Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Aug 25, 2012 · They divorced in 1938 having a son Michael Ray Heindorf who himself would become an orchestrator at Warner Bros. Michael passed away in 2002, his wife Mary the following year. They had no children. Ray connected with Warner Brothers and was with them ever since.

    • Haverstraw, Rockland County, New York, USA
    • August 25, 1908
  2. Aug 25, 2008 · Heindorf had a son, Michael, who also became an established film composer. Coincidentally, Michael Heindorf wrote music for the 1960 television show “The Roaring ’20s,” inspired by the...

    • Saratogian
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ray_HeindorfRay Heindorf - Wikipedia

    Personal life. Census records from 1930 show that Heindorf lived with bandleader and composer Arthur Lange in the Hollywood Hills. [4] Heindorf died in Tarzana, California, aged 71, and reputedly was buried with his favorite conducting baton. Heindorf's son, Michael, was also a film composer.

  4. Ray was first married to Maxine and had a son, the late Michael Heindorf, and later married Lorraine and had two daughters. Ray left Warner Bros. in 1965. Until his death, Ray lived in Los Angeles, having moved from Encino.

    • August 25, 1908
    • February 3, 1980
  5. People also ask

  6. Discover all artworks by Michael Heindorff (German, 1949) on MutualArt along with auctions, exhibitions and articles featuring the artist.

    • German
  7. Michael Heindorf. Composer: The Roaring 20's. Michael Heindorf was the son of Warner Brothers Music Director, Ray Heindorf. Michael attended Chadwick School in Rolling Hills, California and received his high school diploma there in June of 1952. Michael a great and talented musician who had incredible perfect pitch.

  8. Michael Heindorff (b.1949) University of Liverpool. Painter, highly versatile printmaker and teacher, Heindorff attended art college and University of Braunschweig, in Germany, 1970–4. He gained a German National Scholarship, 1972–6, and a DAAD Scholarship for London, 1976–7, attending Royal College of Art, 1975–7.

  1. People also search for