A STRESSFUL COLLABORATION
GERARD 
                    SCHURMANN describes his involvement with the music score for 
                    ‘Lawrence of Arabia”
                  
                  
              Based on an article first published in The Cue Sheet Vol.7, No.3, 
                July 1990
              
                  Previous requests for an account of my involvement 
                    with the music score for Lawrence of Arabia have never 
                    tempted me in the slightest. It all happened a long time ago, 
                    my professional life has developed in a direction largely 
                    away from films, and I generally believe subjective reminiscences 
                    of this kind to be defensively slanted towards self-aggrandisement. 
                    Lawrence, now splendidly restored to its original version, 
                    has acquired a life of its own, while the orchestral full 
                    scores are preserved in Columbia’s music library, available 
                    for inspection to anyone who might be interested. Isn’t this 
                    enough?
                  Apparently not, judging by published accounts 
                    of interviews with the composer Maurice Jarre in the French 
                    press and elsewhere. So extraordinary and far reaching are 
                    the inaccuracies, compromising not only me, but also other 
                    musicians who were my friends, that I seem to have no alternative 
                    but to try and set the record straight on at least a few points, 
                    according to verifiable documentation and the best of my recollection. 
                    In mitigation, it may be true that Jarre’s extremely poor 
                    command of English at the time prevented him from knowing 
                    precisely what was going on. However, the idea that Benjamin 
                    Britten for example, as claimed by Jarre, would have agreed 
                    under any circumstances to collaborate with him is absurd. 
                    Ben told me later that he had indeed been tentatively approached 
                    by someone via Boosey and Hawkes, his publishers at the time, 
                    to compose the score. The subject interested him, and he suggested 
                    that he might, in principle, be prepared to take on the assignment 
                    if he was given a year’s notice!
                  The original joint plan of David Lean and Sam 
                    Spiegel had been to ask William Walton and Malcolm Arnold 
                    to write the score together, a fact well remembered by Susana, 
                    Lady Walton, in her biography Behind the Façade: ”…after 
                    seeing the rushes and drinking a fair amount over lunch, they 
                    (William and Malcolm) decided that it (Lawrence) was 
                    a travelogue needing hours of music, and declined. This deeply 
                    offended David Lean, an old friend of William’s, and provoked 
                    an irate phone call from Paris from Sam Spiegel, the producer, 
                    who berated William for his failure to understand commercial 
                    cinema.”…
                  When Jarre and I first met, he told me a disarmingly 
                    personal story of how he had come to Sam Spiegel’s attention, 
                    involving the French actress Juliette Greco and American film 
                    producer Darryl Zanuck. I for my part was both surprised and 
                    delighted to receive a call from my agent David Conyers at 
                    MCA with the message that Sam Spiegel wanted to see me at 
                    his office about the music for Lawrence of Arabia and 
                    would offer me a contract as co-composer with a Frenchman. 
                    All went smoothly at the meeting. Sam, at his most charming 
                    and encouraging, assured me that I would get on well with 
                    Jarre, who was then in Paris. He invited me to meet David 
                    Lean the following day and see a few edited reels. The sheer 
                    beauty of what I saw bowled me over, and David, noticing my 
                    response, asked me to dinner at the Berkeley Hotel where he 
                    was staying. During the meal I brought up the question of 
                    how, after Walton and Arnold, Sam had finally come to choose 
                    Jarre and me, both still in our thirties, for the music. David 
                    explained that, to him, Sam was like an international fur 
                    dealer who travelled the world feeling out samples and reputations.
                  After Jarre’s return to London, we had about 
                    a week to get acquainted. Our time was spent in daily visits 
                    to the viewing theatre in North Audley Street, often followed 
                    by dinner and stimulating conversation with David in the evening. 
                    On a personal level I found Jarre to be all Sam had promised, 
                    charming and easy to get on with. It was important that we 
                    got to know each other’s musical style, and he played me some 
                    recordings of his music for films and theatre productions. 
                    I could not help noticing an elaborate and resourceful use 
                    of percussion – he told me that he had at one time been a 
                    drummer in the famous Régiment du Chambre et Meuse – but I 
                    began to suspect that he had never previously had experience 
                    of composing or orchestrating anything appropriate for the 
                    kind of large symphony orchestra of close to 100 players that 
                    we were going to employ. Indeed, after I had orchestrated 
                    a few of his sketches, my suspicions were abundantly confirmed, 
                    and there was obviously no way in which the division of labour 
                    was going to be shared equally if the score was to get done 
                    in time. It should here perhaps be said that there were no 
                    professional orchestrators as such in England in those years. 
                    Composers did their own orchestration, and any help needed 
                    had to be supplied by another composer. When I explained my 
                    view of the situation to Sam, he was shocked at first. He 
                    then asked me if I would be prepared to take full charge of 
                    the orchestrations, and reduce my input of original music. 
                    Reluctantly, I agreed, and he proceeded to question me further 
                    about my own abilities in that direction. After I told him 
                    that, apart from my composition credits which he knew about, 
                    I had supplemented my income by doing the orchestrations for 
                    The Cruel Sea, The Vikings and, most recently 
                    the Oscar winning score for Exodus, he heaved a sigh 
                    of relief and seemed reassured.
                  The next hurdle was a financial one. Jarre’s 
                    various explanations on this matter make no sense at all. 
                    The trouble arose because MCA advised me not to sign the revised 
                    contract which reduced my role from that of co-composer to 
                    “the Arranger who shall also compose music as may be reasonably 
                    required by the Company.” The new deal meant that I would 
                    be giving up a considerable potential source of income from 
                    royalties for which MCA felt I should be compensated. This 
                    claim was being resisted by Horizon Pictures when I mentioned 
                    it, in Jarre’s presence, to David Lean over dinner. David 
                    was very supportive, advised me to see Sam personally at his 
                    office the next day, and make sure that I use the words “I 
                    resent….” with appropriate conviction. It did the trick immediately, 
                    and Sam soothed me down with his expressed belief that I would 
                    in any case still be required to contribute a fair amount 
                    of original music.
                  In the event, I did not compose any themes 
                    for the film. Jarre is proud to have done all of this himself. 
                    On the other hand, he seems blissfully unaware that inordinate 
                    repetition, however expedient, almost broke the camel’s back 
                    – no pun intended! – not to mention the arranger’s neck which 
                    suffered a slipped disc and a harnessed existence for many 
                    months to come. 
                  I am afraid that Jarre’s faulty memory has 
                    led him deep into the realm of pure fantasy where Sir Adrian 
                    Boult is concerned. The facts are that, unusually, the recording 
                    schedule with the London Philharmonic Orchestra was spread 
                    over an extended period, while part of the score was still 
                    being written. Sessions were booked at irregular intervals 
                    depending on the orchestra’s availability. Sam confided to 
                    me that he needed another British citizen on the list of credits 
                    to be sure of qualifying the film as a British product. This 
                    brought certain tax advantages and would allow Lawrence 
                    to fall within the 50% of the British films quota system that 
                    cinema chains in the UK had to abide by. To that end he had 
                    asked the conductor John Pritchard to record the unsynchronized 
                    music, i.e. a planned Overture which was also largely going 
                    to double as interval music before Part 2, but Pritchard’s 
                    agent Basil Horsfield had apparently demanded a huge fee which 
                    Sam was not prepared to pay. It was I who suggested asking 
                    Sir Adrian Boult, whom I knew well, and Sam readily agreed 
                    when I proposed that we should offer him a fee of 250 guineas 
                    to conduct the Overture in the course of one session sometime 
                    in the middle of the recording schedule.
                  I was able to send Sir Adrian a copy of the 
                    score a few days in advance, but on the morning of his session 
                    at Shepperton Studios I had been working more than 48 hours 
                    at a stretch without sleep, one of many such stints during 
                    Lawrence. Having remembered to arrange for his customary 
                    pint of milk to be handed to him at the studio, I myself arrived 
                    late and, to Sam Spiegel’s dismay, missed a publicity photo 
                    session which Sam thought important. Sir Adrian recorded the 
                    piece as planned and returned the score accompanied by a charming 
                    little note complimenting me on the orchestration.
                  I have left the recollection of my struggles 
                    with Jarre’s musical material until last, because it was heartbreaking 
                    to discover that his audio-dramatic gifts were coupled to 
                    an astonishingly inarticulate musical technique. This combination 
                    has tended over the years to make Jarre’s film scores stand 
                    out as recognizably his, at least for me.
                  I questioned him very closely in the beginning 
                    as to what he had in mind, since there was never even the 
                    slightest indication of either dynamics or instrumentation, 
                    beyond a detailed lay-out for percussion. However, I do remember, 
                    and he never fails to mention it in his interviews, that 
                    he did once specifically ask for three piccolos instead 
                    of two in a military march!"
                  At the end of a week, I decided there was really 
                    nothing further to be gained from our regular meetings, and 
                    his sketches were thereafter delivered to my home by hired 
                    car. Jarre’s indications continued to be lamentably vague, 
                    or lacking altogether, but I had learned to use my initiative 
                    to an extent unprecedented in my experience in the role of 
                    arranger and orchestrator. The percussion parts were always 
                    written out in full, sometimes taking up five or six staves, 
                    while the rest of the music had to content itself with merely 
                    one or two. During the last few weeks the sheer pressure of 
                    getting the notes down in full score became so great that 
                    Phil Jones, the chief copyist in charge, arranged for one 
                    or two copyists to stay and work at my house in relays. 
                  In an attempt to lift my spirits I used occasionally 
                    to speculate idly whether the word “orchestration” had some 
                    unfathomable connotation in French which was responsible for 
                    my agony. It was not until many years later that friends at 
                    the O.R.T.F. in Paris told me about the case of a well-known 
                    French conductor from Lyon who had undertaken to “orchestrate” 
                    a ballet composed by Maurice Jarre, and was subsequently found 
                    wandering the streets in a suicidal condition.
                  I don’t know what it is that Jarre is supposed 
                    to have played to Sam and David on the piano before I joined 
                    the team, but I remember very clearly, after the first couple 
                    of orchestral sessions had taken place, that there were still 
                    doubts to be resolved. We changed harmonies and broadened 
                    some of the main themes to make them more suitable for big 
                    orchestral treatment. It was not until after Jarre and I had 
                    played these somewhat rearranged versions of the material 
                    together on the piano, four hands, to an audience of David 
                    Lean, Sam Spiegel and Robert Bolt at the offices of Horizon 
                    Pictures in Berkeley Street, that the musical ship was well 
                    and truly launched.
                  I know that at the end of it all Jarre was 
                    nervous and uncertain about my orchestral arrangements. He 
                    had never produced such a big sounding score before and seemed 
                    genuinely worried that he would be heavily criticized for 
                    it in France where, he told me, such rich orchestration would 
                    be frowned upon as being a typical product of Hollywood. 
                  At the end of the last music session Jarre 
                    called me over and asked if, for the sake of the film, I would 
                    agree to present a united front at all times, and not betray 
                    any past difficulties between us. I readily concurred, but 
                    found within a few days that he had complained about me at 
                    a press conference in London, and when he arrived in Hollywood 
                    and met Ernest Gold, composer of the Oscar winning music for 
                    the film Exodus with whom I had enjoyed a happy working 
                    relationship as his orchestrator, Jarre began the conversation 
                    to Ernest’s consternation with, “Only you and I know how bad 
                    Gerard Schurmann is!” In more recent times, however, he appears 
                    to have radically changed his opinion. He now seems proud 
                    to claim all of the credit for himself. 
                  Ah well, I could not help being mildly curious 
                    when I read an advertisement for a subsequent Silva Screen 
                    CD release of Lawrence of Arabia announcing “New and 
                    revised orchestrations made under the direction of the composer.” 
                    When I saw the film again, in its restored version many years 
                    later, I felt rather proud of my work, and I cannot think 
                    of a better way to demonstrate the full extent of my personal 
                    input than to invite a comparison between the music as heard 
                    in the film and these “revised” scores, supposedly made under 
                    Jarre’s personal direction, by someone else. 
                  Finally, after Lawrence had won an Oscar 
                    for its music, and a short time before the production of Dr. 
                    Zhivago got underway, David Lean, who liked to work with 
                    the same people around him, wrote to me from Venice to say 
                    that we would soon all be together again on the new film. 
                    Unfortunately, nothing on earth could ever have persuaded 
                    me to repeat the experience of my stressful musical collaboration 
                    on Lawrence.
                   © Gerard Schurmann