contemporaries in Hollywood, than on his own evolution. As early as 1933, with the enormously successful score for King Kong, he had a good sense of which elements in a film would benefit from musical accompaniment, but there is surprising evidence of the features of his mature film scoring style in the musical forms of his pre-Hollywood career. Chapter I explores the context and experiences from which Steiner's approach emerged, and Chapter 2 considers the distinctive features of this style, particularly as they appear in his score for Now, Voyager. While the score may influence readings of the film, it is also interesting to consider how readings of the film might have influenced the composition of the score, and the analysis of Steiner's music can take place in a range of critical and historical contexts. Now, Voyager is a fascinating document of both Hollywood and American preoccupations with women's lives and the issues which were perceived to be important to them: love, family, work, social purpose. The film invites complex, sometimes conflicting readings of the central character as a vamp-ish adultress and displaced mother, and the narrative is dominated by strongly drawn female characters. Chapter 3 considers the context in which the film was created, the range of influences over its production, and how these elements are manifested in readings and interpretations. Chapter 4 considers an experiential view of the film's music and similarities with the sound of other contemporary Steiner scores. The critical reception of the music is also explored alongside the influence of this score on more recent canons of film musicology. This range of critical, historical and interpretative readings and perspectives creates a rich context in which to analyse the score. The juxtaposition of musical analysis with narrative schemes exposes Steiner's dual intention: his thematic design for the score seems superficially to emphasise the dominance of characterisation, while concealing a far deeper scheme of thematic coherence, created by motif, tonality and orchestration. The analysis, Chapter 5, adopts what is likely to have been Steiner's own approach to composition and considers exactly how his understanding of music's dramatic function is manifested in this score. Valuable evidence for analysis is found in Steiner's short score for this film, both in the musical notation and the margin notes and annotations; the examples given are all taken from the original manuscript. The scores for his other films composed in this period give further evidence of Steiner's scoring practice, and his letters and scrapbooks and the unpublished autobiography, Notes to You, all contribute the composer's own perspective to a broader debate about how scores are interpreted. All of the primary resource material is from the Max Steiner Collection in the Arts and Communications Archive at Brigham Young University. -xviii- |