David Shire (born July 3, 1937, in Buffalo, New York) is an American composer, songwriter, pianist, and arranger renowned for his contributions to stage musicals, film scores, television themes, and recordings.[1]Shire's career in theater spans decades, beginning in the early 1960s with collaborations that include the revue Starting Here, Starting Now (1977) and the musical revue Closer Than Ever (1989, co-written with Richard Maltby Jr.), which earned him an Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Musical and Best Score.[2] He also composed music for Broadway productions such as Baby (1983) and Big (1996), both of which received Tony Award nominations for Best Original Score.[3]In film and television, Shire has provided scores for over 80 movies and nearly 90 TV projects, including notable works like the suspenseful jazz-infused score for The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (1974), the thriller The Conversation (1974), and the drama All the President's Men (1976).[1] His television contributions feature themes for series such as McCloud (1970–1977).[4] Shire's achievements include an Academy Award for Best Original Song for "It Goes Like It Goes" from Norma Rae (1979, shared with lyricist Norman Gimbel), two Grammy Awards (including Album of the Year for Saturday Night Fever soundtrack contributions in 1979), and multiple Emmy and Tony nominations.[5][6]
Early Life and Education
Family and Childhood
David Shire was born David Lee Shire on July 3, 1937, in Buffalo, New York.[7][8]His family maintained a strong musical orientation, centered around his father, Irving Daniel Shire, a prominent local bandleader, songwriter, and piano teacher who led a society dance band that performed at weddings, debutante balls, and other social events in the Buffalo area.[1][9][10] This environment immersed young David in the sounds of big band and popular music from an early age, as his father not only led the ensemble but also provided piano instruction to neighborhood children and family members.[9][11]Shire's early childhood experiences were deeply shaped by this musical household; he began studying piano under his father's guidance in early adolescence, gaining exposure through his father's musical activities and performing in local gigs during high school.[11] These formative encounters with big band arrangements and live performances fostered his initial passion for music, blending classical technique with jazz influences. During adolescence, he attended the Nichols School in Buffalo, where he honed his skills by playing jazz piano and experimenting with composition in school ensembles.[12][13]This foundation in family-driven musical education paved the way for Shire's transition to formal studies at Yale University.[8]
Formal Education and Influences
David Shire attended Yale University from 1955 to 1959, where he pursued a double major in English and music, graduating magna cum laude and earning membership in Phi Beta Kappa.[1][14] During his time at Yale, he immersed himself in the university's musical scene, playing piano in a jazz group and beginning to experiment with composition through student pieces and arrangements for campus productions, including works for the Yale Dramatic Association.[15][1]Shire's formal training emphasized classical foundations alongside his growing interest in popular forms; his family's musical background, with his father Irving Shire as a bandleader and piano teacher, laid the groundwork for these pursuits. Early influences included jazz improvisation and the melodic structures of Broadway composers such as Leonard Bernstein and Irving Berlin, which he encountered through school performances and family exposure to American popular music.[1][16]Following graduation, Shire undertook postgraduate studies for one semester at Brandeis University as the first Eddie Fisher Fellow, intending to study the middle period of Stravinsky's compositions but shifting his focus to theatre writing.[16][14] These academic experiences honed his skills in classical techniques, preparing him for a career blending rigorous structure with jazz and theatrical elements.
Musical Theater Career
Early Theater Compositions
David Shire's entry into professional musical theater occurred in the early 1960s, building on the compositional skills honed during his undergraduate years at Yale University. His first credited work was the off-Broadway revue The Sap of Life, which premiered in 1961 at the Jan Hus Playhouse in New York City. Composed with lyrics by his longtime collaborator Richard Maltby Jr., the show featured satirical sketches and songs exploring themes of youth and vitality, running for a limited engagement of 41 performances.[17][1][18]Throughout the decade, Shire contributed to various cabaret and revue productions in smaller New York venues, often serving as pianist and songwriter to supplement his income. He provided piano accompaniment and incidental music for intimate performances, including early cabaret acts that showcased emerging talents, while experimenting with jazz-inflected scores that would become hallmarks of his style. These efforts, though not always leading to full productions, allowed Shire to refine his versatile approach to musical storytelling in the competitive off-Broadway scene.[1][19]Shire's partnership with Maltby Jr., which originated during their Yale days in the mid-1950s, deepened in the 1960s through collaborative sketches and unproduced musicals, laying the groundwork for their enduring creative synergy. Despite these promising beginnings, Shire faced significant hurdles, including limited production opportunities and financial instability in New York's theater landscape, where he supported himself primarily through freelance piano work in pits and rehearsals. This period of perseverance shaped his pragmatic yet innovative compositional voice.[19][20]
Major Productions and Collaborations
David Shire's breakthrough in musical theater came with the 1977 off-Broadway revue Starting Here, Starting Now, co-written with lyricist Richard Maltby Jr., which premiered at the Manhattan Theatre Club and ran for 120 performances at the Players Theatre.[19] The production featured a cast of three—Loni Ackerman, Margery Cohen, and George Lee Andrews—navigating themes of modern relationships through 24 songs, and it earned a Grammy nomination for Best Musical Show Album.[21] Its enduring popularity led to hundreds of subsequent productions worldwide, including revivals in the 1990s, 2010s, and as recently as 2023.[22]In 1983, Shire and Maltby debuted their first full-length Broadway musical, Baby, at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre, a poignant exploration of parenthood through three intertwining couples, which ran for 241 performances.[23] The show starred Liz Callaway, Alice Ripley, Martin Vidnovic, and Richard Muenz, and garnered seven Tony Award nominations, including for Best Musical, Best Book, and Best Original Score. Directed by Maltby, Baby highlighted Shire's melodic versatility in capturing emotional transitions, and it has seen regional revivals into the 2010s.Shire and Maltby's 1989 revue Closer Than Ever further solidified their reputation for intimate, reflective works, opening at the Cherry Lane Theatre for 312 performances and delving into life's milestones like marriage, career shifts, and aging.[24] Featuring a cast of four—Richard Muenz, Lynne Wintersteller, Beth Fowler, and George Lee Andrews—the production received Drama Desk nominations and became a staple of American musical theater, influencing the genre's focus on personal narratives.[25] It was revived off-Broadway at the York Theatre in 2012, extending its reach with a new cast including Jenn Colella and Matthew Hydzik.[26]Among other key collaborations, the 1996 Broadway musical Big, an adaptation of the 1988 film, starred Matthew Broderick as a boy turned adult overnight and ran for 193 performances at the Shubert Theatre, earning a Tony nomination for Best Original Score.[27] Directed by Michael Mayer with choreography by Susan Stroman, it showcased Shire's playful integration of whimsical numbers into a coming-of-age story. Later, Take Flight premiered in a limited run at London's Menier Chocolate Factory in 2007, weaving tales of aviation pioneers like the Wright brothers and Amelia Earhart in a book by John Weidman, though it did not transfer to Broadway.[28] Their most recent collaboration, the revue About Time, premiered in 2025 at Goodspeed Musicals' Terris Theatre, exploring themes of life, love, and laughter in one's third act.[29]Throughout these works, Shire's signature style emerged in witty, character-driven songs that reflect everyday complexities with emotional depth, often blending pop sensibilities and jazz-inflected harmonies with Broadway traditions.[30] His decades-long partnership with Maltby, spanning over five decades since their Yale days, produced a cohesive body of work emphasizing relational dynamics and stylistic evolution toward more concise, revue-like formats in later revivals.[31]
Film and Television Scoring
Breakthrough Film Scores
David Shire's entry into film scoring began with his debut feature score for the WesternOne More Train to Rob in 1971, marking his transition from television and theater work to cinematic composition. This early assignment established his versatility, drawing on his background in musical theater to craft character-driven cues that supported narrative tension.[11]Shire's breakthrough came in 1974 with two landmark scores that showcased his emerging style of tense, jazz-infused music suited to urban thrillers. For Francis Ford Coppola's The Conversation, Shire, then Coppola's brother-in-law through his marriage to Talia Shire, delivered a sparse, piano-dominated soundtrack emphasizing paranoia and isolation, with improvisational jazz elements heightening the film's surveillance themes.[32] That same year, his score for The Taking of Pelham One Two Three propelled his reputation with its pulsating, gritty rhythms—featuring electronic bass lines, wah-wah guitars, and driving percussion—that mirrored the high-stakes subway hijacking, blending jazz-funk with noir urgency to capture New York City's underbelly.[33]Building on this momentum, Shire's minimalist approach defined his 1976 score for All the President's Men, a Watergate exposé directed by Alan J. Pakula, where subtle, repetitive motifs using piano and low strings underscored journalistic investigation without overpowering dialogue, earning him an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score.[34] In 1977, he contributed key original cues to Saturday Night Fever, including the big-band inspired "Manhattan Skyline" and the disco-inflected "Night on Disco Mountain," alongside arrangements that complemented the Bee Gees' songs, garnering two Grammy Awards and highlighting his adaptability to the era's dance trends.[35] Shire's 1970s peak culminated in 1979 with Norma Rae, where his folk-tinged score supported the labor drama, and the song "It Goes Like It Goes" (lyrics by Norman Gimbel, performed by Jennifer Warnes) won the Academy Award for Best Original Song.[36]Throughout these works, Shire's urban jazz-noir influences—rooted in his New York theater experience—created a signature sound of rhythmic propulsion and emotional restraint, ideal for 1970s thrillers and social dramas, solidifying his Hollywood foothold.[37]
Television and Later Film Works
David Shire's television career began in the early 1970s with the theme and incidental music for the CBS sitcom The Chicago Teddy Bears, a short-lived series set in Prohibition-era Chicago starring Dean Jones.[38] This debut marked his entry into episodic television scoring, where he quickly established himself through work on NBC's McCloud, a popular Western-crime hybrid starring Dennis Weaver; Shire composed the theme and scored multiple episodes throughout the 1970s, contributing twangy, atmospheric cues that blended frontier motifs with urban tension.[39][20] His 1970s film successes, such as The Taking of Pelham One Two Three, facilitated these television opportunities by showcasing his ability to craft suspenseful, character-driven scores under pressure.[40]By the 1980s and 1990s, Shire had become a prolific television composer, delivering hundreds of cues across nearly 90 television projects that emphasized dramatic tension through recurring thematic motifs and economical orchestration.[41] Similarly, Shire composed the theme for the NBC sitcom The Practice (1976–1977), a family-oriented series starring Danny Thomas, which highlighted his versatility in lighter, melodic fare amid his growing reputation for dramatic work.[42] His television output often involved tight deadlines, with composers like Shire typically producing full episode scores in days to accommodate production schedules, a challenge he navigated by reusing and adapting motifs efficiently.[40]Shire's television portfolio extended to high-profile miniseries, including the Emmy-nominated score for ABC's The Kennedys of Massachusetts (1990), a sweeping historical drama where his music underscored the family's political rise and personal tragedies with poignant, orchestral swells.[4] This project exemplified his five Emmy nominations for television scoring, reflecting his skill in elevating narrative depth through music in long-form formats.[43] In the later phases of his film career, Shire returned to features with the energetic, synth-driven score for Short Circuit (1986), a TriStar sci-fi comedy about a sentient robot, featuring playful electronic motifs that captured the film's whimsical tone. He contributed additional music to David Fincher's Zodiac (2007), enhancing the thriller's investigative sequences with tense, minimalist cues that complemented the primary score.[44]
Other Contributions
Notable Songs and Recordings
One of David Shire's most acclaimed standalone songs is "It Goes Like It Goes," co-written with lyricist Norman Gimbel for the 1979 film Norma Rae. Performed by Jennifer Warnes on the soundtrack, the song's folk-blues style, characterized by its simple acoustic guitar accompaniment and introspective lyrics reflecting working-class resilience, earned it the Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 52nd Academy Awards.Another prominent instrumental composition by Shire is "Manhattan Skyline," featured on the 1977 Saturday Night Fever soundtrack. This disco-infused piece, blending orchestral swells with rhythmic percussion, contributed to the album's massive commercial success, which topped the Billboard 200 for 24 weeks and sold over 40 million copies worldwide.Shire's theater songs, often developed in collaboration with lyricist Richard Maltby Jr., have enjoyed enduring popularity through covers and revues. "Starting Here, Starting Now," the title track from the 1970 revue, captures themes of new beginnings with its upbeat melody and was notably recorded by Barbra Streisand on her 1966 album Color Me Barbra, helping introduce Shire's work to a broader audience. Similarly, "Baby, Baby" from the 1983 musical Baby explores parental anticipation with tender harmonies and was included in the original Broadway cast recording, preserving its emotional depth.Key recordings of Shire's songs include the 1977 original cast album for Starting Here, Starting Now, which showcases the revue's intimate cabaret style with performers like Liz Callaway and features 16 tracks highlighting Shire's melodic versatility. The 1990 original cast recording of Closer Than Ever, another Maltby-Shire revue, compiles 25 songs on themes of midlife relationships, earning praise for its sophisticated arrangements and vocal interpretations by artists such as Richard Muenz and Sally Mayes. Shire's songwriting process with Maltby emphasizes close lyrical integration, where music and words evolve simultaneously to blend pop accessibility—through catchy hooks and relatable narratives—with sophisticated harmony, often incorporating unexpected chord progressions and counterpoint to add emotional layers. This collaborative approach, honed over decades, is detailed in analyses of their partnership, underscoring how it allows songs to resonate both commercially and artistically. In 2025, Caldera Records released David Shire – Selected Works (The 1970s), a compilation featuring previously unreleased scores from films such as Skin Game (1971) and Tell Me Where It Hurts (1974), highlighting his early film music contributions.[45]
Miscellaneous Projects and Partnerships
Beyond his primary work in theater and film scoring, David Shire contributed as a pianist and music director in various Broadway productions, including serving as a rehearsal and pit pianist for the original run of Funny Girl (1964–1967), where he also assisted in conducting and became Barbra Streisand's regular accompanist.[1] These roles highlighted his versatility as a performer, supporting iconic shows during their formative stages on the Great White Way.Shire's rare film projects included the comedic score for The Big Bus (1976), a satirical disaster movie parodying 1970s blockbusters, where his orchestral cues blended humor with tension through exaggerated motifs and rhythmic percussion.[46] He also explored occasional jazz compositions, such as the funky, brass-driven "Salsation" from the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack (1977), which fused Latin rhythms with improvisational elements reflective of his early influences.[47]In partnership with his wife, actress Didi Conn, Shire engaged in cabaret acts and joint performances, often featuring his custom songs tailored to her vocal style; for instance, he composed "Another Wedding Song" specifically for her during their 1984 marriage celebration, later incorporated into revues like Closer Than Ever.[48] Their collaborations extended to intimate cabaret settings, such as the 2018 "Cabaret Under Glass" benefit, where Conn performed with Shire providing musical direction.[49]Shire contributed to music education through mentorship in the 2000s, co-leading master classes at the BMI Lehman Engel Musical Theatre Workshop, including sessions in 2005 and 2007 alongside lyricist Richard Maltby Jr., guiding emerging songwriters on structure and character development.[50] These workshops emphasized practical collaboration, drawing from his own experiences in revue formats and film adaptation.[51]
Personal Life
Marriages and Family
David Shire was first married to actressTalia Shire from March 29, 1970, until their divorce in 1980.[7] The couple had one son, Matthew Orlando Shire, born September 18, 1975, who has established an independent career as a screenwriter and producer in Los Angeles.[52][53]Shire married actressDidi Conn on February 11, 1984, after meeting in the entertainment industry.[54] The pair, who share professional overlaps through theater and music projects such as the one-woman show Didilightful, adopted a son, Danny, in 1992; he was diagnosed with autism at age three, prompting Conn to take a hiatus from acting to provide full-time care.[55][56] Conn has been a supportive partner in Shire's career, including co-producing a children's animated musical TV series and attending industry events together.[1][57]The family has primarily resided in New York, with periodic stays in Los Angeles to accommodate Shire's film and television work.[58]
Later Years
In the 2010s, David Shire transitioned into semi-retirement from active film scoring, redirecting his energies toward revivals of his catalog, theater collaborations, and archival projects rather than new cinematic commissions.[9] His contributions to films like Zodiac (2007) maintained ongoing influence through reappraisals and soundtrack releases, underscoring his enduring impact on suspense scoring.[59]Shire resides in the Hudson Valley region of New York with his wife, actress Didi Conn, where he continues to engage in musical pursuits at an advanced age.[4] He has remained visible through participation in tributes and reflective interviews, notably a 2025 exclusive conversation with Cinema Retro magazine in which he discussed his career trajectory and creative process.[20]A highlight of his later activities came in 2017 when Shire received the Lifetime Achievement Award at the World Soundtrack Awards in Ghent, Belgium, during which he performed selections from his oeuvre, including the main theme from The Conversation, accompanied by the Brussels Philharmonic under conductor Dirk Brossé.[60] Although his film scoring has diminished, Shire has continued creating new original compositions for theater, such as the musicals Our Table (2019, with Adam Gopnik) and About Time (2025, with Richard Maltby Jr.), alongside archival efforts that have sustained interest in his work, such as the 2025 release of David Shire – Selected Works by Caldera Records, compiling previously unreleased scores from his 1970s output.[61][29][45]
Awards and Legacy
Major Awards and Nominations
David Shire's most prominent recognition came from the Academy Awards, where he won Best Original Song for "It Goes Like It Goes" from the film Norma Rae in 1980, co-written with lyricist Norman Gimbel.[62] This song, performed by Crystal Gayle in the film, highlighted Shire's ability to craft emotionally resonant themes for dramatic narratives. In the same year, he received a nomination in the same category for "I'll Never Say 'Goodbye'" from The Promise, underscoring his versatility in songwriting for cinema.[62]Shire earned five Primetime Emmy nominations for his television compositions, reflecting his extensive contributions to dramatic scoring. Notable among these were nominations for Outstanding Music Composition for a Miniseries, Movie, or Special (Original Dramatic Score) for Raid on Entebbe (1977), The Defection of Simas Kudirka (1978), Do You Remember Love (1985), Rear Window (1999), and Winnie the Pooh: A Valentine for You (1999). These honors recognized his skill in creating tense, atmospheric underscores for television adaptations and originals.In theater, Shire received two Tony Award nominations for Best Original Score: one for Baby in 1984, co-written with Richard Maltby Jr., and another for Big in 1996, also with Maltby. For the off-Broadway revue Starting Here, Starting Now (1977), he and Maltby received a Grammy nomination for Best Cast Show Album, celebrating the show's innovative song cycle format.[63]Shire's work on the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack earned him a share of the 1978 Grammy Award for Album of the Year, alongside producer Bill Oakes and others, for its groundbreaking disco orchestration and arrangements.[6] He also received Grammy nominations that year for Best Arrangement Accompanying Vocals on "How Deep Is Your Love" and for Best Cast Show Album for Starting Here, Starting Now. Additionally, the soundtrack led to a Golden Globe nomination for Best Original Score in 1978.[6] For Norma Rae, "It Goes Like It Goes" brought a 1979 Golden Globe nomination for Best Original Song.
David Shire's innovative approach to film scoring in the 1970s, particularly his integration of jazz-funk elements into thriller narratives, marked a significant departure from traditional orchestral scores and influenced subsequent composers in blending genre-specific idioms with suspenseful storytelling. His score for The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (1974) exemplified this hybrid style, employing pulsating bass lines and improvisational brass to heighten urban tension, a technique that echoed in later works emphasizing rhythmic propulsion over lush romanticism.[64]In theater, Shire's collaborations with lyricist Richard Maltby Jr. revitalized the musical revue format through intimate, character-driven song cycles that prioritized emotional depth over plot. Productions like Starting Here, Starting Now (1976) and Closer Than Ever (1989) showcased this evolution, drawing from cabaret traditions while incorporating contemporary themes of relationships and self-discovery, thereby paving the way for modern songbook-style musicals. This legacy directly impacted emerging writers, including Jason Robert Brown, who cited Closer Than Ever as a profound influence on his own revue Songs for a New World (1995), adopting its non-linear structure and lyrical introspection to explore personal narratives.[65][66]Shire's broader recognition underscores his enduring contributions, highlighted by the Lifetime Achievement Award from the World Soundtrack Awards in 2017, which honored his versatile body of work across film, theater, and songwriting. In 2024, he and Maltby received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Popular Song Society.[67] As an ambassador for the Society of Composers & Lyricists (SCL), he has mentored younger professionals through educational initiatives and panels, fostering the next generation of scorers and lyricists. His prolific output—spanning over 150 film and television scores—continues to gain traction via post-2020 archival releases, such as the expanded The Conversation soundtrack (2023) and Baby cast recording (2024), which have revived interest on streaming platforms amid renewed appreciation for 1970s cinema.[68][16][69]Culturally, Shire's songs have permeated pop and jazz repertoires, with the Academy Award-winning "It Goes Like It Goes" from Norma Rae (1979) becoming a covered standard in vocal jazz sets for its poignant simplicity. His scores, notably The Conversation (1974), serve as case studies in film music curricula, analyzing techniques for psychological depth and minimalism in academic texts and university courses.[70]
Selected Credits
Filmography
David Shire's film scoring career spans several decades, with notable contributions to feature films across genres. Below is a chronological selection of his key credits, focusing on original scores and songs where applicable.
David Shire's contributions to theater primarily involve composing music for musical revues and full-length musicals, as well as incidental scores for plays, with much of his work developed in long-term collaboration with lyricist Richard Maltby Jr. beginning in their college years at Yale University. Their partnership produced several acclaimed Off-Broadway and Broadway productions that showcased innovative song cycles exploring themes of relationships, urban life, and personal growth, earning nominations and awards for their lyrical and melodic sophistication. Shire's theater scores often blend jazz influences with theatrical storytelling, reflecting his background as a pianist and arranger.One of his earliest professional credits was as musical director and composer for the Off-Off-Broadway revue Graham Crackers in 1963, which featured sketches and songs co-written with Maltby and marked an initial showcase for their material.[71] In 1967, Shire provided incidental music for Peter Ustinov's play The Unknown Soldier and His Wife during its Broadway run at the Vivian Beaumont Theatre, contributing atmospheric underscoring to the anti-war drama directed by John Dexter.[72] He later composed original music for the New York Shakespeare Festival's 1973 production of Shakespeare's As You Like It at the Delacorte Theatre, adapting folk and classical elements to enhance the pastoral comedy's Central Park staging.[2]Shire and Maltby's breakthrough came with the Off-Broadway revue Starting Here, Starting Now in 1977 at the Manhattan Theatre Club, a song cycle drawing from their earlier trunk songs that addressed modern romance and self-discovery; the cast album earned a Grammy Award nomination for Best Musical Show Album.[2] Their first full Broadway musical, Baby, premiered in 1983 at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre, with Shire's score accompanying a book by Sybille Pearson about three couples facing parenthood; it received seven Tony Award nominations, including for Best Original Score.[73] In 1988, they contributed songs to the short-lived Off-Broadway revue Urban Blight at the Westside Theatre, a satirical take on New York City life directed by John Tillinger and Maltby.[74]The duo's 1989 Off-Broadway production Closer Than Ever at the Cherry Lane Theatre built on their revue style, presenting 22 songs about life's transitions without a traditional book; it won Outer Critics Circle Awards for Best Musical and Best Score, running for 312 performances.[2]Big, their 1996 Broadway adaptation of the 1988 film at the Shubert Theatre, featured Shire's music for a story of a child's mind in an adult body, earning a Tony nomination for Best Original Score and running for 193 performances despite mixed reviews.[3] Later, Shire served as orchestrator for the 1999 Broadway revival of Saturday Night Fever at the Marquis Theatre, adapting the Bee Gees' disco hits for the stage.[75] Throughout his career, Shire continued developing new musicals with Maltby, including workshopped projects like Take Flight (2007) and others exploring historical and contemporary themes.[19]