Philippe Parès
Philippe Parès
Biography
Philippe Parès (1 January 1901 – 2 February 1979) was a 20th-century French composer of film scores, d'operettas and light music. The son of Gabriel Parès, music conductor of the Republican Guard, Philippe Parès met Georges Van Parys in the beginning of the 20s. Georges Van Parys, one year younger, commenced from 1925 to compose little pieces (one-act operettas or musical sketches) and songs. In 1927, they collaborated for the first time on La Petite dame du train bleu, which was created in Lyon. The same year, Lulu was presented in Paris, at the Théâtre Daunou. They worked together until 1931. In particular, they wrote the music for the film The Million by René Clair, in collaboration with Armand Bernard. Philippe Parès then made a career as a producer of records and music publisher (ambience and film music, education, works for children ...). He produced, particularly around 1928-1929, several important scores of the late silent film era: La Femme et le Pantin by Jacques de Baroncelli and The Passion of Joan of Arc by Carl Dreyer (music by Victor Alix and Léo Pouget), among others. Source: Article "Philippe Parès" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Known For
Personal Info
Known For
Sound
Known Credits
12
Gender
Male
Birthday
1901-05-03 (124 years old)
Place of Birth
Paris, France
Acting

1971

Samedi soir as Self
Crew

1938

Un fichu métier Music

1932

The Wedding of Miss Beulemans Original Music Composer

1931

Le Million Original Music Composer

1931

Dragnet Night Music

1931

I'll Be Alone After Midnight Original Music Composer

1931

Black and White Sound

1929

Paris' Girls Music

1929

The Woman and the Puppet Original Music Composer

1929

The Road Is Fine Music