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Vladimir Horunzhy | |
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Володимир Хорунжий | |
Born | (1949-09-19) September 19, 1949 (age 75) Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union (now Kyiv, Ukraine) |
Occupation(s) | Film producer, composer |
Years active | 1969–present |
Vladimir Anatoliiovych Horunzhy (born September 19, 1949) is a film producer and composer, a well-known jazz musician. Graduated from a Special music school at Kyiv Music Conservatory. His first composition was written at the age of 12. In the '70s led the Pop-Symphony Orchestra of Radio and Television of Ukraine. From 1977 to 1981 lived and worked in Hungary. Moved to the U.S. in 1981. The first project, which he participated in as a composer there, was the famous daytime soap opera “Santa Barbara”.
An active jazz musician, Vladimir performed at Soviet jazz festivals in Tallinn, Moscow, Donetsk, and throughout the Soviet Union. At age 26 he became principal conductor and staff composer for the Ukrainian National TV and Radio Orchestra, Kyiv. Living in Budapest, Vladimir composed and conducted for Hungarian State Orchestra. Entering the realm of film scoring, he scored feature films and animation. He also performed with jazz-rock groups throughout the European community.
Later on, when Vladimir moved to New York, he had an opportunity to work with such renowned musicians as George Benson, Michael Brecker, Marcus Miller, and Michał Urbaniak, to name just a few. He frequented jazz club "Seventh Avenue South" with his groups "212" and "Central Committee" that included Omar Hakim, Victor Bailey, Bob Malach, Jeff Andrews, Don Mulvaney, Mitch Coodley, and others.
In the course of his work, Vladimir met film composing-great, Jerry Goldsmith. Orchestrating for and studying with the Master, Vladimir further refined his art of film scoring.
Starting in 1991 Vladimir Horunzhy produced his first feature. Comedy "High Strung" had an all-star cast and became an instant hit with fans of Jim Carrey, Steve Oedekerk, Fred Willard, and Kirsten Dunst (her first part in the movies). This film became a cult classic. There are more than 60 features, TV and animation films produced and/or scored by Vladimir Horunzhy. Since 2006 along with a US-based production company, producing Ukrainian film projects. In 2009 he founded the production company/studio InQ located in Kyiv, Ukraine.
Filmography
Producer
- 2013 - Synevir 3D (www.synevirthemovie.com) Gran Prix at Moscow International 3D Film Festival
- 2012 - Lovers in Kyiv (www.loversinkiev.com) winner of more than 20 International Film Festivals
- 2010 – My Widow’s Husband
- 2009 - 13 months
- 2007 - Orangelove
- 1999 – Mike, Lu & Og
- 1999 – Flying Nansen
- 1999 – Turnaround
- 1996 – Lord Protector/ Dark Mist
- 1996 – Original Gangstas
- 1995 - Sacred Cargo
- 1991 – High Strung
Composer
- 2002 - Bookashky winner of more than 40 Grand Prizes at International Film Festivals
- 1999 – Children of the Corn 666
- 1999 – Mike, Lu & Og
- 1999 - Flying Nansen
- 1999 - Turnaround
- 1996 – Lord Protector/ Dark Mist
- 1996 - Original Gangstas
- 1995 – Sacred Cargo
- 1995 – Blood of the innocent
- 1995 – The Langoliers
- 1993 - Point of Impact
- 1992 - Miracle in the Wilderness
- 1992 - Blink of an Eye
- 1991 - High Strung
- 1991 - Firehead
- 1990 – Stranger Within
- 1990 - The Forbidden Dance
- 1990 - Zorro
- 1989 – Elves
- 1989 - Homer and Eddie
- 1989 - Oro fino
- 1989 - Tales from the Crypt
- 1989 - Man of passion / Pasión de hombre
- 1988 - Return of the Living Dead Part II
- 1989 - Creepy Tales
- 1975 - Four inseparable cockroach and the cricket
Notes
External links
- Vladimir Horunzhy at IMDb
- Vladimir Horunzhy on Hollywood.com at archive.today (archived 2013-01-25)
- Vladimir Horunzhy on television.aol.com
- Vladimir Horunzhy on tv.com
- Vladimir's Ukrainian movie Orange Love
- Living people
- 1949 births
- American film producers
- American film score composers
- American television composers
- American male television composers
- 20th-century American composers
- 21st-century American composers
- American male composers
- Ukrainian film score composers
- Ukrainian male composers
- Ukrainian composers
- Soviet film score composers
- Soviet male composers
- American jazz musicians
- American male jazz musicians
- Ukrainian jazz musicians
- Soviet jazz musicians
- Musicians from Kyiv
- Ukrainian emigrants to the United States