Joining as an uncredited orchestrator at
United Artists where Newman already was house composer, an early project was
Eddie Cantor’s
Kid Millions, where he shared song arranging duties with the young
Roger Edens (in his days before joining
MGM’s
Freed unit). He also ventured out with other composers and musical directors including
Max Steiner (
The Garden of Allah, 1936), got to work with
Fred Astaire in
Irving Berlin’s
Top Hat and received his first screen credit for
Eleanor Powell’s (no relation)
Broadway Melody of 1936. More highbrow, he was sole orchestrator for the experimental ballet film Spring Night choreographed and danced by
David Lichine as Pan and conducted by
Constantin Bakaleinikoff. In 1936 he recommended ex-Chappell colleague
David Raksin join Newman’s unit and together they shared duties as the arrangers of
Charlie Chaplin’s beloved music in his first fully soundtracked (if not very talkie) film
Modern Times. After the Gershwins tried their luck in motion pictures, Powell became a good friend of the composer and was often a guest at their home. While working on
The Goldwyn Follies of 1938, he got to introduce settings for the last songs composed by Gershwin - “
Love is Here to Stay” and “
Love Walked In” - plus
George Balanchine’s groundbreaking Technicolor ballets featuring
Vera Zorina. At the close of the decade, he also collaborated with
Robert Russell Bennett and
Conrad Salinger as the powerhouse trio of (unbilled) orchestrators for Newman’s original music to
George Stevens'
Gunga Din. Throughout the 1940s Powell lobbied on behalf of fellow orchestrators for royalties and advised on ways to modernize copyright law, serving a short stint as President of
American Society of Music Arrangers from 1946 to 47. ==Musical arrangement technique==