Helmy Kresa

Helmy Kresa, (born in Meissen, Germany on November 7, 1904,[1] died 1991, Long Island, New York) was a songwriter and the principal arranger and orchestrator for Irving Berlin.[2]

In 1931 Kresa wrote "That's My Desire," which Frankie Laine, Louis Armstrong and a host of others recorded. He also composed the instrumental music for Martin Scorsese's film "Raging Bull".

Kresa's was the first published arrangement of "All of Me," written by Gerald Marks and Seymour Simons. He also acted as the arranger for Berlin for some stage musicals, including Call Me Madam (1952), Miss Liberty (1950) and Annie Get Your Gun (1949).

In 1926, Kresa began working for Berlin, where he transcribed what Berlin was playing into musical manuscript form as Berlin could neither read nor write music, eventually becoming the general professional manager of the Irving Berlin Music Company.[3]

He died of pneumonia in Southampton Hospital, Southampton, Long Island, New York.

His son is Kent Kresa.

References

  1. ASCAP Biographical Dictionary (1948)
  2. "Helmy Kresa, Songwriter, 86". 23 August 1991 via NYTimes.com.
  3. "White Christmas".


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.