Gerald Fried, Emmy-winning composer of the “Roots” miniseries and scores of other TV projects, died Friday in Connecticut of pneumonia, in response to media reports. He was 95.
Born within the Bronx on Feb. 13, 1928, Fried attended Recent York’s High School of Music and the Juilliard School of Music.
He was first oboist with the Dallas Symphony, Pittsburgh Symphony and Recent York’s Little Orchestra, eventually fleeing to California to play with the Los Angeles Philharmonic for one season.
He began busying himself in Hollywood within the late Nineteen Fifties by composing for blockbusters, TV series and more.
Fried scored five Emmy nominations and one win, in 1977, for Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Series, for “Roots.”
Variety reports he got that gig amid producer fears the production wouldn’t finish on time with the unique composer, Quincy Jones, reportedly missing deadlines.
Fried was also nominated for an Academy Award for Best Music, Original Dramatic Rating, for the 1974 animal sexuality documentary “Birds Do It, Bees Do It.”
Throughout his six-decade profession, he worked on musical compositions for dozens of TV projects, comparable to “Star Trek,” “Gilligan’s Island,” “The Man from U.N.C.L.E.,” Gunsmoke,” and more.
Perhaps most notably, the composer scored several movies helmed by his childhood friend, Stanley Kubrick, including “The Killing” (1956) and “Paths of Glory” (1957).
In a 2003 interview with the Television Academy, Fried recalled his prolific profession and the pressures that accompanied it.
“In TV, you see it once, go home, and next Friday you’re conducting the music,” he said on the time. “It was terrifying and exhilarating. The schedules were so tight, I needed to go on my first ideas. There was an orchestra waiting and also you needed to have the music ready. With that sort of pressure, you learn real fast what works and what doesn’t.”
Fried was also an activist who supported the efforts to quell the AIDS crisis. He lost his own son, Zack, at just 5 years old to AIDS in 1987 after he received a blood transfusion that contained HIV.
Fried is survived by his wife, Anita, 4 children, six grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. The Post was unable to succeed in a relative for comment Saturday.