Eugene Zador
Jenő Zádor (5 November 1894, Bátaszék, Hungary – 4 April 1977, Hollywood, California), also known as Eugene Zador, was a Hungarian-American composer.[1]
His parents Paula Biermann and József Zádor (orig. Zucker).
He studied at the Vienna Music Academy and in Leipzig with Max Reger. He taught from 1921 at the new New Vienna Conservatory and later at the Budapest Academy of Music. In 1939 he emigrated to the United States, where he soon found employment in the music department of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (M-G-M). He composed (anonymously) music for a number of film scores, but regarded his movie work as merely supportive of his own creative activity. For this reason he preferred to work at home on the orchestration of other composers' music. The most notable collaboration was with his fellow Hungarian Miklós Rózsa, with whom he worked until 1961. He also wrote a number of operas in which the characterization and orchestration are worthy of note, and orchestral pieces in a style that owed something to Reger and Richard Strauss, including the popular Hungarian Caprice (1935) and concertos for such instruments as the cimbalom (1969) and accordion (1971).
Zádor was married to Maria Steiner in Geneva during 1946 and had a son, Leslie, and a daughter, Peggy.[2]
Although his operas are said to be strongly characterized and skillfully orchestrated, his compositional style remained within the late romantic language of Richard Strauss and Max Reger (he claimed to occupy a position "exactly between La Traviata and Lulu)".[1][3]
Operas
- Diana (1923)
- A holtak szigete (1928)
- Revisor (1928)
- X-mal Rembrandt (1930)
- The Awaking of Sleeping Beauty (1931)
- Asra (1936)
- Christoph Columbus (1939)
- The Virgin and the Fawn (24 October 1964)
- The Magic Chair (1966)
- The Scarlet Mill (1968)
- Revisor [rev] (1971)
- Yehu, a Christmas Legend (1974)
Orchestral
- Divertimento for Strings (1954)
- Elegie and Dance (1954)
- Studies for Orchestra (1969)
- Oboe Concerto (1975)
References
- ^ a b Demény, János; Meckna, Michael. "Zador, Eugene". Grove Music Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 5 August 2013. (subscription required)
- ^ https://eugenezador.com/about/
- ^ DeWald, Frank K. Zador: Divertimento / Elegie and Dance / Oboe Concerto / Studies (CD). Naxos Records. 8.572549. Retrieved 5 August 2013.
- Wendy Thompson. The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, edited by Stanley Sadie (1992). ISBN 0-333-73432-7 and ISBN 1-56159-228-5
External links
- American male classical composers
- American classical composers
- Hungarian classical composers
- Hungarian male classical composers
- American opera composers
- Male opera composers
- 1894 births
- 1977 deaths
- University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna alumni
- Hungarian emigrants to the United States
- American film score composers
- Male film score composers
- People from Tolna County
- 20th-century classical composers
- 20th-century American composers
- 20th-century American male musicians
- American composer, 19th-century birth stubs
- Hungarian composer stubs