"Star Trek" Composer Dies At 88
Emmy-Winning Composer-Arranger Alexander Courage Was Veteran Of Television, Hollywood Musicals
Courage died May 15 at the Sunrise assisted-living facility in Pacific Palisades, his stepdaughter, Renata Pompelli of Los Angeles, said Thursday. He had been in ill health for three years.
Over a decades-long career, Courage collaborated on dozens of movies and orchestrated some of the greatest musicals of the 1950s and 1960s, including "My Fair Lady," "Hello, Dolly!" "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers," "Gigi," "Porgy and Bess" and "Fiddler on the Roof."
But it was the "Star Trek" theme he composed, arranged and conducted in a week in 1965 that is undoubtedly his most famous work.
"I have to confess to the world that I am not a science fiction fan," Courage said in an interview for the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Foundation's Archive of American Television in 2000. "Never have been. I think it's just marvelous malarkey. ... So you write some, you hope, marvelous malarkey music that goes with it."
Courage said the tune, with its ringing fanfare, eerie soprano part and swooping orchestration, was inspired by an arrangement of the song "Beyond the Blue Horizon" he heard as a youngster.
"Little did I know when I wrote that first A-flat for the flute that it was going to go down in history, somehow," Courage said. "It's a very strange feeling."
Courage said he also mouthed the "whooshing" sound heard as the starship Enterprise zooms through the opening credits of the TV show.
"Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry later wrote lyrics to the tune, which were never sung on the show but entitled him to half the royalties, Courage said.
Among the many other projects Courage worked on was the 1987 TV special "Julie Andrews: The Sound of Christmas," for which he won an Emmy for musical direction.
He and Lionel Newman shared Academy Award nominations for their adapted scores for 1964's "The Pleasure Seekers" and 1967's "Doctor Dolittle."
A friend and colleague of movie composers John Williams and Jerry Goldsmith, he also provided the orchestration for such movies as "The Poseidon Adventure," "Jurassic Park," "Basic Instinct" and "The Mummy" and supplied arrangements for the Boston Pops while Williams was conductor in the 1980s and early 1990s.
For "Star Trek" he composed music for only a few episodes, in addition to the theme and the music for the pilot. But that theme was reprised in the sequel "Star Trek: The Next Generation" and in the "Star Trek" features films.
Courage was born Dec. 10, 1919, in Philadelphia but raised in New Jersey. After graduation from the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N.Y., in 1941, Courage enlisted in the Army Air Corps.
After the war, he became a composer for CBS radio shows and then became an orchestrator and arranger at MGM.
Beginning in the 1960s he composed music for TV shows, including "The Waltons," "Lost in Space" and "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea," although he only created the themes to "Star Trek" and "Judd For the Defense."
In addition to his stepdaughter, Courage is survived by stepchildren Raphael Pumpelly of Malibu, Lisa Pompelli and Andrea Steyn, both of Los Angeles, and six grandchildren.
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- We will miss this great talent. Music for television shows goes largely unappreciated. I remember all of the shows he created the music for, and the movies.
There are so many composers who never get recognized by the audiences who hear their music. Much of Glenn Miller''s music was written by others. We need to recognize these modern day composers more.
Thank you Mr Courage for giving a generation a theme tune, and so appropriately, as the space generation. - Reply to this comment
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