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Walter Greene (January 23, 1910 - December 23, 1983) was a film and television composer who worked on numerous productions for over 30 years. ==Career== His early career consisted of music scores for films such as ''Jesse James' Women'' (1954), ''Teenage Doll'' (1957), ''The Brain from Planet Arous'' (1957), ''Teenage Monster'' (1958), ''War of the Satellites'' (1958) and ''Thunder in Carolina'' (1960). However while Greene composed for a variety of genres, he is arguably most well known for his work at United Artists, providing the musical scores for numerous ''Pink Panther'', ''The Inspector'' and ''Misterjaw'' animated shorts in the 1960s and 1970s, replacing William Lava, starting with the 21st entry in the series, ''Pink-A-Boo''. Greene's memorable scores were built around "The Pink Panther Theme" composed by Henry Mancini, creating different variations of the famous theme. Unlike the music scores composed by Bill Lava, which closely followed the action of the film, Greene's compositions were generic and could be reused more freely. Indeed, Greene's scores appeared frequently from ''Pink-A-Boo'' in 1966 until the final ''Pink Panther'' theatrical short, ''Therapeutic Pink'' in 1977. Greene also had a brief stint creating music for six ''Looney Tunes'' shorts from 1966 to 1967: *''A Squeak in the Deep'' *''Feather Finger'' *''Swing Ding Amigo'' *''Sugar and Spies'' *''Taste of Catnip'' *''Daffy's Diner'' In 1946, Greene earned an Academy Award nomination for his score to the 1945 film ''Why Girls Leave Home''. In 1960, Greene provided the score for the German/Polish film ''First Spaceship on Venus''. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Walter Greene」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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