Pino Donaggio (Body Double) Body Double
Pino Donaggio (born November 24, 1941, Burano, Venice, Italy) composed the score for Body Double (1984).
The De Palma partnership exists because Bernard Herrmann died
The entire De Palma-Donaggio collaboration traces back to a single event. Bernard Herrmann — Hitchcock's most important composer, and the man who had scored De Palma's Sisters (1973) and Obsession (1976) — was set to score Carrie as well. But Herrmann died on the night of the final recording session for his Taxi Driver score in December 1975. De Palma needed a new composer. Time magazine film critic Jay Cocks recommended Donaggio, whose atmospheric score for Nicolas Roeg's Don't Look Now (1973) had impressed Cocks. De Palma took the suggestion, and the partnership that would define his thrillers' sound was born from a death. (mubi)
Donaggio scored seven De Palma films in total:
| Year | Film |
|---|---|
| 1976 | Carrie |
| 1978 | Home Movies |
| 1980 | Dressed to Kill |
| 1981 | Blow Out |
| 1984 | Body Double |
| 1992 | Raising Cain |
| 2012 | Passion |
Where Jerry Goldsmith (Outland) and Ennio Morricone (The Untouchables, Casualties of War, Mission to Mars) brought orchestral grandeur to De Palma's bigger-budget films, Donaggio brought something more unsettling — lush, romantic string melodies that scored scenes of voyeurism and violence with the language of love. The effect is deliberately disturbing: the music tells you to feel desire while the images show you something sinister.
Donaggio saw the De Palma collaboration as the period where he found his voice as a film composer:
"From Dressed to Kill on I had mastered the skills." — Pino Donaggio, Maintitles.net
The partnership was one Donaggio wished had continued through all of De Palma's work:
"I would have liked to do all other films by Brian de Palma." — Pino Donaggio, Maintitles.net
The Body Double score is Bernard Herrmann filtered through Italian romanticism
Donaggio's musical vocabulary owes an obvious debt to Bernard Herrmann, Hitchcock's most important collaborator. The swooping strings, the obsessive repetition, the way melodies circle without resolving — these are Herrmann techniques. But Donaggio adds an Italian sensuality that Herrmann's more austere style didn't have. The result is a score whose romantic surfaces curdle into unease the longer a scene runs.
Donaggio also scored Don't Look Now — another voyeurism-and-death film
Before the De Palma partnership, Donaggio scored Nicolas Roeg's Don't Look Now (1973) — a film about grief, psychic vision, and misinterpreted seeing that shares Body Double's preoccupation with what happens when you trust your eyes. The Roeg score established Donaggio's ability to use lush, romantic orchestration in scenes built around grief and menace.
Before film, Donaggio was a pop star
Donaggio had a successful career as a pop singer in Italy before transitioning to film scoring. His song "Io che non vivo (senza te)" (1965) became a worldwide hit when covered by Dusty Springfield as "You Don't Have to Say You Love Me." The transition from pop balladeer to thriller composer is an unlikely career arc, but it explains the melodic lushness of his film work.