Walter Kent was an American composer and conductor. Some notable compositions are: "I'll Be Home for Christmas", "I’m Gonna Live Till I Die" and " The White Cliffs of Dover".
Early life
Walter Kent was born to a Jewish family on November 29, 1911 in New York City. He graduated from Townsend Harris Hall High School. Kent received a scholarship to attend the Juilliard School of Music in New York where he chose to pursue advanced study of the violin. Kent was also involved in private music study with Leopold Auer and Samuel Gardner. He also received more formal education at City College of New York. After completion of his university education, Kent conducted his own orchestra in New York, performing in theatres and on the radio. Additionally, Kent became a freelance architect following his education, continuing to write music in his spare time.
Career
Following his completion of his education, Kent was an architect, continuing to write music on the side, conducting his own orchestra performing on radio and in theatres. In 1932, Kent co-wrote his first major song with Milton Drake and Abner Silver entitled, “Pu-Leeze, Mister Hemingway”. Following his break, Kent moved to Los Angeles, remaining a freelance architect, while venturing into his musical career. Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, Kent worked in the motion picture industry composing songs for films, including several westerns. As World War II started in Europe, Kent’s thematic concepts of his work turned towards the conflict, with the composition of the melody of " The White Cliffs of Dover" in 1941. The song was a piece that expressed sympathy for England’s struggle against the looming Nazi threat at the time. Kent received two Oscar nominations, one in 1944 for his song "Too Much In Love", showcased in the film Song of the Open Road and another in 1945 for “Endlessly” found in Earl Carroll's Vanities. In 1951, Walter Kent wrote the stage score for Seventeen alongside Kim Gannon. The musical was shown for five months. Throughout his career, Kent worked with multiple artists including; Al Hoffman, Mann Curtis, Jerome Jerome, Richard Byron and Milton Drake. After 1951, Kent’s career in Hollywood dwindled and he seldom produced any music following his work on Seventeen.
Death
Preceding his death in 1989, Kent journeyed to Kent, England to view the cliffs of Dover. At the time of his visit, he donated an original manuscript of the song " The White Cliffs of Dover" and participated in the preliminary stages of planning a war commemoration tourist center. Walter Kent died at the age of 82 on March 2, 1994 in Los Angeles.
Composed works
The following is a list of musical works from the career of Walter Kent:
I Could Get Married Today; from the Broadway Musical Seventeen
After All It’s Spring; from the Broadway Musical Seventeen
This Could Be The Night
Swingin’ Along
Filmography
Kent began composing for movies in the late 1930s with beginning with Manhattan Merry-Go-Round in 1937 and continuing to doing so for the next three decades. Kent received Oscar nominations for his film compositions entitled “Too Much In Love” and “Endlessly”. He worked alongside Kim Gannon, composing songs for the big screen, for much of his Hollywood career. In 1950, Kent worked with Gannon once again to create the musical stage score for Seventeen, a Broadway musical based upon a novel of the same name. Kent’s song “I’ll Be Home For Christmas” has passed the test of time and remains to be a holiday classic, often used in holiday based cinema. Below is a list of Kent’s contributive film/theatrical works: