Composer Alexandre Desplat plays โHappy Birthday to Youโ on his keyboard โ but with a twist: the final note on โyouโ is higher than in the traditional melody.
Itโs Igor Stravinskyโs โGreeting Prelude,โ a serial variation of the familiar tune composed in 1955 for the 80th birthday of French conductor Pierre Monteux. This inventive transformation by the Russian composer inspired Desplat to, as he puts it, โbendโ a piece from Stravinskyโs ballet โThe Firebirdโ for the score of Wes Andersonโs โThe Phoenician Scheme,โ now playing in theaters.
โThe seed of the score comes from a piece by Stravinsky, and thereโs this little, short melody that Iโve used, and twisted and expanded,โ Desplat tells Variety over Zoom. โWhen I started playing with that, I thought about what Stravinsky had done, and tried to stay in Stravinskyโs world.โ
Desplat taps out a brief melody on his keyboard โ a leitmotif destined to become the musical anchor of Andersonโs latest film. The story follows business magnate Zsa-zsa Korda (Benicio Del Toro) as he embarks on an ambitious venture with his estranged daughter โ a nun named Liesl (Mia Threapleton) โ and her entomology tutor, Bjorn (Michael Cera).
Variations of that leitmotif โ derived from โThe Firebirdโ โ play over the transition cards, showcasing the destinations the trio travel to as they scramble to cover a funding gap for Kordaโs sprawling infrastructure project.
โIt should be called โThe Russian Scheme,โโ Desplat jokes.
Benicio Del Toro as Zsa-Zsa Korda, Michael Cera as Bjorn and Mia Threapleton as Liesl in โThe Phoenician Scheme.โ
Courtesy of TPS Productions/Focu
Stravinskyโs influence resonates beyond the score. โThe Phoenician Schemeโ features several pieces of the Russian composerโs works, including the โApotheosisโ from his ballet โApolloโ during the opening credits. Music by fellow classical giants Bach and Beethoven can also be heard, alongside jazz arrangements by Gene Krupa, Gerry Mulligan and Glenn Miller.
Desplat aimed to โslalom aroundโ those classical and jazz pieces when writing the score.
โThere are too many things happening, and I just canโt musically link them,โ he explains. โSo I have to avoid them and let them play, and then find a flourish of mine โ and another. These songs, these pieces, keep going along, and I just jump around.โ
This musical maneuvering is especially noticeable, Desplat points out, because the only music the characters hear comes directly from tracks by the other artists โ played through radios, bands and turntables visible on screen.
โIn this very early shot, this turntable is playing โThe Firebird,โ and so it created what we call diegetic music, which is in the film, and non-diegetic music โ which is the score โ to be completely connected,โ Desplat says. โ[The music] goes in and out of the image.โ
Despite the filmโs eclectic cast โ from Ceraโs quirky Norwegian insect specialist to Kordaโs devious, bushy-browed half-brother, Uncle Nubar (Benedict Cumberbatch) โ Desplat chose not to compose distinct themes for individual characters. Instead, he focused on crafting melodies that enrich the filmโs overall atmosphere.
โIt would be a Rubikโs Cube to give colors to every character,โ he admits.

Michael Cera as Bjorn and Mia Threapleton as Liesl in โThe Phoenician Scheme.โ
Courtesy of TPS Productions/Focu
Desplat has been a longtime collaborator of Andersonโs, first working with the visionary auteur on the 2009 stop-motion comedy โFantastic Mr. Fox.โ Since then, heโs contributed to โMoonrise Kingdomโ (2012), โThe Grand Budapest Hotelโ (2014), โIsle of Dogsโ (2018), โThe French Dispatchโ (2021) and โAsteroid Cityโ (2023).
โSince โFantastic Mr. Fox,โ we have this kind of little toolbox that we keep nearby. The glockenspiel, the choir, the mandolin, the banjo, recorders โ and theyโre there sitting, and we try to find something new,โ Desplat says. โBut at times, we pick one tool from the box that belongs to the previous movies, and we inject it into the scope.โ (In the case of โThe Phoenician Scheme,โ they pulled drums and piano from the toolbox.)
When asked how he would define the โWes Anderson sound,โ Desplat describes it as โaccessible, simple but not simplistic, unashamedly melodic, obsessively repetitiveโ and an โextravaganza of sounds.โ
That sensibility carries through in โThe Phoenician Scheme,โ which retains the signature whimsy and eccentric charm of Desplatโs earlier collaborations with Anderson. Yet to the composer, this score stands apart in one notable way: โStravinsky became the core.โ


