/ Stars that died in 2023: Victor Mizzy died he was 93

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Victor Mizzy died he was 93

Victor Mizzy died he was 93. Mizzy was an American composer for television and movies whose best-known works are the themes to the 1960s television sitcoms Green Acres and The Addams Family. He also penned top-20 songs from the 1930s to 1940s.

(January 9, 1916 – October 20, 2009)


Vic Mizzy was born in Brooklyn, New York and attended New York University.[1] As a child, he played accordion and piano, and was largely self-taught as a composer.[1] During World War II, he served in the U.S. Navy, where he wrote some of his song hits.[1]

Mizzy had two children with his first wife, gracie Small, who as a 1930s child singer had been known as "The Little Girl With The Big Voice", and who remained popular (especially on radio) through the 1950s.[citation needed] One of her daughters, Patty Keeler, a singer and songwriter, often worked with songwriter Doc Pomus.[citation needed]

In the late 1930s, Mizzy, based in New York City,[1] began composing a string of popular songs. These would include Doris Day's 1945 hit "My Dreams Are Getting Better All the Time".[1] Other Mizzy compositions included "There's a Faraway Look in Your Eye" and "Three Little Sisters", both co-written with lyricist Irving Taylor and both sung by the Andrews Sisters; "Take It Easy" (also with lyricist Taylor), "Pretty Kitty Blue Eyes", "The Whole World Is Singing My Song", "Choo'n Gum", "The Jones Boy" (a 1953 hit for The Mills Brothers), and "With a Hey and a Hi and a Ho-Ho-Ho".[1]

Mizzy broke into television circa 1959, composing music for Shirley Temple's Storybook and the themes for Moment of Fear, Klondike and Kentucky Jones.[1] During the 1960s, he wrote themes and scores for the hit shows Green Acres, The Addams Family, as well as for other sitcoms including The Pruitts of Southampton, The Double Life of Henry Phyfe, Captain Nice, The Don Rickles Show, and Temperature's Rising.[1] He also wrote the scores for five Don Knotts films including The Ghost and Mr. Chicken and The Reluctant Astronaut,[1] releasing those scores on a CD companion to the two films' DVD releases.[citation needed] Other work includes scores for the William Castle films The Night Walker and The Busy Body, and underscores for the TV series The Richard Boone Show and Quincy. as well as for such TV movies as Terror on the 40th Floor.[1] He also worked with Sam Raimi for the outtake music of Spider-Man 2 and Spider-Man 3.

Mizzy died at his home in Bel Air, Los Angeles, California on October 17, 2009, aged 93.[2] He was predeceased by a daughter who died in 1995; another daughter survived him.[1]

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