H. Hyman, from a screenplay by James Hilton, Zoe Akins and Frances Marion. The picture is based on the 1852 novel and play La Dame aux Camélias by Alexandre Dumas, fils...

    (1936)
  • The Gorgeous Hussy
    The Gorgeous Hussy
    The Gorgeous Hussy is a 1936 film directed by Clarence Brown, and starring Joan Crawford and Robert Taylor. The film's plot tells a fictionalized account of President of the United States Andrew Jackson and an innkeeper's daughter...

    (1936)
  • Night Must Fall
    Night Must Fall (1937 film)
    Night Must Fall is a 1937 film adaptation of the Emlyn Williams play of the same name. It was directed by Richard Thorpe and adapted by John Van Druten. It stars Robert Montgomery, Rosalind Russell, and Dame May Whitty...

    (1937)
  • Maytime (1937)
  • Saratoga
    Saratoga (film)
    Saratoga is a 1937 film written by Anita Loos and directed by Jack Conway. The movie stars Clark Gable and Jean Harlow in their sixth and final film collaboration....

    (1937)
  • A Yank at Oxford
    A Yank at Oxford
    A Yank at Oxford is a 1938 British film, directed by Jack Conway from a screenplay by John Monk Saunders and Leon Gordon. It was produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios...

    (1938)
  • The Shopworn Angel
    The Shopworn Angel
    The Shopworn Angel is a 1938 American drama film directed by H.C. Potter. The MGM release featured the second screen pairing of Margaret Sullavan and James Stewart following their successful teaming in the Universal Pictures production Next Time We Love two years earlier...

    (1938)
  • Boys Town (1938)
  • The Women
    The Women (1939 film)
    The Women is a 1939 American comedy-drama film directed by George Cukor. The film is based on Clare Boothe Luce's play of the same name, and was adapted for the screen by Anita Loos and Jane Murfin, who had to make the film acceptable for the Production Code in order for it to be released.The film...

    (1939)
  • The Babe Ruth Story
    The Babe Ruth Story
    The Babe Ruth Story is a 1948 baseball film biography of Babe Ruth, the famed New York Yankees slugger. It stars William Bendix as the ballplayer and Claire Trevor as his wife. It was rush released while Ruth himself was still alive. It makes no mention whatsoever of Ruth's first wife,...

    (1948)
  • Man of a Thousand Faces
    Man of a Thousand Faces
    Man of a Thousand Faces is a film detailing the life of silent movie actor Lon Chaney, in which the title role is played by James Cagney.Directed by Joseph Pevney, the film's cast included Dorothy Malone, Jane Greer and Jim Backus...

    (1957)

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK