
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Herbert P. Stothart (September 11, 1885 – February 1, 1949) was an American songwriter, arranger, conductor, and composer. He was also nominated for twelve Academy Awards, winning Best Original Score for The Wizard of Oz. Stothart was widely acknowledged as a member of the top tier of Hollywood composers during the 1930s and 1940s. Life and career Herbert Stothart was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He studied music in Europe and at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he later taught. Stothart was first hired by producer Arthur Hammerstein to be a musical director for touring companies of Broadway shows, and was soon writing music for the producer's nephew Oscar Hammerstein II. He composed music for the famous operetta, Rose-Marie. Stothart soon joined with many famous composers including Vincent Youmans, George Gershwin and Franz Lehár. Stothart achieved pop-chart success with standards like “Cute Little Two by Four”, “Wildflower”, “Bambalina”, “The Mounties”, “Totem Tom-Tom”, “Why Shouldn’t We?”, “Fly Away”, “Song of the Flame”, “The Cossack Love Song”, “Dawn”, “I Wanna Be Loved by You”, “Cuban Love Song”, “The Rogue Song” and “The Donkey Serenade.” The year 1929 marked the end of the era of silent films. Shortly after completing his latest musical “Golden Dawn” with Oscar Hammerstein, Stothart received an invitation from Louis B. Mayer to move to Hollywood, which he accepted. In 1929, Stothart was signed to a large MGM contract. The next twenty years of his life were spent at MGM Studios, where he was part of elite group of Hollywood composers. Among the many films that he worked on was the famous 1936 version of Rose-Marie, starring Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy. He conducted and wrote songs and scores for the films The Cuban Love Song, The Good Earth, Romeo and Juliet, Mutiny on the Bounty, Mrs. Miniver, The Green Years and The Picture of Dorian Gray. His output included the Marx Brothers' Night at the Opera, the Leo Tolstoy romantic drama Anna Karenina, two Charles Dickens dramas (A Tale of Two Cities and David Copperfield), and Mutiny on the Bounty, which earned him his first Academy Award nomination. He won an Oscar for his musical score for the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz. Herbert Stothart spent his entire Hollywood career at MGM. In 1947, he suffered a heart attack while visiting Scotland, and afterwards, composed an orchestral piece (Heart Attack: A Symphonic Poem), based on his tribulations. He worked on another (Voices of Liberation), commissioned by Roger Wagner Chorale, when he died two years later at the age of 63.
Rose Marie
1954
Big Jack
1949
Hills of Home
1948
Desire Me
1947
High Barbaree
1947
The Sea of Grass
1947
The Yearling
1946
Undercurrent
1946
The Green Years
1946
Son of Lassie
1945
National Velvet
1945
Kismet
1944
Dragon Seed
1944
A Guy Named Joe
1944
Madame Curie
1943
Thousands Cheer
1943
The Human Comedy
1943
Random Harvest
1942
Cairo
1942
Mrs. Miniver
1942
Rio Rita
1942
Smilin' Through
1941
Ziegfeld Girl
1941
Men of Boys Town
1941
Susan and God
1940
Waterloo Bridge
1940
Edison, the Man
1940
Balalaika
1939
Idiot's Delight
1939
Sweethearts
1938
Marie Antoinette
1938
Of Human Hearts
1938
The Firefly
1937
Conquest
1937
The Good Earth
1937
Maytime
1937
Camille
1936
Romeo and Juliet
1936
San Francisco
1936
Moonlight Murder
1936
Rose Marie
1936
Ah, Wilderness!
1935
Anna Karenina
1935
China Seas
1935
Sequoia
1935
The Painted Veil
1934
Chained
1934
Treasure Island
1934
Viva Villa!
1934
Laughing Boy
1934
Riptide
1934
Queen Christina
1934
Night Flight
1933
The White Sister
1933
The Son-Daughter
1932
Grand Hotel
1932
The Squaw Man
1931
New Moon
1930
A Lady's Morals
1930
Madam Satan
1930
Golden Dawn
1930
In Gay Madrid
1930







































































































