Peter Rodgers Melnick

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Peter Rodgers Melnick (born July 24, 1958) is an American author and composer for film, television and musical theatre.

Career

Some of Melnick’s earlier film score credits include L.A. Story, The Only Thrill, Convicts, and Farce of the Penguins. His television credits include the PBS's, Cinema's Exiles: From Hitler to Hollywood, Indictment: The McMartin Trial, Grand Avenue, and Lily Dale by Horton Foote.

His first produced musical was Adrift in Macao,[1] featuring script and lyrics by Christopher Durang. Melnick then collaborated with Bill Russell on The Last Smoker in America, a musical comedy about a dysfunctional family struggling with a new law forbidding smoking.[2] It opened in Columbus, Ohio in late 2010.

Melnick and Russell have also worked together on two musical one-acts, Patter for the Floating Lady, based on the eponymous Steve Martin, and A Bad Spell, adapted from a Virginia Moriconi short story Simple Arithmetic.

Personal life

Melnick is the son of

The Choate School (which later merged with Rosemary Hall to become Choate Rosemary Hall) and attended Harvard College, Berklee College of Music, and the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.[3] He also studied jazz with the Jaki Byard.[4]

Melnick lives in Montecito, California, with wife, Talia Van-Son.

Works

Musical theatre scores

Film scores

Television scores

  • The Death of a Star (1987) TV documentary
  • The Mystery of the Master Builders (1988) TV documentary
  • Nightingales (1989) TV series
  • The KGB, the Computer and Me (1990); TV documentary
  • Testing Dirty (1990); TV series:
    ABC Afterschool Specials
  • Magic (1991); TV series
  • Edgar Allan Poe: Terror of the Soul (1995); TV series documentary: American Masters
  • Robert Rauschenberg: Inventive Genius (1999); TV series documentary: American Masters
  • Cinema's Exiles: From Hitler to Hollywood (2009); TV documentary
  • James McNeill Whistler: The Case for Beauty (2014) TV documentary

References

  1. ^ Charles Isherwood (14 February 2007). "Here's Looking at You, Beloved Movie Clichés". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-07-12.
  2. ^ Piepenburg, Erik (October 12, 2009). "NYMF: Five Questions About 'The Last Smoker in America'". The New York Times.
  3. The Choate School
    . Retrieved April 22, 2017.
  4. ^ Melnick, Peter (2013). "Biography". PeterMelnick.com. Archived from the original on 2016-10-10. Retrieved 2017-04-22.

External links