Billy Goldenberg
Billy Goldenberg (February 10, 1936 – August 3, 2020) was an American composer, conductor, and songwriter best known for his prolific work scoring television series, films, and stage productions during the mid-20th century.[1][2] Born William Leon Goldenberg in Brooklyn, New York, to a musical family—his father, Morris Goldenberg, was a renowned percussionist and Juilliard instructor, while his mother, Isabella, taught violin and viola—he began piano lessons at age five and later studied at Columbia College, earning a bachelor's degree.[1][3][4] As a protégé of Broadway songwriter Frank Loesser, Goldenberg started his career in theater, composing and arranging music before transitioning to Hollywood in the 1960s.[1][2] Goldenberg's television contributions were particularly influential, where he created memorable themes for 1970s series such as Kojak, Rhoda, and Harry O, and scored pilots for anthology shows like Night Gallery and Columbo.[1][2][5] He also composed music for high-profile TV movies and miniseries, including The Marcus-Nelson Murders, Helter Skelter, The Atlanta Child Murders, and documentaries like The Incredible Machine for National Geographic.[1][2] As musical director, he oversaw specials featuring artists like Elvis Presley (including the 1968 comeback special), Diana Ross, Petula Clark, and Ann-Margret.[1][4] In film, Goldenberg provided scores for notable directors, such as Steven Spielberg's debut TV movie Duel (1971), Woody Allen's Play It Again, Sam (1972), and Elvis Presley's Change of Habit (1969), alongside features like The Grasshopper (1970) and Up the Sandbox (1972).[1][2][3] His stage work included collaborations with performers like Elaine May, Mike Nichols, and Bea Arthur, culminating in the 1978 Broadway musical Ballroom, which earned eight Tony Award nominations.[1][4] Throughout his career, Goldenberg received widespread acclaim, winning four Primetime Emmy Awards—for Queen of the Stardust Ballroom (1975), The Lives of Benjamin Franklin (1975), King (1978), and Rage of Angels (1983)—and accumulating 25 nominations, a testament to his versatility across genres.[1][2] He largely retired from television scoring in the late 1990s but continued performing, including with Bea Arthur in the early 2000s, before his death from a heart attack at his New York City home.[1][4]Early life and education
Family background
William Leon Goldenberg was born on February 10, 1936, in Brooklyn, New York, into a family deeply immersed in professional music. His mother, Isabella Goldenberg, was a violin and viola teacher who also performed in chamber groups, providing an early and intimate environment rich with classical music.[4] His father, Morris Goldenberg, was a renowned percussionist who served as a staff member with WOR radio and NBC, while also teaching at the Juilliard School of Music and authoring influential method books on percussion techniques.[3][4] From a young age, Goldenberg was surrounded by these musical influences, beginning piano lessons at age five under his mother's guidance. She also taught him violin and viola, fostering his initial technical skills and appreciation for string instruments within the household setting.[1][4] Family performances, including chamber music sessions led by his parents, exposed him to collaborative playing and the nuances of ensemble work, embedding a strong foundation in classical traditions before his formal academic pursuits.[4] This nurturing environment at home influenced Goldenberg's musical development, though his formal studies at Columbia College were in physics and mathematics.[6]Academic and musical training
Born into a musical family—his father was a staff percussionist at WOR radio and NBC and his mother a violin and viola teacher—Billy Goldenberg began piano lessons at age 5, fostering an early interest in music.[4] Goldenberg attended Columbia College, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1957, majoring in physics and mathematics rather than pursuing formal music studies at the Juilliard School.[4] During his time there, he developed his composition and arrangement skills by writing music for campus productions, including the Columbia Varsity Shows.[7] Following graduation, Goldenberg initially worked as a computer programmer but soon pivoted to music full-time, influenced by his experiences performing as a pianist.[4] This decision marked the beginning of his professional commitment to composition and performance.Professional career
Early work as performer and arranger
Following his graduation from Columbia College in 1957, Billy Goldenberg entered the music industry as a rehearsal pianist and arranger on Broadway, leveraging the technical skills honed during his academic training. His early roles involved providing musical support for live performances, including playing piano and creating incidental music for comedy acts. In 1960, he was hired to perform background music and contribute arrangements for the Broadway production An Evening with Mike Nichols and Elaine May, a revue that showcased the improvisational talents of the duo and ran for over a year.[4][3] Goldenberg's theater work expanded in the early 1960s, where he served as dance arranger and conductor for several productions, marking his initial composing credits in the professional arena. Notable contributions included dance arrangements for Let It Ride (1961), a musical comedy. These roles bridged live theater performance with behind-the-scenes orchestration, allowing him to collaborate closely with directors and performers while building a reputation for versatile musical support.[8][3][1] By the mid-1960s, Goldenberg's arranging talents extended to early television specials and variety shows, where he handled orchestrations and served as musical coordinator. He worked on the NBC music series Hullabaloo (1965–1966), providing arrangements that supported performances by emerging pop and rock artists. Key collaborations during this period included incidental music for acts like Mike Nichols and Elaine May. Around 1968, Goldenberg shifted from primarily live performance and arranging to studio-based composition, relocating to Los Angeles to focus on television scoring.[1][4]Television scoring
Goldenberg's entry into television scoring came in 1968, when he composed music for episodes of the anthology series The Name of the Game, including the Steven Spielberg-directed segment "L.A. 2017."[1] This debut marked the beginning of his prolific work in the medium, leveraging his prior experience as an arranger to craft dynamic scores for dramatic narratives. He followed this with contributions to Rod Serling's horror anthology Night Gallery, providing scores for the pilot and multiple episodes from 1969 to 1973, where his atmospheric compositions enhanced the series' eerie supernatural themes.[2] Throughout the 1970s, Goldenberg became renowned for his iconic television themes, which captured the essence of character-driven procedurals and comedies. He composed the main title music for Kojak (1973–1978), a gritty police drama starring Telly Savalas, whose pulsating jazz-inflected score became synonymous with urban detective stories.[1] Similarly, his upbeat theme for Rhoda (1974–1978), a spin-off of The Mary Tyler Moore Show, infused the sitcom with warm, melodic optimism reflective of its New York City setting.[2] Other notable themes included those for Columbo (select 1970s episodes), Harry O (1974–1976), and The Sixth Sense (1972), where his versatile style blended suspenseful motifs with emotional depth to support psychological thrillers and mysteries.[1] Goldenberg's excellence in scoring television specials and miniseries earned him multiple Emmy Awards, highlighting his ability to elevate historical and dramatic content through orchestral sweep. He won an Emmy for Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Special or Episode) for the full score of the biographical miniseries The Lives of Benjamin Franklin (1974), which dramatized the Founding Father's multifaceted life with period-appropriate grandeur.[9] Additional Emmy wins came for King (1978), a miniseries on Martin Luther King Jr. that featured poignant, inspirational cues, and the TV movie Queen of the Stardust Ballroom (1975), where his score underscored themes of romance and resilience in a poignant dance drama.[2] These works exemplified his skill in tailoring music to narrative emotional arcs, often drawing on lush strings and brass to convey historical weight or personal intimacy. Spanning from 1968 to the late 1990s, Goldenberg's television career encompassed dozens of credits across episodic series, pilots, and specials, solidifying his role as a cornerstone of American broadcast music.[10] His contributions to shows like It Takes a Thief, Alias Smith and Jones, and Amazing Stories (three episodes) demonstrated a consistent ability to blend genre conventions with innovative orchestration, influencing the sound of prime-time television for decades.[1]Film and theater compositions
Goldenberg's transition from television scoring opened doors to feature films and theatrical productions in the late 1960s and 1970s, where he composed original scores that enhanced narrative tension and emotional depth.[3] His breakthrough came with the score for Steven Spielberg's Duel (1971), initially a television movie that received a theatrical release, featuring an atonal, percussive orchestral sound that built unrelenting suspense through repeated motifs and eerie minimalism. Earlier, he scored Elvis Presley's Change of Habit (1969), blending light jazz elements with dramatic undertones to underscore the film's social themes. These works marked his entry into cinema, followed by the comedic Play It Again, Sam (1972), directed by Herbert Ross and starring Woody Allen, where his understated score incorporated playful, syncopated rhythms to complement the film's neurotic humor.[11] Similarly, for the thriller The Last of Sheila (1973), co-written by Stephen Sondheim and Anthony Perkins, Goldenberg crafted a sophisticated, jazz-inflected soundtrack that heightened the mystery's intrigue with subtle cues and thematic variations. Beyond these milestones, Goldenberg contributed to approximately 20 film projects, often tailoring his music to the story's tone while incorporating songs and orchestral arrangements. In Barbra Streisand's Up the Sandbox (1972), he provided a lush, evocative score that pulsed with the film's surreal fantasy sequences, including the original song "If I Close My Eyes," which captured the protagonist's introspective dreams.[12] His work extended to television adaptations with theatrical impact, such as the score for Rage of Angels (1983), a Sidney Sheldon story starring Jaclyn Smith, where sweeping romantic themes amplified the legal drama's emotional stakes. In theater, Goldenberg expanded his compositional range during the 1960s and 1970s, creating incidental music and full scores for Broadway revues and musicals. He composed the soundtrack for comedy sketches in An Evening with Mike Nichols and Elaine May (1960), using piano-driven cues to punctuate the improvisational humor of the iconic duo.[13] His most prominent stage contribution was the music for Ballroom (1978), a Broadway musical with book by Jerome Kass and lyrics by Alan and Marilyn Bergman, featuring waltz-infused overtures and dance numbers like "A Terrific Band and a Real Nice Crowd" that evoked nostalgic romance.[14] These theatrical efforts showcased his versatility in live performance contexts, distinct from his screen work. Goldenberg's film and theater compositions often employed tension-building orchestral techniques for thrillers, such as in Duel, where percussive elements and escalating phrases created palpable unease, while comedies like Play It Again, Sam and Up the Sandbox received lighter, mood-enhancing themes with jazz and lyrical flourishes to support character-driven narratives.[15][12] This stylistic adaptability, rooted in his jazz background, distinguished his contributions across genres.[3]Awards and legacy
Emmy Awards and nominations
Billy Goldenberg earned four Primetime Emmy Awards, three for Outstanding Music Composition recognizing his contributions to dramatic miniseries and specials during the 1970s and 1980s, and one for Outstanding Achievement in Special Musical Material. His wins highlighted his ability to craft evocative scores that enhanced historical and narrative-driven television projects.[1][3] In 1975, Goldenberg won for his score to the CBS miniseries The Lives of Benjamin Franklin, a biographical production chronicling the Founding Father's life, in the category of Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore).[16] This marked his first Emmy in the composition field, underscoring his emerging dominance in television scoring.[5] He secured his second win in 1978 for King, an NBC miniseries depicting the life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., in the Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore) category. The score's emotional depth complemented the project's civil rights themes, earning praise for its integration with the narrative.[17] Goldenberg's third and final composition win came in 1983 for the NBC miniseries Rage of Angels, based on Sidney Sheldon's novel, in the Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Limited Series or a Special (Dramatic Underscore) category. His tense, atmospheric music amplified the thriller's suspenseful elements.[18] He also won in 1975 for Outstanding Achievement in Special Musical Material for the title song from Queen of the Stardust Ballroom (shared with Alan and Marilyn Bergman). Beyond these victories, Goldenberg received 25 Primetime Emmy nominations across his career, primarily in music composition categories for dramatic series and limited programs from the 1970s to the 1980s.[1] Notable nominations included 1974's Outstanding Achievement in a Series or Special - Music Theme or Title for the Kojak theme, which became iconic for its gritty urban pulse. He was also nominated in 1975 for Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Special or Limited Series for Queen of the Stardust Ballroom, a poignant dance drama. These nominations reflected his versatility in blending orchestral and thematic elements to support character-driven storytelling in television.[3]| Year | Project | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1975 | The Lives of Benjamin Franklin | Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore) | Win[16] |
| 1975 | Queen of the Stardust Ballroom | Outstanding Achievement in Special Musical Material | Win[19] |
| 1978 | King | Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore) | Win[17] |
| 1983 | Rage of Angels | Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Limited Series or a Special (Dramatic Underscore) | Win[18] |