Rachel Portman
- September 3rd, 2010
- Posted in Music
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Yesterday I interviewed one of my longtime favorite composers, Rachel Portman. She was the first woman to win an Oscar for best score (for Emma in 1996), and is probably best known for her scores to Chocolat, The Cider House Rules, and The Legend of Bagger Vance.
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Ms. Portman’s style is distinctive; her bailiwick is the sweet string and wind writing with which she has supplied so many light romances. She is an old-fashioned composer in that she still literally “writes” her music with good old pencil and paper, and her classical education manifests itself in her simple and organic orchestration. She’s a marvelous melodist, and admits that most filmmakers pursue her talents because they want something of a traditional melody (a rarity these days).
“Melodies are hard to write,” she told me, “but they’re so worth writing…They have a strange way of working with film that I find intriguing.”
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She sounded very much like Emma Thompson on the phone (probably a dumb American assessment), and came across humble and gentle—much like her music. She seemed genuinely touched that I was such a fan of her oeuvre, and reacted with surprised delight when I praised her relatively unknown score for The Storyteller. (She provided this 1988 Jim Henson-helmed television miniseries with some wonderfully thematic fantasy music, and it will hopefully see a CD release later this year.)
It could be said that much of Ms. Portman’s music sounds alike, that the elegant melodies and plucky promenades from her various films could be substituted for one another without notice. And there is probably some truth to the claim. She has a recognizable “brand,” and several of her scores are taken from the same proverbial page.
But what Ms. Portman does, she does extremely well. Few composers can conjure the kind of breezy, dreamy melodies with such (seemingly) effortless grace. Her orchestration is always so pure, honoring the traditional symphonic instruments and their simple inherent power.
Further, it would be unfair to corral all of Ms. Portman’s music under one broad “light romance” heading. She has addressed darker subject matter in her career, such as in the slavery-themed Beloved and Roman Polanski’s Oliver Twist, as well as the Anthony Hopkins drama The Human Stain. These films also evoked Ms. Portman’s melodic sensibilities, but with a darker and more tragic hue; the results have been rich.
Her latest score is for the film adaptation of the acclaimed novel Never Let Me Go. You will still find some of her familiar pluck and bounce, but the score is marked by a tragic solo cello melody with harmonic accompaniment “suspended above it.” The sadness of the story is supplemented by Ms. Portman’s sensitively devastating music, and we are gifted with another exquisite entry into her dark and dramatic hall of fame.
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If you love film music and aren’t subscribed to Film Score Monthly Online, first of all, SHAME ON YOU. Secondly, click on the link to subscribe. For the cost of a calorie-laden Frappuccino every month, you gain access to the film music industry’s leading publication, chock full of interviews with A-list composers, academic essays, pun-filled editorials, exclusive video and audio content, and tons of great soundtrack reviews. Not only that, but subscribing gives you a key to the entire 20-year back catalog of the magazine. If that doesn’t make your symphonic mouth drool, I don’t know what will.

There’s nothing like a good “tragic solo cello melody” and I’m not even kidding. So glad you were able to interview her–I love getting to know these composers through you. She sounds like a person I’d love to photograph.
@Laura
Glad you’re enjoying this “series.” And believe me, cuz, I really want to find a story on a composer that I can write and you can tag along with camera in tow. It will happen…
Can’t wait for the Graeme Revell and Cliff Martinez interviews.
In all seriousness, while Portman doesn’t rank among my favorite composers, I do find what I’ve heard eminently listenable. “Vianne Sets Up Shop,” for one, is absurdly infectious. And it was a fantastic privilege to attend the world premiere of The Little Prince in Houston several years ago.
I’m curious: how does Portman handle action sequences? I’m not familiar enough with her oeuvre to know, but I’m assuming she doesn’t exactly tackle them with Goldsmithian aggression. (If she did, I suspect we’d be seeing a lot more “Top 10 Portman Action Cues” threads on message boards. Then again, Delerue could let loose with some pretty slammin’ stuff when he wanted to, yet you rarely see discussion of his action music.)
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SHAME ON ME, I guess. Strike me down, film music gods.
@Alan
To be honest, I don’t recall ever hearing Portman tackle an action sequence…nor can I find any indication that she has. (The titles in her catalog that jump out as possibilities are Hart’s War and The Manchurian Candidate, but I’ve never heard either score.) Clearly most of the films she scores don’t require much aggression of any kind, Goldsmithian or otherwise. And I, for one, am content with that, as it takes very special action music to pique and keep my interest.
Portman said she gravitates towards films with “heart and emotion,” and I infer that she probably gravitates away from films with blood and guts (and car chases).
Color me intrigued: what action music do you consider to be “very special”?
By the way, if you love film music and don’t think “Raisuli Attacks” is one of the finest action cues ever written, SHAME ON YOU.
WHOA…i JUST, as in a matter of minutes ago, read a synopsis of the novel “never let me go”…crazy.