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Published: Friday, 13 September 2024 at 11:00 AM


Conductor Leonard Slatkin shares his early memories of growing up on the soundstages of Hollywood…

A black sedan pulls up to the security gate at the Fox Studio Lot. I lean out the window and give the guard my name. He instructs me to head to the Alfred Newman Scoring Stage. It’s 12 June 2024, and I am about to experience déjà vu in real time…

Leonard Slatkin: early days with Alfred Newman at 20th Century Fox…

More than 70 years have passed since I first set foot on the hallowed soundstage where so many musical memories were made. My father, Felix Slatkin, was lead violin of the 20th Century Fox Studio Orchestra from the late 1930s until the early ’50s. Alfred Newman was head of the music department, responsible for composing and conducting most of the films during that golden era. I will never forget my very first LP – the soundtrack to the biblical epic The Robe, one in a series of guaranteed box-office bonanzas. What a fantastic score by Alfred, who kindly autographed a copy of the album for me. 

Meeting Marilyn Monroe and Bernard Herrmann

Dad would take me to recording sessions in what is still the world’s most extraordinary recording facility. There, at age eight, I met Marilyn Monroe while she was shooting How to Marry a Millionaire in 1953. On another occasion two years earlier, I witnessed the recording of Bernard Herrmann’s inventive score to The Day the Earth Stood Still. During that session, my father was the first to use an electric violin in a film. I remember him playing the instrument in one room and hearing the sound emerge in an adjacent studio.