Ben Weisman
born on 16/11/1921 in Providence, RI, United States
died on 20/5/2007 in Los Angeles, CA, United States
Ben Weisman
Ben Weisman (November 16, 1921 – May 20, 2007) was an American composer and pianist best known for having written many of the songs associated with Elvis Presley.
A native of Providence, Rhode Island, Ben Weisman was one of Elvis Presley's chief songwriters throughout the 1960s. He co-composed for Elvis' movies and stage performances nearly sixty songs that proceeded to go gold or platinum, including "First in Line", "Got a Lot o' Livin' to Do", "Follow That Dream" and "Wooden Heart". Weisman also wrote songs recorded by Barbra Streisand ("Love in the Afternoon"), The Beatles ("Lend Me Your Comb"), Johnny Mathis ("When I Am with You"), Terry Stafford ("I'll Touch A Star"), Bobby Vee ("The Night Has a Thousand Eyes") and many others. In 1964 Weisman signed a very young songwriter Laramy Smith, 17 years of age, to a production contract and co-wrote a movie script The British Are Coming disposed with the screen writers' guild.
Since Weisman's outward appearance was atypical for a "rock 'n' roll guy", Elvis' pet nickname for him was "the mad professor". Just before Weisman's last meeting with Elvis in 1976, Elvis proudly announced to the crowd that he had recorded more of Weisman's songs than those of any other songwriter. Weisman's most recent musical score was for the 1995 movie Crossroads at Laredo: The Lost Film of Edward D. Wood Jr.
Ben Weisman died at a long-term care hospital in Los Angeles after complications from pneumonia and stroke.
References
- Interview with Ben Weisman
- "Songwriter Ben Weisman," from the Ben Weisman Songbook
- The New York Times: Movies > Ben Weisman
External links
- Ben Weisman at the Internet Movie Database
- Ben Weisman obituary in the May 22 edition of the International Herald Tribune
- Ben Weisman wrote five songs specifically for Terry Stafford's Suspicion! album
This article uses material from the article Ben Weisman from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia and it is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.