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・ Saul Amsterdam
・ Saul Andrew Blinkoff
・ Saul Anuzis
・ Saul Ascher
・ Saul B. Cohen
・ Saul B. Newton
・ Saul Bass
・ Saul Bellow
・ Saul Bellow bibliography
・ Saul ben Anan
・ Saul Bennett
・ Saul Berlin
・ Saul Berman
・ Saul Bonnell
・ Saul Bron
Saul Chaplin
・ Saul Cherniack
・ Saul Cordero
・ Saul Cornell
・ Saul David
・ Saul David (producer)
・ Saul Davis
・ Saul Deeney
・ Saul Dibb
・ Saul Dushman
・ Saul Elkin
・ Saul Elkins
・ Saul Ewing
・ Saul Fenster
・ Saul Friedländer


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Saul Chaplin : ウィキペディア英語版
Saul Chaplin

Saul Chaplin (February 19, 1912 – November 15, 1997) was an American composer and musical director.
He was born Saul Kaplan in Brooklyn, New York.
He had worked on stage, screen and television since the days of Tin Pan Alley. In film, he won three Oscars for collaborating on the scores and orchestrations of ''An American in Paris'' (1951), ''Seven Brides for Seven Brothers'' (1954) and ''West Side Story'' (1961).
==Biography==

Following education at New York University's School of Commerce, where he studied accounting, Chaplin joined the ASCAP and started out penning tunes for the theatre, vaudeville and for New York's famous songwriting district, Tin Pan Alley. While in New York, Chaplin teamed with Sammy Cahn to compose original songs for Vitaphone movie shorts, filmed in Brooklyn by Warner Brothers. During this period the team was sometimes billed only by surname ("Cahn and Chaplin"), in the manner of Rodgers and Hart or Gilbert and Sullivan.
Cahn and Chaplin relocated to Hollywood and scored two films for Universal Pictures. Chaplin then moved to Columbia Pictures to score ''Cover Girl'' and ''The Jolson Story''. While on the latter film, Chaplin and Al Jolson penned the million-selling hit tune ''The Anniversary Song''. In the late 1940s, Chaplin moved to MGM to work on a long string of films including ''On the Town'' (1949), ''Kiss Me Kate'' (1953), ''High Society'' (1956) and ''Merry Andrew'' (1958). For collaborating on such hits as ''Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen'' and ''Please Be Kind'', Chaplin was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1985. He won Academy Awards for his work on the scores of ''Seven Brides for Seven Brothers'', ''An American in Paris'' and ''West Side Story'' as well as nominations for ''Kiss Me Kate'' and ''High Society''.
While continuing as a film music supervisor, Chaplin became an associate producer in the early '60s and worked on such major features as ''Can-Can'' (1960), ''West Side Story'' (1961), ''I Could Go On Singing'' (1963), ''The Sound of Music'' (1965), ''STAR!'' (1968), ''Man of La Mancha'' (1972) and ''That's Entertainment, Part 2'' (1976).
He published his autobiography, ''The Golden Age of Movie Musicals and Me'' in 1994. He had worked with and was friends with most of the major songwriters and performers of his era, such as Cole Porter, Ira Gershwin, Al Jolson, Leonard Bernstein, Judy Garland, Gene Kelly, Phil Silvers, Julie Andrews, Frank Sinatra and others. His memoir focused on the behind the scenes aspect of moviemaking.

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