ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I OWE SPECIAL THANKS TO A NUMBER OF PEOPLE WHO HAVE assisted with this project. First, I must acknowledge my wonderful thesis committee at the University of Iowa. Corey Creekmur suggested useful ways to approach the topic, helped me obtain key film resources, and provided a particularly penetrating response to an early draft. Kim Marra raised important questions and offered a careful reading of the theater-related sections of the book. In the University of Iowa’s School of Music, Bob Cook carefully read the early chapters, alerted me to new music sources, and offered numerous suggestions for sharpening my musical analysis. Happily, midway through this project the University of Iowa hired film music specialist Nathan Platte, and this project has benefited immensely from his expertise, insights, and probing questions.
My biggest debt at Iowa, however, is to Rick Altman, who went beyond the call of duty for me even before I arrived at the university. He remained the model of a generous and dedicated adviser, lending me sheet music and videos and eventually giving me an enormous collection of film sound material; reading drafts of my articles; responding promptly to my inquiries; providing rapid yet thorough responses to every chapter; and connecting me with key scholars. His film sound courses and penetrating scholarship were major catalysts for this project, and I benefited tremendously from his commitment to it.
Many other individuals have been involved with this project at various stages and deserve acknowledgment here. My thanks to Steve Choe for offering several key ideas for framing the project, Nicole Biamonte for providing encouragement and advice during the early stages, David Mayer for offering helpful suggestions, and Michael Pisani for taking time out of his busy schedule to assist me with the complex topic of musical accompaniment in theatrical melodrama. I presented parts of this project in many diff erent places and contexts. For their helpful and encouraging responses I especially thank Andrew Ritchey, Kyle Stine, Jeff Smith, and my wonderful colleagues at San Diego State University: Greg Durbin, Mark Freeman, D. J. Hopkins, Paula Kalustian, and Martha Lauzen. I also wish to thank Katherine Spring for inviting me to present on a terrific panel on early sound film music at the 2013 Society for Cinema and Media Studies Conference.
I wrote much of this book while I was on a Ballard Seashore Dissertation Completion Fellowship, and I wish to thank the University of Iowa Graduate College for providing this fellowship. I am also grateful to San Diego State University for awarding me money through the University Grants Program to help offset the cost of illustrations and indexing. On my research trips to Los Angeles, Jeannie Pool of Paramount Pictures not only provided a wealth of valuable resources but also helped with the logistics of the trip and even gave a private tour of the Paramount Pictures lot. At the Warner Bros. Archives at the University of Southern California, Jonathon Auxier and Sandra Joy Lee Aguilar responded promptly to my numerous inquiries and helped set up two productive research visits. My thanks also to Shannon Fife and the legal staff at Warner Bros. for their quick responses to my inquires and for permitting me to use photographs from the Warner Bros. Archives. I received valuable assistance from staff members at Special Collections in the Charles E. Young Research Library at UCLA and the UCLA Film & Television Archive. Thanks also go to Quentin Ring and McKenzie Sweeney, who provided generous hospitality in Los Angeles. On a research trip to the Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, Dorinda Hartmann cheerfully assisted me in a week of film viewing.
I wrote most of the first draft of this book on the campus of Western Kentucky University. I owe enormous thanks to Ken Foushee and Selina Langford of the university’s interlibrary loan program for accommodating a continuous onslaught of requests over the course of two years. Without their help this book literally could not have been written. I also thank the Western Kentucky University library personnel for their willingness to order crucial materials for my project.
Special thanks go to John Belton, Jennifer Crewe, and Kathryn Schell at Columbia University Press for their interest in this project and for bringing it to print. I also thank Joe Abbott for his extremely helpful copyediting, and Roy Thomas for his valuable assistance during the book’s production phase. Portions of chapters 3, 5, and 6 appear in “Diegetic Withdrawal and Other Worlds: Film Music Strategies Before King Kong, 1927–1933,” Cinema Journal 53, no. 1 (2013), and portions of chapters 2 and 3 appear in “Experiments in Early Sound Film Music: Strategies and Rerecording, 1928–1930,” American Music 31, no. 4 (2013). I am grateful to editors Will Brooker at Cinema Journal and Neil Lerner at American Music for their invaluable editorial guidance.
I wish to thank my parents, John and Lynn, and my brother, Jay, who have encouraged me since the day I decided to pursue this career. Their interest in this project, along with their love and moral support, has helped keep me energized and motivated. Finally, I am indebted, in ways words cannot quite express, to my wife, Amy, who on my behalf endured six years of poverty, months of subzero temperatures, moves to four different states, and endless movie screenings. She has remained a champion, editing all of my writing, offering continual encouragement, sharing her office space, and loving me throughout the process.