Arrangements By the time De Vol was 16, "he was doing arrangements with professional skill."
Concert appearances In the 1950s, De Vol's orchestra played frequently at the
Hollywood Palladium under the concert name "Music of the Century".
Radio De Vol's orchestra and arrangements were available to radio stations via
electrical transcriptions. His work was syndicated by Capitol Transcriptions, for which he also was musical director.
Hollywood De Vol wrote the scores for many Hollywood movies, receiving
Academy Award nominations for four of them:
Pillow Talk (1959),
Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964),
Cat Ballou (1965) and ''
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner'' (1967). De Vol's numerous scores included
Kiss Me Deadly (1955),
What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962),
McLintock! (1963),
The Flight of the Phoenix (1965),
The Glass Bottom Boat (1966),
The Dirty Dozen (1967),
Hustle (1975),
Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo (1977) and
Herbie Goes Bananas (1980). He also scored many
Doris Day comedies and films for director
Robert Aldrich. De Vol also composed the jingle for the
Screen Gems' "Dancing Sticks" logo (1963–1965), which appeared on all television series produced by the television division of
Columbia Pictures.
Television work De Vol was musical director (and occasionally seen) on
Edgar Bergen's
CBS Television prime-time game show
Do You Trust Your Wife? (1956-1957). "Frank De Vol's orchestra" was featured on the
NBC Television prime-time musical variety series
The Lux Show Starring Rosemary Clooney (1957-1958). During this time, he appeared on
The Betty White Show (1954) and
Rod Cameron's
syndicated State Trooper. In 1964 he was seen in an episode during the first season of,
My Favorite Martian and several guest spots on different television shows throughout the 1960s. In the 1970s, he appeared as the ironically named dour bandleader Happy Kyne on the talk show satire/parody
Fernwood 2 Night (1977) and
America 2-Night (1978). De Vol is best recognized for his television theme tunes, like
Family Affair,
The Brady Bunch and
My Three Sons. The
My Three Sons theme was musically complex, with a marimba playing a triplet
obligato (the famous tune "Chopsticks") over the melody in
time, and was a hit single in 1961. He composed scores for episodes of
McCloud and
The Love Boat, amongst other work for television. Beginning in 1969, "The Fuzz" became the theme song of Brazilian television newscast
Jornal Nacional.
Acting De Vol was also an actor specializing in
deadpan comic characters; first appearing in various episodes of
Life With Elizabeth, starring
Betty White. He was perhaps best known as the dour bandleader Happy Kyne on the
Norman Lear talk show parodies
Fernwood 2 Night and
America 2-Night, in 1977–78. He also had a recurring role in ''
I'm Dickens, He's Fenster'' as Myron Bannister, Dickens & Fenster's boss; and appeared on
The Cara Williams Show,
I Dream of Jeannie,
Gidget, Bonanza,
Petticoat Junction (the 1967 episode, "That Was the Night That Was" and the 1969 episode, "The Organ Fund" as Reverend Barton),
Mickey starring
Mickey Rooney,
The Brady Bunch,
Get Smart (at least 2 appearances as Professor Carleton) and
The Jeffersons. He had also comic roles as Chief Eaglewood, the head of the Thundercloud Boys' Camp in 1961's
The Parent Trap, and as the onscreen narrator in
Jerry Lewis's 1967 comedy film
The Big Mouth. De Vol appeared as a bandleader in the last season of
My Three Sons, in addition to writing the theme music and serving as in-house composer for most of the show's twelve seasons. He also scored most episodes of
Family Affair, including many of the same incidental music cues as
My Three Sons. In 1980, he appeared in the second season of ''
Diff'rent Strokes'', in episode 22, "The Slumber Party". De Vol preferred to be credited as "Frank De Vol" for his acting appearances, and as "De Vol" for his musical work. ==Personal life==