W. Franke Harling
male
Born on January 18, 1887 (138 years old)
Passed Away on November 22, 1958
From London, England, UK
Known for Sound
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia W. Franke Harling (January 18, 1887 – November 22, 1958) was a composer of film scores, operas, and popular music. Born William Franke Harling in London, he was educated at the Grace Choir Church School in New York City. After working as an organist and choir director at the Church of the Resurrection in Brussels, he spent two years at the United States Military Academy at West Point, and composed both its hymn, called "The Corps," and its official march, "West Point Forever." In 1918, Harling contributed incidental music to the Broadway production of the 1898 play Pan and the Young Shepherd by Maurice Hewlett. In 1926, he collaborated with Laurence Stallings on Deep River, a voodoo-themed opera set in New Orleans in 1835. It opened on Broadway at the Imperial Theatre on October 4 and ran for 32 performances. Harling began his Hollywood career in 1928. His film credits include The Vagabond King, This Is the Night, So Big!, A Bill of Divorcement, Blonde Venus, A Farewell to Arms, The Bitter Tea of General Yen, Monte Carlo, Souls at Sea, and Penny Serenade. Harling won the Academy Award for Best Music Scoring for Stagecoach (1939) and was nominated for Souls at Sea (1937) and Three Russian Girls (1944). Harling's popular songs include "Beyond the Blue Horizon" (with Richard A. Whiting) popularized by Jeanette MacDonald in 1930 and Lou Christie thirty years later, and "Sing, You Sinners", originally performed by Lillian Roth in 1930 and a hit for Tony Bennett in 1950. Harling won the Bispham Memorial Medal Award for his jazz-oriented opera A Light from St. Agnes. Harling died in Sierra Madre, California and is buried in Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Hollywood Hills.
Cast Credits
No credits available
Crew Credits
- 1944
- 1943
- 1942
- 1941
- 1938
- 1937
- 1936
- 1935
- 1934
- 1933
- 1932

The Bitter Tea of General Yen
as
Original Music Composer
1932

One Hour with You
as
Original Music Composer
1932

The Miracle Man
as
Music
1932

Broken Lullaby
as
Original Music Composer
1932

Blonde Venus
as
Original Music Composer
1932

A Farewell to Arms
as
Original Music Composer
1932

Week-End Marriage
as
Music
1932

This Is the Night
as
Original Music Composer
1932

No Man of Her Own
as
Additional Music
1932

The Rich Are Always with Us
as
Original Music Composer
1932

The Crash
as
Original Music Composer
1932

Madame Butterfly
as
Original Music Composer
1932

Two Seconds
as
Original Music Composer
1932

Winner Take All
as
Original Music Composer
1932

Shanghai Express
as
Original Music Composer
1932

Trouble in Paradise
as
Original Music Composer
1932

A Bill of Divorcement
as
Original Music Composer
1932

Beauty and the Boss
as
Original Music Composer
1932
- 1931
- 1930

The Love Parade
as
Original Music Composer
1930

Monte Carlo
as
Original Music Composer
1930

Behind the Make-Up
as
Original Music Composer
1930

The Kibitzer
as
Original Music Composer
1930

The Right to Love
as
Original Music Composer
1930

Monte Carlo
as
Songs
1930

Only the Brave
as
Original Music Composer
1930

Sea Legs
as
Songs
1930
- 1929
- 1928





























