Duncan's most famous works are mainly classed in the light music category. As well as those mentioned above, these include
Children in the Park,
20th Century Express,
Sixpenny Ride,
Wine Festival and
Meadow Mist, but in 1958 he composed the title music to the BBC's serial of
Quatermass and the Pit, known as
Mutations. He was also a composer of more serious major orchestral works. His largest work, the
Sinfonia Tellurica, composed in 1970, was a
symphony based on the elements and man's achievements. Other larger compositions include
The Navigators,
St Boniface Down,
A Tale of Two Hearts,
The Visionaries and
The Challenge of Space. His library music appears in many productions of the 1950s and 1960s, such as
The Quatermass Experiment (1953),
Quatermass II (1955),
The Key Man (1957),
Quatermass and the Pit (1958),
Strange Awakening (1958),
Pathfinders In Space (1961) and
Chris Marker's
La jetée (1962). Between 1965 and 1968, his music was heard in several classic episodes of the BBC science fiction serial
Doctor Who (including episodes of "The Space Museum", "The Time Meddler", "Mission To The Unknown", "The Moonbase", "The Tomb Of The Cybermen" and "The Web Of Fear"). Most infamously, his library piece "Grip of the Law" was chosen by Gordon Zahler as the opening titles of
Ed Wood's
Plan 9 from Outer Space. His library music also featured in many Marvel Superhero cartoons for television of the 1960s, and in the modern era much of that has been recycled by the cartoon
SpongeBob SquarePants. In his later years, he was credited with film-score music for the film
The Piano Tuner of Earthquakes (2005) and was also writing a
musical shortly before his death. His "English Suite" became notorious after its use as the theme song for
SNL's fortunate character portrayed and born from an idea of his impersonator, comedian
Jon Lovitz, of Master Thespian, a ruthlessly ambitious,
egomaniacal actor who spoke with a plummy "
Shakespearean"
English accent and often elicited the sympathy of other characters in the sketch, only to reveal the
ruse by declaring his famous catchphrase, "ACTING!" His arch-rival and mentor, Baudelaire (
John Lithgow), often had the last laugh in the escalating
one-upmanship, in reality
childish pranks and paperthin disguises that they both fell for, ostensibly due to their brilliant acting. On the few occasions we actually see him act, it is clear that he is not as good as his reputation would have us believe, on occasion seeming completely oblivious to the concept of
acting. The sketch debuted on the
SNL show of December 7, 1985 and appeared 13 times between 1985 and 1989.
Selected list of works •
High Heels (1949) •
20th Century Express (1951) •
Children in the Park (1954) •
Meadow Mist (A Pastoral Soliloquy) (1954) •
The Navigators, suite (1954) •
The Visionaries, orchestral suite (1957) •
St. Boniface Down (An Idyll) (1957) •
The Girl from Corsica (1958) •
La Torrida (1958) •
Wine Festival (1958) •
A Little Suite (1959) •
Little Debbie (1959) •
Valse mignonette (1959) •
Overland to Oregon, suite (1960) •
Enchanted April (1964) •
Sixpenny Ride (1964) •
Maestro Variations (1967) •
Sinfonia Tellurica (1970) ==Filmography==