SEALED
The World of Henry Orient is a wonderful, joyful score, bouncing with melody and life. It is one of the cinema’s all-time greatest scores for a movie involving children, but only Elmer Bernstein’s second-greatest work in that genre. Such is the case when To Kill a Mockingbird, written two years earlier, is also on your resume.
The World of Henry Orient (1964) stars real schoolgirls Tippy Walker and Merrie Spaeth as youngsters in New York City obsessed with a local, fairly bad pianist and lothario with a predilection for married women: Henry Orient, a signature comic role for Peter Sellers. The girls follow Henry throughout the city, spoiling his escapades and causing trouble with their innocent games. In the skillful hands of director George Roy Hill, the film is no mere spoof but an honest and emotional study of the girls whose interest in Henry is an outlet for their yearning for parental love.
That the film manages to stay true to its dramatic origins while providing comic belly laughs is evidence of a brilliant composer. Bernstein evokes innocence, mischief, bonding and heartbreak—sometimes all in the same cue. He scales his music perfectly to the girls’ mindset as they tail Henry throughout the city, playing on dramatic film music conventions with a light and comedic touch. His main theme, with gentle mixed meters and a catchy theme, is instantly memorable. As fans of the film have known for 37 years, the score is an absolute gem, without a phony note.
01. Main Title (3:40)
02. Central Park / Rendezvous (3:09)
03. Splitzing (2:10)
04. Sick Joke / Again (1:36)
05. Tuning / Concerto (4:07)
06. Stood Up Again / Scrapbook (2:41)
07. Watching...Waiting / Arrival (2:26)
08. The Switch (1:50)
09. Mansfield (1:23)
10. Arrest (0:56)
11. Cold Remembrance (1:06)
12. Coffee With Henry (3:31)
13. The Secret / Magic / The Detective (2:13)
14. The Search (1:51)
15. Disaster / Flight (2:03)
16. Father / Plans (1:49)
17. Retreat (1:11)
18. Homecoming / End Titles (2:36)