Pinar Toprak (born 18 October 1980) is a Turkish-American composer for film, television and video games. She is most well known for composing the score to the hit Marvel movie Captain Marvel (2019). She has won three International Film Music Critics Association Awards for The Lightkeepers (2009), The Wind Gods (2013), and The Tides of Fate (2018), as well as the fanfare of Skydance Media from 2010 to 2022 and contributed music for Fortnite.
Pinar Toprak | |
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Born | (1980-10-18) 18 October 1980 (age 42) Istanbul, Turkey |
Alma mater | Berklee College of Music |
Musical career | |
Genres | Film and television scores, electronic, ambient, jazz |
Occupation(s) | Composer |
Instruments | Piano, keyboards, synthesizer, violin, guitar |
Years active | 2000–present |
Musical artist | |
Website | pinartoprak |
Toprak was born and raised in Istanbul, Turkey, where she began her classical musical education at the age of five. After studying composition and multiple instruments at the conservatory she moved to Chicago to study jazz, before continuing on to Boston for a degree in film scoring from Berklee College of Music. She then moved to Los Angeles, earned a master's degree at California State University, Northridge in composition at age 22, and has quickly become an active and reinvigorating composer in Hollywood. She joined the music production company Media Ventures International (now known as Remote Control), home of film composer Hans Zimmer.
In addition to Captain Marvel, Toprak most recently scored, the Superman prequel series Krypton, the Pixar animated short Purl, the HBO documentary series McMillions, the DC series Stargirl, and the 2021 film The Lost City. Toprak also composed and conducted the fanfare for Amazon Prime Video's Thursday Night Football broadcasts.[1]
Toprak grew up in the "not-fancy part" of Istanbul, Turkey. Her father was an accountant but a lover of the arts. He played violin and starred in stage productions as a young man; when peers from his theater company became popular actors on local TV, he did their books. He nudged Toprak's interest in music and her love of movies. Pretending not to have his glasses handy, he would ask her to read the synopsis and cast for films listed in the newspaper's TV schedule. He also introduced her to American westerns and, crucially, Superman. She memorized the dialogue from the 1978 film starring Christopher Reeve, dubbed into Turkish—and she loved John Williams's score so much that she recorded the soaring, songlike music from the TV to her Walkman so she could listen to it anytime.[2][3]
"Encouraged by her father, Toprak enrolled in the local music conservatory when she was five. She began as a violinist but hated the instrument and switched to guitar."[2]
According to Toprak, she was always drawn to superheroes and comic books growing up. She often felt like the "weird kid out" growing up as a young girl in Turkey, and books gave her an escape to another world that was not her world at all.[4]
Toprak shared a small room with her brother, Jesse Toprak. Her mother, whom the composer characterizes as a quiet homemaker, was so inspired by her headstrong musical daughter that in her 40s, she took up the Turkish stringed oud, which she regularly plays in concerts today. Toprak found refuge in her piano. Music became "the way I was able to express all the things that I was feeling", she says. "I tell my kids that music was my best friend my whole life."[2]
She finished high school at 16, and after her 17th birthday she took the leap to the United States. "She lived with her brother in Wisconsin and taught herself English mostly through conversation, then completed a short ESL program before enrolling at Berklee. Soon after moving to the United States, she realized a career as a jazz guitarist wasn't in the cards and briefly switched to piano."[2]
Toprak graduated from Berklee at 19, thanks to testing out of several classes and taking general courses at a local college. She became a US citizen in 2015.[2]
Toprak received her musical training in her hometown of Istanbul, while attending the Istanbul State Conservatory, the oldest conservatory in Turkey. During her studies there, she focused on composition and multi-instrumentalism.[5]
She then moved to the United States, where she went to Chicago and then to the Berklee College of Music in Boston to study jazz. At Berklee, she was initially a piano performance major, but then pursued film scoring. She received her Bachelor of Music in Film Scoring from Berklee in 2000 when she was 19 years old.[6][7][8]
After Berklee and following her move to Los Angeles, she attended and received her master's degree in Classical Composition from the California State University, Northridge in 2002.[7] It was at CSUN where she was recommended for an internship at Paramount Pictures at the age of 20.[7]
Later in her career, Toprak also instructed Berklee students in Film Scoring as a part of Berklee Online classes.[6]
At the age of 20, Toprak got her first job, an internship at the Music Department of Paramount Pictures, where she attended scoring sessions almost every day.[2] In her own words, this was her first step towards reaching her goal of working for Hans Zimmer, since the experience at Paramount made her feel ready to reach out to him.[9] This method proved to be successful, as she ended up working for Hans Zimmer at his music production company, Media Ventures International (now Remote Control). As required by her job and based on her own interest, she trained herself in programming sample instruments.[7] She left Zimmer's company after a year as she was hired as the composer's assistant to the composer and orchestrator, William Ross.[7]
Her big break as a composer came in 2006 when she composed the score for the video game, Ninety-Nine Nights, when she was also pregnant with her first child.[9] After that, she landed another scoring project for the video game, Behind Enemy Lines 2. Since then, she has worked on more than 40 feature films and several video game and television projects, as well as the fanfare of Skydance Media from 2010 to 2022.[6] Among them was the romantic comedy, The Lightkeepers (2009), the score of which (by Toprak) was nominated and won the 2010 International Film Music Critics Association (IFMCA) Award for Best Comedy Score.[9] Toprak's score for The Lightkeepers also made it to the 2011 Academy Award Shortlist for Best Original Score.[9] Following that, Toprak composed the music to the documentary film, The Wind Gods (2011) for which she received a second IFMCA award for Best Documentary Score in 2011.
Toprak was hired by director Dean Devlin, to compose the score for the 2017 film, Geostorm. While she invested a huge amount of time and money on writing an epic orchestral score for this project, she was laid off after the production companies, Warner Bros. and Skydance Media hired a new director for the movie's reshoots. Under more than $100,000 of debt, and simultaneously, working as a single mother after her divorce, Toprak refers to this period of her life and career as a testing and difficult time.[2]
Her resilience through these hardships came to fruition when her agent, Richard Kraft, contacted her regarding an opportunity to score the video game, Fortnite. In addition, composer Danny Elfman hired Toprak to write additional scores for the 2017 DC superhero movie, Justice League (Dir. Zack Snyder).[2] Prior to Captain Marvel, this was Toprak's gateway to large-scale superhero movies.[9]
Toprak received an opportunity to audition and pitch a main theme for the hit blockbuster film, Captain Marvel. Previously, she had already pitched a demo for the DC blockbuster movie, Wonder Woman (2017), but was not selected for the project.[9] After composing the main theme for Captain Marvel, Toprak hired and conducted a full 70-piece orchestra using her own funds in order to record the theme, while additionally sending a tape regarding her idea about the movie's score.[2][9] The risk of using her personal funds was worth it, as she composed the score for this hit Marvel superhero movie. Consequently, she made history as she became the first woman to ever score a major superhero movie, and the first to compose for a film that made more than $1 billion,[6] and received a nomination for the 2019 World Soundtrack Awards.[10][11] Currently, Toprak is one of the few female composers who is working on major large-scale productions.[2]
Toprak's other notable works include the score to the 2018–2019 series, Krypton, the prequel to the well-known Superman series; DC's recent superhero television series, Stargirl, and the HBO limited series, McMillions (2020), for which she was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Original Music Composition for a Documentary Series or Special.[12] She is the first Turkish composer to be nominated for the Emmys.[13]
In addition, Toprak's work on the 2018 movie, The Tides of Fate earned her the 2019 ASCAP Shirley Walker Award, and also, her third IFMCA Award for Best Original Score for a Documentary Film in 2019.[5]
In contrast to her orchestral and electronic works, Toprak's score in the 2018 Pixar animated short film, Purl (Dir. Kristen Lester) shows elements of her jazz studies and composition.[14]
In 2022, Amazon picked Toprak to compose and conduct the new theme for its Thursday Night Football telecasts. Toprak recorded the theme with at Ocean Way Studios in Nashville with an 80-piece orchestra.[1]
Toprak's other scoring credits include the music for Christina Aguilera's 2019 Las Vegas show, Xperience, as well as Fortnite, and the main theme for Walt Disney World's Epcot theme park.[5]
Toprak is a voting member at the World Soundtrack Academy along with composers such as Carter Burwell, Hildur Guðnadóttir, and fellow Berklee graduates, Alan Silvestri, and Ramin Djawadi.[15]
Toprak currently resides in Los Angeles, and when not composing loves to sail the Pacific Coast.[5]
Denotes films that have not yet been released |
Year | Title | Director | Notes |
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2004 | Hold The Rice | Alfonso Pineda Ulloa | Short film |
Headbreaker | |||
2005 | When All Else Fails | David Ellison | |
2006 | Behind Enemy Lines II: Axis of Evil | James Dodson | |
2007 | Daydreamer | Brahman Turner | |
Sinner | Marc Benardout | ||
Fall Down Dead | Jon Keeyes | ||
In the Name of the Son | Harun Mehmedinović | Short film | |
Say It in Russian | Jeff Celentano | ||
2008 | Ocean of Pearls | Sarab Singh Neelam | with Karsh Kale & Snatam Kaur |
Light of Olympia | San Wei Chan | Animation Feature | |
Pregnant in America | Steve Buonaugurio | Documentary | |
2009 | The Crimson Mask | Elias Plagianos | |
Breaking Point | Jeff Celentano | ||
The Lightkeepers | Daniel Adams | ||
2011 | Last Will | Brent Huff | |
The River Murders | Rich Cowan | ||
Girls! Girls! Girls! | Shana Betz Beth Grant Tracie Laymon Jennifer Lynch Barbara Stepansky America Young |
with Heather Schmidt | |
2012 | Vamperifica | Bruce Ornstein | |
How to Have a Happy Marriage | Jennifer Lynch | ||
Restos | Alfonso Pineda Ulloa | Short film | |
2013 | The Wind Gods | Fritz Mitchell | Documentary film |
2015 | The Challenger | Kent Moran | |
The Curse of Downers Grove | Derick Martini | ||
In Utero | Kathleen Man Gyllenhaal | Documentary film | |
2017 | The Chainbreakers | Rui Yang | with Emir Işılay |
The Monster Project | Victor Mathieu | ||
Justice League[16] | Zack Snyder | Additional music Main score by Danny Elfman | |
2018 | The Angel | Ariel Vromen | |
The Tides of Fate | Fritz Mitchell | Documentary | |
2019 | Purl | Kristen Lester | Short film |
Captain Marvel[17] | Anna Boden Ryan Fleck |
Also writer of Captain Marvel theme in Avengers: Endgame | |
Skyfire | Simon West | ||
2020 | It's Time | Frank Waldeck | |
2021 | Us Again[18] | Zach Parrish | Short film |
2022 | The Lost City | Aaron Nee Adam Nee |
|
Slumberland | Francis Lawrence | ||
2023 | Shotgun Wedding | Jason Moore |
Year | Title | Notes |
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2008 | Beyond Loch Ness | Television film |
Ogre | ||
Ba'al | ||
2009 | Wyvern | |
2010 | Mongolian Death Worm | |
Medium Raw: Night of the Wolf | ||
2015 | Clan of the Cave Bear | |
2016 | Falling Water | 4 episodes |
2018–2019 | Krypton | 20 episodes |
2020–present | Stargirl[19] | 13 episodes |
2020 | McMillions | 6 episodes |
2022–present | Prime Video Sports[20] | Theme song |
Year | Title | Notes |
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2006 | Ninety-Nine Nights | With Takayuki Nakamura |
2017 | Fortnite | Additional music |
Year | Recipient | Award[5][12][11][13][23][24] | Category | Result |
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2010 | The Lightkeepers | International Film Music Critics Association Awards | Best Original Score for a Comedy Film | Won |
2011 | The Wind Gods | Best Original Score for a Documentary Film | Won | |
2019 | The Tides of Fate | Won | ||
American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers Awards | Shirley Walker Award | Won | ||
Captain Marvel | World Soundtrack Awards | Public Choice Award | Nominated | |
2020 | McMillions | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Music Composition for a Documentary Series or Special | Nominated |
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