Lalo Schifrin, award-winning composer known for ‘Mission: Impossible' theme, dies at 93
Lalo Schifrin, the six-time Oscar nominee and prolific composer best known for his Grammy-award winning 'Mission: Impossible' theme, has died. He was 93.
Schifrin died Thursday morning at a hospital in Los Angeles, his son Will Schifrin told The Times. He reportedly died of complications from pneumonia.
The Argentine-born composer was known for his ability to infuse elements of jazz, rock and funk into classical orchestral music, and is credited for helping to change the sound of movies. Schifrin was recognized for his scores on films such as 'Cool Hand Luke' (1967), 'The Fox' (1967), 'Voyage of the Damned' (1976), 'The Amityville Horror' (1979) and 'The Sting II' (1983). In 2018, Schifrin was presented an honorary Oscar from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Schifrin wrote more than 100 scores for film and television over the course of his Hollywood career, including for films such as 'Dirty Harry' (1971), 'THX 1138' (1971), 'Enter the Dragon' (1973) and the 'Rush Hour' trilogy, as well as TV shows including 'The Man from U.N.C.L.E.' and 'Starsky and Hutch.'
'I learned to be a chameleon,' Schifrin told The Times in 2018. 'In motion pictures, the real creator is the screenwriter and the director and the producer. I have to work for what they have made. Like a chameleon, I do whatever is necessary.'
In 2011, Schifrin modestly described himself as simply a 'music maker.' While the catchy theme for the spy series 'Mission: Impossible' remains one of his best known pieces, Schifrin told The Times in 2016 that 'it was just work.'
'For everything I've done, I did my best,' Schifrin said. 'I like what I did. I don't think it's a masterpiece, but it's OK. ... If people like it, to the point of embracing it, great. That doesn't happen too often.'
Born in Buenos Aires in 1932, Schifrin was exposed to music from a young age. His father Luis served as the concert master of the Philharmonic Orchestra of Buenos Aires at the Teatro Colón. And he was just 5 years old when a trip to the movies with his grandmother made him realize that it was the music that helped make the horror film so scary.
Schifrin began studying piano under Enrique Barenboim, the father of pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim, when he was 6. He discovered and fell in love with modern American jazz as a teenager. Upon the suggestion of one of his teachers, he applied for a scholarship to attend the Paris Conservatory. During his time there, he made money playing at jazz clubs.
After returning to Buenos Aires, Schifrin started his own jazz band to perform at concerts and on TV. He eventually met American jazz trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, who invited him to come work for him in the U.S. In 1963, while he was working with Gillespie after moving to New York, Schifrin was offered a job in Hollywood.
'My first movie was called 'Rhino,'' Schifrin told The Times in 2011. 'It was a low-budget movie, but it was the beginning.'
Schifrin is survived by his wife, Donna, and his children, William, Frances and Ryan.
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