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Mark
Watters is a five time Emmy Award winner whose composition credits include
Doug's First Movie, The Return Of Jafar and Aladdin and the King of
Thieves for Disney, The Pebble And The Penguin and All Dogs Go To Heaven
2 for MGM as well as over 300 episodes of various television series
including The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, Tiny Toon Adventures, The New
Pink Panther, All Dogs Go To Heaven, 101 Dalmatians and A Very Muppet
Christmas.
In 1996, Mark served as Music Director for the Centennial Olympic Games
in Atlanta for which he received an Emmy Award for Outstanding Musical
Direction and an Emmy nomination for the song "Faster, Higher,
Stronger," performed by opera legend Jessye Norman and co-written
with lyricist Lorraine Feather. He returned to the Olympic podium again
as Music Director for the 2002 Salt Lake Olympic Winter Games where
he had the honor of working with the acclaimed Utah Symphony and the
Grammy Award winning Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
Other recent credits include the award winning score to "Disney's
True Life Adventures," featuring four one-hour television documentaries.
This critically acclaimed series captured the beauty and magnificence
as well as the acute harshness of nature around the world.
As
conductor and arranger for country music star, Trisha Yearwood, Mr.
Watters has guest conducted such orchestras as The Los Angeles Philharmonic,
The London Symphony, The Detroit Symphony, and The Atlanta Symphony.
His arrangements are featured on her platinum selling CD, Thinking About
You from MCA. Born and raised in Irving, Texas, he attended the University
of Southern California where he majored in saxophone. His numerous performances
with the Los Angeles Philharmonic were with conductors such as Leonard
Bernstein, Zubin Mehta, Pierre Boulez, Erich Leinsdorf, and Michael
Tilson Thomas. Other credits include The Joffrey Ballet Orchestra, The
Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, and The Ojai Festival Orchestra as well as
numerous film and television scores. He currently lives in Chatsworth
with his wife, Vanessa.
Mark has served on the Board of Governors of the Television Academy
as well as a past president of the Society of Composers and Lyricists.
For more information, please see the current projects page.
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