11 Things We Learned at AFI Tribute to John Williams

2022-07-30 08:58:03 By : Ms. Monica Zhao

Kobe Bryant reveals why he used ”Star Wars“ music for inspiration when he returned from injury, among other stories

It takes a special kind of L.A. icon to bring together such disparate local luminaries as retired Laker Kobe Bryant and charismatic Los Angeles Philharmonic conductor Gustavo Dudamel, not to mention Steven Spielberg and George Lucas and Harrison Ford and Tom Hanks. But composer John Williams did just that on Thursday night at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, drawing an eclectic crowd of heavy hitters to see him become the first composer to receive the Life Achievement Award from the American Film Institute.

Others in the crowd who came to celebrate the composer of the music to “Jaws,” “Star Wars,” “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” “Jurassic Park,” “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” “Superman” and “Harry Potter” included Drew Barrymore, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Ted Sarandos, Vince Gilligan, Frank Marshall and Kathleen Kennedy and songwriters Diane Warren and Carol Bayer Sager.

“Without John Williams, bikes don’t really fly,” said Spielberg, who has made 27 movies with the prolific conductor, who has received a remarkable 50 Oscar nominations. “There is no Force. Dinosaurs do not walk the Earth. We do not wonder. We do not believe.”

Also Read: See 'Star Wars' Holograms Hover Over Soundtrack LPs (Video)

Also Read: See 'Star Wars' Holograms Hover Over Soundtrack LPs (Video)

An edited version of the AFI show will be broadcast on TNT on June 15 — but in the meantime, here’s some of what we learned.

1. John Williams played piano for Marilyn Monroe … sort of. A film detailing Williams’ start in Hollywood pointed out that the composer got his start as a pianist working with composers like Bernard Hermann and Elmer Bernstein. In a series of clips, you could hear Williams’ piano in scenes from “To Kill a Mockingbird” (score by Bernstein), “The Apartment” and “Some Like It Hot” (Adolph Deutsch).

The “Some Like It Hot” clip featured Marilyn Monroe singing “I Wanna Be Loved by You,” with Williams on the soundtrack as part of her backing band. But as he explained in the film, the band did its part in the studio, and simply played to a vocal that Monroe had already recorded.

2. Even in a crowd of Hollywood stars, Kobe Bryant stands out. As the crowd mingled before the program began, one person towered over the others in the orchestra section of the Dolby, which had its usual seats replaced by tables for dinner. Kobe Bryant was taller than anyone else in the room — but the ex-Laker star also exhibited a strong gravitational pull on much of the theater, greeting a steady stream of admirers and posing for a constant string of selfies.

And when he took the stage to the loudest round of applause for anybody other than the guest of honor, Bryant explained that he’d approached Williams during his Laker career to figure out how the composer did it. “John’s music created a level of perfection that I wanted to replicate on the basketball court,” he said. “I thought if I could understand it, I might be able to replicate it.”

A few years later, he added, he turned to Williams’ music to accompany his 2013 return after an injury. “The music I chose to return to the court was the Imperial March from ‘Star Wars,'” he said. “Why? I needed John Williams to inspire me. That’s music for a villain. The Black Mamba was back and the Imperial March immediately put me into character.”

Also Read: Kobe Bryant Kicks Off Post-NBA Life With Time Inc. Partnership

Also Read: Kobe Bryant Kicks Off Post-NBA Life With Time Inc. Partnership

3. The AFI doesn’t have a big budget for roadies. Early in the show, Will Ferrell (who was introduced as “John Williams Ferrell”) took the stage wearing white tie and tails and carrying a conductor’s baton. He mock-conducted an elaborate version of the five-note motif used to communicate with the alien spaceship in “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” incorporating Cloris Leachman and Idina Menzel into the number before it was taken over by a couple dozen singers who appeared at various points in the Dolby’s orchestra section.

When the number ended, all the singers filed down the aisles and left the Dolby — and they all did double duty as their own roadies, carrying the chairs which they’d brought into the theater so that they could sit unnoticed during the first part of the number.

4. Steven Spielberg didn’t like the theme to “Jaws” when he first heard it. When he first came up with the low throbbing sound that would signal the appearance of the shark in Spielberg’s 1975 film, Williams said, he told the director that he had an idea “for this kind of thump-thump thing.'”

But the director didn’t immediately love the thump-thump thing. “When he played that for me on the piano for the first time, I thought he was joking,” said Spielberg. “And he wasn’t.”

Also Read: 'The BFG' Cannes Review: Steven Spielberg, Roald Dahl Have a Great Character, Not a Great Movie

Also Read: 'The BFG' Cannes Review: Steven Spielberg, Roald Dahl Have a Great Character, Not a Great Movie

5. Williams likes to give people nicknames. This information came from “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” director J.J. Abrams, who said that typical conversations with the composer would include sentences like, “Oh, Angel, I just hope this cue is good enough,” and “Baby, do you mind if we reference the Force thing here?”

6. In a career full of iconic film scores, “Star Wars” stands out. When a body of work stretches over 58 years and includes more than 100 film scores, it’s hard for one piece of music to dominate. And the AFI program made a strong case for “E.T. The Extra Terrestrial,” “Schindler’s List,” “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” “Raiders of the Lost Ark” and several other Williams scores.

Still, the “Star Wars” movies were in many ways the stars of the night. Abrams and George Lucas both spoke about the importance of his music to the films, as did Daisy Ridley and Mark Hamill on film. “‘Star Wars’ was meant to be a fantasy for young people,” said Lucas, “and then John wrote the music, and raised it to the level of art.”

Also Read: On 'Star Wars' Day, It's Time to Appreciate George Lucas Again (Commentary)

Also Read: On 'Star Wars' Day, It's Time to Appreciate George Lucas Again (Commentary)

A string of clips made the case strongly — maybe most of all in the simple and ineffably poignant scene of a young Luke Skywalker standing on his home planet of Tatooine and looking out at its two setting suns.

As Hamill said in a film clip, “It’s impossible to understate his importance to those films.”

7. Williams wrote the music for a lengthy and inappropriate love scene between Luke and Leia. This was a sidelight to the “Star Wars” portion of the evening: Williams said he once wrote music for a love scene between two characters he figured were destined to get together — only to find out that he was misguided once Lucas began filling in the backstory and revealing family ties in the second “Star Wars” film, “The Empire Strikes Back.”

“I wrote quite a heated love scene, including a big climax, thinking that Luke and Leia were lovers,” he said. “And I found out two years later that they were brother and sister.”

Also Read: 'Bright Lights' Cannes Review: Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds Documentary Is Very Funny, Brutally Honest

Also Read: 'Bright Lights' Cannes Review: Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds Documentary Is Very Funny, Brutally Honest

8. Gustavo Dudamel conducted a bit of the score to “Star Wars: The Force Awakens.” In his acceptance speech, Williams mentioned that the L.A. Phil maestro had come to a scoring session for “The Force Awakens” as his guest. But while William Ross conducted most of the score, Williams prevailed upon his friend Dudamel to take the baton for what he said was the opening sequence and the end credits.

“So now I can say that he’s the best Hollywood conductor,” added Williams.

On Thursday, Dudamel conducted a small group of musicians from the American Youth Symphony in a gorgeous section of the “Schindler’s List” score, which was perhaps surprisingly the only full-bodied live musical performance on the program.

9. Harrison Ford is a virtuoso of grumpiness. Maybe we didn’t learn this on Thursday night — maybe we already knew it, since Ford’s famously terse interviews and public appearances are widely known. But the actor brought the house down when he walked on stage to the “Indiana Jones” theme and grumbled, “That damn music follows me everywhere.”

He elaborated, “It plays every time I walk on a stage, every time I walk off a stage. It was playing in the operating room when I went in for my colonoscopy.”

Also Read: 9 Other Actors Who Have Replaced Harrison Ford in Blockbuster Roles (Photos)

Also Read: 9 Other Actors Who Have Replaced Harrison Ford in Blockbuster Roles (Photos)

10. Williams didn’t think he was good enough to write the score for “Schindler’s List.” When he first saw a rough cut of Spielberg’s film set during the Holocaust in World War II, Williams said, he had to leave the room and take a walk to collect himself before facing the director.

Then, he said, he tried to get out of the job. “I said, ‘Steven, this is a great film, and you need a better composer than I am to write the music,'” Williams said. “And he said, ‘I know, but they’re all dead.'”

11. Even Spielberg gets insecure. This revelation came from the pre-Williams part of the program, when television director and producer Lesli Linka Glatter accepted the Franklin J. Schaffner Alumni Medal. Glatter talked about how before her first TV directing job, she had a nightmare that she showed up to work and found she was on the wrong set, with a crew that didn’t know her and had started filming with a different director.

She told her dreams to the producer who’d hired her, and then immediately regretted letting him know that she was scared. “But he said, ‘Can I tell you a secret, Lesli? I have that dream, too,'” Glatter said, laughing.

“That show was ‘Amazing Stories,’ and that man was Steven Spielberg. Maybe he was just telling me that to make me feel better.”

From his seat next to Williams, Spielberg immediately shook his head no.

Party Report: Bryan Cranston, Bella Hadid and Horses at the Beverly Hilton (Photos) Rainn Wilson and Bryan Cranston, teen stars such as Jack and Jack, Malin Ackerman at a new hotspot, and one media mover pulling a horse into the Beverly Hilton hotel top the party circuit. Getty Images/Various Bella Hadid (bottom right) got one of the first bites of anything at Chloe, a new casual vegan spot in L.A.'s hipster Silverlake neighborhood. It opens on May 31. Hagop Kalaidjian/BFA.com Gwyneth Paltrow checked in to Svedka's Country Club in Hancock Park on Tuesday night, June 14. Before synchronized swimmers performed in the pool, guests toasted the new Cucumber Lime flavor with miniature golf and bocce ball. Michael Simon/StarTraks Morgan Freeman presumably gave sage advice to Robin Sanders at the annual "Backstage at the Geffen" event on May 22.  Jordan Strauss/Invision for Geffen Playhouse/AP Images The wizards of Warner Bros.' TV stable huddled for the post-upfront screenings at Universals' Wizarding World of Harry Potter attraction on May 23. The group included Greg Berlanti, Jerry Bruckheimer, Vanessa Hudgens, Peter Roth, WB TV Distribution President Jeffrey Schlesinger, Kevin Williamson, Danny Pudi and McG. Courtesy WBTV Malin Akerman blew the candles out on her cake at the new Doheny Room in Beverly Hills, an SBE restaurant in the space formerly Lobby, The Lounge, and Mercato di Vetro near Dan Tana's in West Hollywood. This party columnist gives a thumbs up for its late seatings (till 12:30 a.m.) Courtesy of Brand Agency John Krasinski's second spin in the director's chair - for Sony Pictures Classics' "The Hollars" - played at the LA Film Festival on Friday night, June 3. While the film played, Krasinski and castmates Anna Kendrick and Margo Martindale, with SPC Co-President Michael Barker, snuck in a celebratory dinner at the Culver Hotel. After the Dobel Tequila hosted gathering, they bolted back for the Q&A when the family dramedy finished. It played Sundance earlier this year. Sony Pictures Classics Iconic West Hollywood meeting spot The Abbey turned 25 this week. Owner David Cooley (left), welcomed guests to a formal affair early (an orchestra and white drapery covered the Robertson Blvd. hotspot), and welcomed guests like first "out" NFL player Michael Sam (right).  Jonathan Sirand Candis Cayne, who preceded Caitlyn Jenner on TV by a decade and appears on Jenner's E! series, was a popular guest.  "I'm really grateful for 25 years," Cooley told TheWrap. "But tomorrow is a new  day and I hope people still come in. I don't market much, so it's always word of mouth. The community and the neighborhood has been extremely wonderful to me." Mikey Glazer Tubefilter founder Drew Baldwin got a better view of the valet at the Beverly Hilton at Share, Inc.'s "Boomtown Gala," which raised funds for developmentally disabled, abused and neglected children.  Amy Graves TheWrap's Power Women's Breakfast was not the only heavy hitting gathering in NYC this week. Arianna Huffington and MSNBC's Stephanie Ruhle spoke at Brand Innovator's "Top 100 Women in Brand Marketing" event at Santina in NYC on Tuesday, June 7. Also Read: Lena Dunham, Katie Couric Join TheWrap’s Power Women Breakfast NYC (Photos)

Michael Bezjian / Getty Images At the annual high-powered Community In Schools: Los Angeles event at a Westside estate, singer JoJo performed a cover of James Bay's "Let It Go." She also performed with the Venice High School choir. Rich Polk/Getty Images for Communities in Schools of Los Angeles CAA's Michelle Kydd Lee and Kevin Humane spoke at the event honoring their colleague Richard Lovett. Rich Polk/Getty Images for Communities in Schools of Los Angeles Brian Loucks, JoJo, CISLA Executive Director Deborah Marcus got together to raise $600,000 on a Tuesday night on the Westside. Rich Polk/Getty Images for Communities in Schools of Los Angeles Meanwhile at the Gracie Awards at the Beverly Wilshire, which honors women in media, Miami Heat coach Pat Riley was able to attend since his team is out of the NBA Playoffs. He sat with the night's top honoree Lynda Carter, who said she most looked up to Lucille Ball, Carol Burnett, and stuntwoman Jeannie Epper.  Rachel Murray/Getty Images for Alliance for Women in Media Marilu Henner and Kathie Lee Gifford hugged it out at the Gracies. Rachel Murray/Getty Images for Alliance for Women in Media In case you missed it on Instagram or Snapchat, this photo of Justin Bieber protege Madison Beer kissing Jack Gilinksy (of "Jack and Jack" fame) took off like a rocket on social media. They were two of the big names at a Tiger Beat relaunch party at Argyle, celebrating the 2016 reincarnation of the formerly neon-heavy, collage-covered, pin-up mag for adolescent girls. Chelsea Lauren/Shutterstock This crew from the Tiger Beat party are the ones that will be dominating the Hollywood scene in about five years: Nash Grier, Jack Gilinsky, Madison Beer, Jack Johnson, Jake Miller and Bryan J. (There was a prominent L.A. nightclub promoter at the teen bash, building those relationships early.) Chelsea Lauren/Shutterstock "A Bikini a Day's" Devin Brugman hosted this month's Full Moon Bazaar at the Mondrian on Sunset, welcoming pal Shaun Ross (right). The monthly poolside shopping party devolved in to a late night bash that went until 1 a.m.  Courtesy of Mondrian/Morgans Hotel Group Rainn Wilson and Bryan Cranston at the Geffen Backstage fundraiser, which sold out, and raised $1.4 million on a Sunday night. Jordan Strauss/Invision for Geffen Playhouse/AP Images Norman Lear, Jeff Skoll (honoree), Dana Delany, Morgan Freeman (honoree), Alan Horn gathered backstage at the Geffen. Jordan Strauss/Invision for Geffen Playhouse/AP Images "Pretty Little Liars'" castmates Torrey DeVitto, Ian Harding, and Roberto Aguirre chomped down at P.S. Arts' 25th anniversary celebration at Neuehouse, where Makerskit sponsored the bar. Kelsea Holder Previous Slide Next Slide 1 of 22 Inside and backstage at the best industry bashes of the week with The Party Report’s Mikey Glazer Rainn Wilson and Bryan Cranston, teen stars such as Jack and Jack, Malin Ackerman at a new hotspot, and one media mover pulling a horse into the Beverly Hilton hotel top the party circuit. View In Gallery

Rainn Wilson and Bryan Cranston, teen stars such as Jack and Jack, Malin Ackerman at a new hotspot, and one media mover pulling a horse into the Beverly Hilton hotel top the party circuit.

Bella Hadid (bottom right) got one of the first bites of anything at Chloe, a new casual vegan spot in L.A.'s hipster Silverlake neighborhood. It opens on May 31.

Gwyneth Paltrow checked in to Svedka's Country Club in Hancock Park on Tuesday night, June 14. Before synchronized swimmers performed in the pool, guests toasted the new Cucumber Lime flavor with miniature golf and bocce ball.

Morgan Freeman presumably gave sage advice to Robin Sanders at the annual "Backstage at the Geffen" event on May 22. 

The wizards of Warner Bros.' TV stable huddled for the post-upfront screenings at Universals' Wizarding World of Harry Potter attraction on May 23. The group included Greg Berlanti, Jerry Bruckheimer, Vanessa Hudgens, Peter Roth, WB TV Distribution President Jeffrey Schlesinger, Kevin Williamson, Danny Pudi and McG.

Malin Akerman blew the candles out on her cake at the new Doheny Room in Beverly Hills, an SBE restaurant in the space formerly Lobby, The Lounge, and Mercato di Vetro near Dan Tana's in West Hollywood. This party columnist gives a thumbs up for its late seatings (till 12:30 a.m.)

John Krasinski's second spin in the director's chair - for Sony Pictures Classics' "The Hollars" - played at the LA Film Festival on Friday night, June 3. While the film played, Krasinski and castmates Anna Kendrick and Margo Martindale, with SPC Co-President Michael Barker, snuck in a celebratory dinner at the Culver Hotel. After the Dobel Tequila hosted gathering, they bolted back for the Q&A when the family dramedy finished. It played Sundance earlier this year.

Iconic West Hollywood meeting spot The Abbey turned 25 this week. Owner David Cooley (left), welcomed guests to a formal affair early (an orchestra and white drapery covered the Robertson Blvd. hotspot), and welcomed guests like first "out" NFL player Michael Sam (right). 

Candis Cayne, who preceded Caitlyn Jenner on TV by a decade and appears on Jenner's E! series, was a popular guest.  "I'm really grateful for 25 years," Cooley told TheWrap. "But tomorrow is a new  day and I hope people still come in. I don't market much, so it's always word of mouth. The community and the neighborhood has been extremely wonderful to me."

Tubefilter founder Drew Baldwin got a better view of the valet at the Beverly Hilton at Share, Inc.'s "Boomtown Gala," which raised funds for developmentally disabled, abused and neglected children. 

TheWrap's Power Women's Breakfast was not the only heavy hitting gathering in NYC this week. Arianna Huffington and MSNBC's Stephanie Ruhle spoke at Brand Innovator's "Top 100 Women in Brand Marketing" event at Santina in NYC on Tuesday, June 7.

Also Read: Lena Dunham, Katie Couric Join TheWrap’s Power Women Breakfast NYC (Photos)

At the annual high-powered Community In Schools: Los Angeles event at a Westside estate, singer JoJo performed a cover of James Bay's "Let It Go." She also performed with the Venice High School choir.

CAA's Michelle Kydd Lee and Kevin Humane spoke at the event honoring their colleague Richard Lovett.

Brian Loucks, JoJo, CISLA Executive Director Deborah Marcus got together to raise $600,000 on a Tuesday night on the Westside.

Meanwhile at the Gracie Awards at the Beverly Wilshire, which honors women in media, Miami Heat coach Pat Riley was able to attend since his team is out of the NBA Playoffs. He sat with the night's top honoree Lynda Carter, who said she most looked up to Lucille Ball, Carol Burnett, and stuntwoman Jeannie Epper. 

Marilu Henner and Kathie Lee Gifford hugged it out at the Gracies.

In case you missed it on Instagram or Snapchat, this photo of Justin Bieber protege Madison Beer kissing Jack Gilinksy (of "Jack and Jack" fame) took off like a rocket on social media. They were two of the big names at a Tiger Beat relaunch party at Argyle, celebrating the 2016 reincarnation of the formerly neon-heavy, collage-covered, pin-up mag for adolescent girls.

This crew from the Tiger Beat party are the ones that will be dominating the Hollywood scene in about five years: Nash Grier, Jack Gilinsky, Madison Beer, Jack Johnson, Jake Miller and Bryan J. (There was a prominent L.A. nightclub promoter at the teen bash, building those relationships early.)

"A Bikini a Day's" Devin Brugman hosted this month's Full Moon Bazaar at the Mondrian on Sunset, welcoming pal Shaun Ross (right). The monthly poolside shopping party devolved in to a late night bash that went until 1 a.m. 

Rainn Wilson and Bryan Cranston at the Geffen Backstage fundraiser, which sold out, and raised $1.4 million on a Sunday night.

Norman Lear, Jeff Skoll (honoree), Dana Delany, Morgan Freeman (honoree), Alan Horn gathered backstage at the Geffen.

"Pretty Little Liars'" castmates Torrey DeVitto, Ian Harding, and Roberto Aguirre chomped down at P.S. Arts' 25th anniversary celebration at Neuehouse, where Makerskit sponsored the bar.

Inside and backstage at the best industry bashes of the week with The Party Report’s Mikey Glazer

Rainn Wilson and Bryan Cranston, teen stars such as Jack and Jack, Malin Ackerman at a new hotspot, and one media mover pulling a horse into the Beverly Hilton hotel top the party circuit.

Please fill out this field.

Steve Pond's inside look at the artistry and insanity of the awards race, drawn from more than three decades of obsessively chronicling the Oscars and the entertainment industry.

Please fill out this field.

I agree with TheWrap's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy and provide my consent to receive marketing communications from them.