Career
Dudley was born in Chatham, Kent. She attended Eltham Hill Grammar School for Girls.[3] She graduated with a master's degree in music from King's College London in 1978.[4] Trained as a classical performer, she moved into the competitive commercial field as a session musician, where her professional relationship with Trevor Horn began. In 1982, Dudley contributed to the ABC album The Lexicon of Love, produced by Horn. She went from fleshing out keyboard parts to scoring the album's orchestrations (which were, according to Horn, her first-ever string arrangements)[5] and also co-writing one of the songs.[6]
Dudley was a founding member of the band Art of Noise in 1983, which helped pioneer the use of sampling within pop music. Their hits include "Beat Box" (1984), "Moments in Love" (1984), "Close (to the Edit)" (1984), " Peter Gunn Theme with Duane Eddy" (1986), "Legs" (1985, Paranoimia" (1986), which featured a monologue about insomnia by the artificial intelligence character, Max Headroom, and, with Tom Jones, "Kiss", a Top 10 in 1988. Art of Noise also produced the theme tune to the ITV game show The Krypton Factor which was used between 1986 and 1993. "(Theme From) The Krypton Factor" was composed and recorded in 1986 and was reworked as "Crusoe" on their 1987 album.
Dudley's association with Trevor Horn and Art of Noise led on to working with artists such as Frankie Goes to Hollywood, Seal, Marc Almond, Rod Stewart, Robbie Williams and, more recently, Siphiwo. She has co-written songs with Malcolm McLaren ("Buffalo Gals"), Cathy Dennis ("Too Many Walls"), and a 1930s-inspired song with Sting called "This Was Never Meant to Be".[7]
She produced the Tom Jones hit "You Can Leave Your Hat On" (1988) and a Debbie Harry single "Strike Me Pink" (1993).
In 1989, Dudley produced and conducted the string arrangements for the eponymous debut album by Welsh pop duo Waterfront. Her intricate production is demonstrated most notably on the song "Nature of Love", which was released as a single in both the UK and US. Another collaboration in 1989 was with Neil Tennant from Pet Shop Boys and Bernard Sumner of New Order; Dudley contributed the lush string arrangements on their debut Electronic release, "Getting Away with It", which peaked at #12 in the UK in December 1989, and #38 in the US in 1990.
Dudley produced two tracks on the 2002 Opera Babes album Beyond Imagination (ranking No. 1 on the UK classical charts for 11 weeks, and No. 4 on the US Billboard charts). In 2004, she produced the album Voice for Alison Moyet. The album, an eclectic collection of cover versions, reached No. 7 on the UK Albums Chart.
Her works for orchestra include "Northern Lights", a 14-minute reflection of Norway's Aurora Borealis for full orchestra, performed in 2005 and 2006 at the Royal Festival Hall and broadcast on BBC Radio 3's Late Junction programme in May 2005. Her first commission as Composer in Association with the BBC Concert Orchestra was "Music and Silence", inspired by the novel of the same name by Rose Tremain and first performed at The Royal Festival Hall in 2002. Dudley arranged Bach's Chaconne from Partita in D minor for piano trio, and a recording by the Eroica Trio appears on their Baroque album. Her album Ancient and Modern, with modern versions of some traditional hymns and Bach chorales, was released in 1999. She was the musical director for Bill Bailey's Remarkable Guide to the Orchestra, first performed in Brighton then at the Royal Albert Hall in 2008, which was recorded and released as a DVD in December 2009. The show was toured in 2009 with eight different regional orchestras participating. It involved the orchestra playing the Nokia theme tune and a French horn concerto evolving into the theme from Coronation Street.
Dudley collaborated with Sam Taylor-Wood in producing the sound and video installation Sigh at the White Cube in 2008. This work featured the BBC Concert Orchestra on eight large projected screens, miming to Dudley's score.
In 2019, 2022 and 2024, she conducted the Southbank Sinfonia during Martin Fry's Lexicon of Love tour.[8]
Film scores
Dudley's career in film music has spanned 20 years and her film scores include:
- Buster (1988), a British comedy drama starring musician Phil Collins, Julie Walters, Larry Lamb and Sheila Hancock;[7]
- Silence Like Glass (Zwei Frauen) (1989), German-made but set in a cancer ward at a hospital in America;
- The Pope Must Die (1991), a comedy film starring Robbie Coltrane the score of which was co-written with Jeff Beck;
- Knight Moves (1992), an American thriller directed by Carl Schenkel and starring Christopher Lambert;
- The Crying Game (1992), an Irish/British drama film written and directed by Neil Jordan;
- Felidae (1994), German animated mystery film about cats investigating a serial killer;
- The Grotesque (1995), released in the US as Gentlemen Don't Eat Poets a British film starring Alan Bates, Theresa Russell and Sting;
- Hollow Reed (1996), a drama directed by Angela Pope and set in Bath;
- When Saturday Comes (1996), starring Sean Bean, Pete Postlethwaite, Emily Lloyd. Directed by Maria Giese;
- The Full Monty (1997), a Peter Cattaneo-directed comedy about six unemployed steel workers who decide to form a male striptease act. Dudley won the "Best Original Musical or Comedy Score" Oscar for her music;
- American History X (1998), an American drama directed by Tony Kaye, starring Edward Norton and Edward Furlong;
- Pushing Tin (1999), directed by Mike Newell and starring John Cusack and Billy Bob Thornton, a comedy-drama film based around air traffic controllers in New York;
- The Miracle Maker (2000), an animated feature film made for TV by BBC Wales with Russian model makers;
- Lucky Break (2001), a British feelgood comedy starring James Nesbitt and based around a prison escape;
- Monkeybone (2001), an American film combining live-action and stop-motion animation directed by Henry Selick, starring Brendan Fraser and Bridget Fonda;
- The Gathering (2002), an Anthony Horowitz thriller directed by Brian Gilbert and starring Christina Ricci;
- A Man Apart (2003), starring Vin Diesel;
- Bright Young Things (2003), a British drama written and directed by Stephen Fry based on the novel Vile Bodies by Evelyn Waugh;
- Black Book (2006), a World War II film directed by Paul Verhoeven;
- Tristan & Isolde (2006), a Ridley Scott romantic drama based on the medieval romantic legend of Tristan and Iseult and starring James Franco and Sophia Myles;
- Perfect Creature (2007), a New Zealand-made horror/thriller film starring Leo Gregory;
- The Walker (2007), a drama written and directed by Paul Schrader set in Washington, D. C.;
- Les Misérables (2012), a blockbuster version of the celebrated long-running musical (music producer / arranger / additional music composer).
- Elle (2016), a French thriller directed by Paul Verhoeven, starring Isabelle Huppert.
- The Hustle (2019), an American comedy film directed by Chris Addison, starring Anne Hathaway and Rebel Wilson.
- Benedetta (2020), a French/Italian erotic drama directed by Paul Verhoeven, starring Virginie Efira.
- Fing! (2026), a Australian/British family adventure film, starring Taika Waititi.
Her TV music includes:
Awards
In addition to Dudley's Academy Award for The Full Monty, she has received a number of awards and nominations.
- Other honours