If Google is your search engine of choice, keep an eye out today for Trenton’s own George Antheil. Antheil makes an appearance in Google’s tribute to actress Hedy Lamarr on what would have been her 101st birthday.
Not only was Lamarr marketed as the stunner she was, but she possessed a scientific curiosity decidedly at odds with her big screen persona. During WWII, she and Antheil devised a frequency-hopping system that would have prevented the Nazis from jamming radio-controlled Allied torpedoes.
What this article doesn’t tell us is that Lamarr had initially approached Antheil, a neighbor, to discuss endocrinological matters (a noted polymath himself, Antheil had written books on the subject), in reference to increasing the size of certain of her “assets,” or that neither Lamarr or Antheil ever saw a cent for their patent, which went on to form the basis for modern wireless technology.
Antheil, of course, was the self-proclaimed “Bad Boy of Music” (actually the title of his autobiography), who set Paris on its ear with his “Ballet Mécanique.” The work, conceived for 16 player pianos, 3 airplane propellers, 7 electric bells, and siren, instigated one of classical music’s most notorious riots. Later, the composer settled into a more conservative language to become one of America’s most performed composers.
There was never anything romantic between Lamarr and Antheil. They were just two quirky, misunderstood, lonely, intelligent Americans looking to do their patriotic duty. Happy birthday, Hedy Lamarr, and thank you, Google, for acknowledging George Antheil.
If you’re not a Google user, read more about it and see the animation here:
http://www.cnn.com/2015/11/09/entertainment/hedy-lamarr-google-doodle-feat/

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