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George Gershwin

George Gershwin (/ˈɡɜːrʃ.wɪn/; born Jacob Gershwine; September 26, 1898 – July 11, 1937) was an American composer and pianist whose compositions spanned popular, jazz and classical genres. Among his best-known works are the orchestral compositions Rhapsody in Blue (1924) and An American in Paris (1928), the songs "Swanee" (1919) and "Fascinating Rhythm" (1924), the jazz standards "Embraceable You" (1928) and "I Got Rhythm" (1930), and the opera Porgy and Bess (1935), which included the hit "Summertime".

George Gershwin
Gershwin in 1937 by Carl Van Vechten
Born
Jacob Gershwine

(1898-09-26)September 26, 1898
New York City, U.S.
DiedJuly 11, 1937(1937-07-11) (aged 38)
Resting placeWestchester Hills Cemetery
Occupations
  • Pianist
  • composer
Years active1916–1937
Relatives

Gershwin studied piano under Charles Hambitzer and composition with Rubin Goldmark, Henry Cowell, and Joseph Brody. He began his career as a song plugger but soon started composing Broadway theater works with his brother Ira Gershwin and with Buddy DeSylva. He moved to Paris, intending to study with Nadia Boulanger, but she refused him, afraid that rigorous classical study would ruin his jazz-influenced style; Maurice Ravel voiced similar objections when Gershwin inquired about studying with him. He subsequently composed An American in Paris, returned to New York City and wrote Porgy and Bess with Ira and DuBose Heyward. Initially a commercial failure, it came to be considered one of the most important American operas of the twentieth century and an American cultural classic.

Gershwin moved to Hollywood and composed numerous film scores. He died in 1937, only 38 years old, of a brain tumor.[1]

His compositions have been adapted for use in film and television, with many becoming jazz standards.

Biography

Ancestors

Gershwin was of Jewish ancestry. His grandfather, Jakov Gershowitz, was born in Odesa (Ukraine, then part of the Russian Empire) and had served for 25 years as a mechanic for the Imperial Russian Army to earn the right of free travel and residence as a Jew, finally retiring near Saint Petersburg. His teenage son Moishe, George's father, worked as a leather cutter for women's shoes. His mother, Roza Bruskina, was born in St. Petersburg, Russia.[2][3] Moishe met Roza in Vilnius, Lithuania where her father worked as a furrier. She and her family moved to New York because of increasing anti-Jewish sentiment in Russia, changing her first name to Rose. Moishe, faced with compulsory military service if he remained in Russia, moved to America as soon as he could afford to. Once in New York, he changed his first name to Morris. Gershowitz lived with a maternal uncle in Brooklyn, working as a foreman in a women's shoe factory. He married Rose on July 21, 1895, and Gershowitz soon Anglicized his name to Gershwine.[4][5][6] Their first child, Ira Gershwin, was born on December 6, 1896, after which the family moved into a second-floor apartment at 242 Snediker Avenue in the East New York neighborhood of Brooklyn.

Early life

George was born on September 26, 1898, in the Snediker Avenue apartment. His birth certificate identifies him as Jacob Gershwine, with the surname pronounced 'Gersh-vin' in the Russian and Yiddish immigrant community.[7][8] He was named after his grandfather, and, contrary to the American practice, had no middle name. He soon became known as George,[9] and changed the spelling of his surname to 'Gershwin' around the time he became a professional musician; other family members followed suit.[10] After Ira and George, another boy, Arthur Gershwin (1900–1981), and a girl, Frances Gershwin (1906–1999), were born into the family.

The family lived in many different residences, as their father changed dwellings with each new enterprise in which he became involved. They grew up mostly in the Yiddish Theater District. George and Ira frequented the local Yiddish theaters, with George occasionally appearing onstage as an extra.[11][12][13]

George lived a boyhood not unusual in New York tenements, which included running around with his friends, roller-skating and misbehaving in the streets. Until 1908, he cared nothing about music. Then, as a ten-year-old, he was intrigued upon hearing his friend Maxie Rosenzweig's violin recital.[14] The sound, and the way his friend played, captivated him. At about the same time, George's parents had bought a piano for his older brother Ira. To his parents' surprise, though, and to Ira's relief, it was George who spent more time playing it as he continued to enjoy it.[15]

Although his younger sister Frances Gershwin was the first in the family to make a living through her musical talents, she married young and devoted herself to being a mother and housewife, thus precluding spending any serious time on musical endeavors. Having given up her performing career, she settled upon painting as a creative outlet, which had also been a hobby George briefly pursued. Arthur Gershwin followed in the paths of George and Ira, also becoming a composer of songs, musicals, and short piano pieces. George studied with various piano teachers for about two years (circa 1911) before finally being introduced to Charles Hambitzer by Jack Miller (circa 1913), the pianist in the Beethoven Symphony Orchestra. Until his death in 1918, Hambitzer remained Gershwin's musical mentor, taught him conventional piano technique, introduced him to music of the European classical tradition, and encouraged him to attend orchestral concerts.[16]

Tin Pan Alley and Broadway: 1913–1923

In 1913, Gershwin left school at the age of 15 to work as a "song plugger" on New York City's Tin Pan Alley. He earned $15 a week from Jerome H. Remick and Company, a Detroit-based publishing firm with a branch office in New York.

His first published song was "When You Want 'Em, You Can't Get 'Em, When You've Got 'Em, You Don't Want 'Em" in 1916. It earned the 17-year-old 50 cents.[17]

In 1916, Gershwin started working for Aeolian Company and Standard Music Rolls in New York, recording and arranging. He produced dozens, if not hundreds, of rolls under his own and assumed names (pseudonyms attributed to Gershwin include Fred Murtha and Bert Wynn). He also recorded rolls of his own compositions for the Duo-Art and Welte-Mignon reproducing pianos. As well as recording piano rolls, Gershwin made a brief foray into vaudeville, accompanying both Nora Bayes and Louise Dresser on the piano.[18] His 1917 novelty ragtime, "Rialto Ripples", was a commercial success.[17]

In 1919 he scored his first big national hit with his song "Swanee", with words by Irving Caesar. Al Jolson, a Broadway star and former minstrel singer, heard Gershwin perform "Swanee" at a party and decided to sing it in one of his shows.[17]

In the late 1910s, Gershwin met songwriter and music director William Daly. The two collaborated on the Broadway musicals Piccadilly to Broadway (1920) and For Goodness' Sake (1922), and jointly composed the score for Our Nell (1923). This was the beginning of a long friendship. Daly was a frequent arranger, orchestrator and conductor of Gershwin's music, and Gershwin periodically turned to him for musical advice.[19]

Musical, Europe and classical music: 1924–1928

 
George Gershwin, c. 1935

In 1924, Gershwin composed his first major work, Rhapsody in Blue, for orchestra and piano. It was orchestrated by Ferde Grofé and premiered by Paul Whiteman's Concert Band, in New York. It subsequently went on to be his most popular work, and established Gershwin's signature style and genius in blending vastly different musical styles, including jazz and classical, in revolutionary ways.

Since the early 1920s Gershwin had frequently worked with the lyricist Buddy DeSylva. Together they created the experimental one-act jazz opera Blue Monday, set in Harlem. It is widely regarded as a forerunner to the groundbreaking Porgy and Bess introduced in 1935. In 1924, George and Ira Gershwin collaborated on a stage musical comedy Lady Be Good, which included such future standards as "Fascinating Rhythm" and "Oh, Lady Be Good!".[20] They followed this with Oh, Kay! (1926),[21] Funny Face (1927) and Strike Up the Band (1927 and 1930). Gershwin allowed the latter song, with a modified title, to be used as a football fight song, "Strike Up The Band for UCLA".[22]

In the mid-1920s, Gershwin stayed in Paris for a short period, during which he applied to study composition with the noted Nadia Boulanger, who, along with several other prospective tutors such as Maurice Ravel, turned him down, afraid that rigorous classical study would ruin his jazz-influenced style.[23] Maurice Ravel's rejection letter to Gershwin told him, "Why become a second-rate Ravel when you're already a first-rate Gershwin?" While there, Gershwin wrote An American in Paris. This work received mixed reviews upon its first performance at Carnegie Hall on December 13, 1928, but it quickly became part of the standard repertoire in Europe and the United States.[24]

New York: 1929–1935

In 1929, the Gershwin brothers created Show Girl;[25] the following year brought Girl Crazy,[26] which introduced the standards "Embraceable You", sung by Ginger Rogers, and "I Got Rhythm". 1931's Of Thee I Sing became the first musical comedy to win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama; the winners were George S. Kaufman, Morrie Ryskind, and Ira Gershwin.[27]

Gershwin spent the summer of 1934 on Folly Island in South Carolina after he was invited to visit by the author of the novel Porgy, DuBose Heyward. He was inspired to write the music to his opera Porgy and Bess while on this working vacation.[28] Porgy and Bess was considered another American classic by the composer of Rhapsody in Blue — even if critics could not quite figure out how to evaluate it, or decide whether it was opera or simply an ambitious Broadway musical. "It crossed the barriers," per theater historian Robert Kimball. "It wasn't a musical work per se, and it wasn't a drama per se – it elicited response from both music and drama critics. But the work has sort of always been outside category."[29]

Last years: 1936–1937

After the commercial failure of Porgy and Bess, Gershwin moved to Hollywood, California. In 1936, he was commissioned by RKO Pictures to write the music for the film Shall We Dance, starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. Gershwin's extended score, which would marry ballet with jazz in a new way, runs over an hour. It took Gershwin several months to compose and orchestrate.

Gershwin had a ten-year affair with composer Kay Swift, whom he frequently consulted about his music. The two never married, although she eventually divorced her husband James Warburg in order to commit to the relationship. Swift's granddaughter, Katharine Weber, has suggested that the pair were not married because George's mother Rose was "unhappy that Kay Swift wasn't Jewish".[30] The Gershwins' 1926 musical Oh, Kay was named for her.[31] After Gershwin's death, Swift arranged some of his music, transcribed several of his recordings, and collaborated with his brother Ira on several projects.[32]

Illness and death

Early in 1937, Gershwin began to complain of blinding headaches and a recurring impression that he smelled burning rubber. (As early as February 1934, he had said he smelled burning garbage at the Detroit railway station, though those with him did not.)[33] On February 11, 1937, he performed his Piano Concerto in F in a special concert of his music with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra under the direction of French maestro Pierre Monteux.[34] Gershwin, normally a superb pianist in his own compositions, suffered coordination problems and blackouts during the performance. He was at the time working on other Hollywood film projects while living with Ira and his wife Leonore in their rented house in Beverly Hills. Leonore Gershwin began to be disturbed by George's mood swings and his seeming inability to eat without spilling food at the dinner table. She suspected mental illness and insisted he be moved out of their house to lyricist Yip Harburg's empty quarters nearby, where he was placed in the care of his valet, Paul Mueller. The headaches and olfactory hallucinations continued.

On the night of July 9, 1937, Gershwin collapsed in Harburg's house, where he had been working on the score of The Goldwyn Follies. He was rushed to Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in Los Angeles,[35] and fell into a coma. Only then did his doctors come to believe that he was suffering from a brain tumor. Leonore called George's close friend Emil Mosbacher and explained the dire need to find a neurosurgeon. Mosbacher immediately called pioneering neurosurgeon Harvey Cushing in Boston, who, retired for several years by then, recommended Dr. Walter Dandy, who was on a boat fishing in the Chesapeake Bay with Harry Nice, the governor of Maryland. Mosbacher called the White House and had a Coast Guard cutter sent to find the governor's yacht and bring Dandy quickly to shore.[36] Mosbacher then chartered a plane and flew Dandy to Newark Airport, where he was to catch a plane to Los Angeles;[37] by that time, Gershwin's condition was critical and the need for surgery was immediate.[36] So, before Dandy could arrive,[38] in the early hours of July 11, 1937, doctors at Cedars removed a large brain tumor, believed to have been a glioblastoma, but Gershwin died that morning at the age of 38.[39] The fact that he had suddenly collapsed and become comatose after he stood up on July 9 has been interpreted as brain herniation with Duret hemorrhages.[39]

 
Gershwin's mausoleum in Westchester Hills Cemetery

Gershwin's friends and admirers were shocked and devastated. John O'Hara remarked: "George Gershwin died on July 11, 1937, but I don't have to believe it if I don't want to."[40] He was interred at Westchester Hills Cemetery in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. A memorial concert was held at the Hollywood Bowl on September 8, 1937, at which Otto Klemperer conducted his own orchestration of the second of Gershwin's Three Preludes.[41]

Musical style and influence

 
Birthday party honoring Maurice Ravel in New York City, March 8, 1928. From left: Oskar Fried; Éva Gauthier; Ravel at piano; Manoah Leide-Tedesco; and George Gershwin.

Gershwin was influenced by French composers of the early twentieth century. In turn Maurice Ravel was impressed with Gershwin's abilities, commenting, "Personally I find jazz most interesting: the rhythms, the way the melodies are handled, the melodies themselves. I have heard of George Gershwin's works and I find them intriguing."[42] The orchestrations in Gershwin's symphonic works often seem similar to those of Ravel; likewise, Ravel's two piano concertos evince an influence of Gershwin.

George Gershwin asked to study with Ravel. When Ravel heard how much Gershwin earned, Ravel replied with words to the effect of, "You should give me lessons." (Some versions of this story feature Igor Stravinsky rather than Ravel as the composer; however Stravinsky confirmed that he originally heard the story from Ravel.)[43]

Gershwin's own Concerto in F was criticized for being related to the work of Claude Debussy, more so than to the expected jazz style. The comparison did not deter him from continuing to explore French styles. The title of An American in Paris reflects the very journey that he had consciously taken as a composer: "The opening part will be developed in typical French style, in the manner of Debussy and Les Six, though the tunes are original."[44]

Gershwin was intrigued by the works of Alban Berg, Dmitri Shostakovich, Igor Stravinsky, Darius Milhaud, and Arnold Schoenberg. He also asked Schoenberg for composition lessons. Schoenberg refused, saying "I would only make you a bad Schoenberg, and you're such a good Gershwin already."[45] (This quote is similar to one credited to Maurice Ravel during Gershwin's 1928 visit to France – "Why be a second-rate Ravel, when you are a first-rate Gershwin?") Gershwin was particularly impressed by the music of Berg, who gave him a score of the Lyric Suite. He attended the American premiere of Wozzeck, conducted by Leopold Stokowski in 1931, and was "thrilled and deeply impressed".[46]

Russian Joseph Schillinger's influence as Gershwin's teacher of composition (1932–1936) was substantial in providing him with a method of composition. There has been some disagreement about the nature of Schillinger's influence on Gershwin. After the posthumous success of Porgy and Bess, Schillinger claimed he had a large and direct influence in overseeing the creation of the opera; Ira completely denied that his brother had any such assistance for this work. A third account of Gershwin's musical relationship with his teacher was written by Gershwin's close friend Vernon Duke, also a Schillinger student, in an article for the Musical Quarterly in 1947.[47]

What set Gershwin apart was his ability to manipulate forms of music into his own unique voice. He took the jazz he discovered on Tin Pan Alley into the mainstream by splicing its rhythms and tonality with that of the popular songs of his era. Although George Gershwin would seldom make grand statements about his music, he believed that "true music must reflect the thought and aspirations of the people and time. My people are Americans. My time is today."[48]

In 2007, the Library of Congress named its Gershwin Prize for Popular Song after George and Ira Gershwin. Recognizing the profound and positive effect of popular music on culture, the prize is given annually to a composer or performer whose lifetime contributions exemplify the standard of excellence associated with the Gershwins. On March 1, 2007, the first Gershwin Prize was awarded to Paul Simon.[49]

Recordings and film

Early in his career, under both his own name and pseudonyms, Gershwin recorded more than one hundred forty player piano rolls which were a main source of his income. The majority were popular music of the period and a smaller proportion were of his own works. Once his musical theater-writing income became substantial, his regular roll-recording career became superfluous. He did record additional rolls throughout the 1920s of his main hits for the Aeolian Company's reproducing piano, including a complete version of his Rhapsody in Blue.

Compared to the piano rolls, there are few accessible audio recordings of Gershwin's playing. His first recording was his own "Swanee" with the Fred Van Eps Trio in 1919. The recorded balance highlights the banjo playing of Van Eps, and the piano is overshadowed. The recording took place before "Swanee" became famous as an Al Jolson specialty in early 1920.

Gershwin recorded an abridged version of Rhapsody in Blue with Paul Whiteman and his orchestra for the Victor Talking Machine Company in 1924, soon after the world premiere. Gershwin and the same orchestra made an electrical recording of the abridged version for Victor in 1927. However, a dispute in the studio over interpretation angered Whiteman and he walked out on the session. Victor's staff conductor and arranger Nathaniel Shilkret led the orchestra, though Whiteman is still credited as conductor on the original record labels.[50]

Gershwin made a number of solo piano recordings of tunes from his musicals, some including the vocals of Fred and Adele Astaire, as well as his Three Preludes for piano. In 1929, Gershwin "supervised" the world premiere recording of An American in Paris with Nathaniel Shilkret and the Victor Symphony Orchestra. Gershwin's role in the recording was rather limited, particularly because Shilkret was conducting and had his own ideas about the music. When it was realized that no one had been hired to play the brief celeste solo, Gershwin was asked if he could and would play the instrument, and he agreed. Gershwin can be heard, rather briefly, on the recording during the slow section.

Gershwin appeared on several radio programs, including Rudy Vallee's, and played some of his compositions. This included the third movement of the Concerto in F with Vallee conducting the studio orchestra. Some of these performances were preserved on transcription discs and have been released on LP and CD.

In 1934, in an effort to earn money to finance his planned folk opera, Gershwin hosted his own radio program titled Music by Gershwin. The show was broadcast on the NBC Blue Network from February to May and again in September through the final show on December 23, 1934. He presented his own work as well as the work of other composers.[51] Recordings from this and other radio broadcasts include his Variations on I Got Rhythm, portions of the Concerto in F, and numerous songs from his musical comedies. He also recorded a run-through of his Second Rhapsody, conducting the orchestra and playing the piano solos. Gershwin recorded excerpts from Porgy and Bess with members of the original cast, conducting the orchestra from the keyboard; he even announced the selections and the names of the performers. In 1935, RCA Victor asked him to supervise recordings of highlights from Porgy and Bess; these were his last recordings.

Victor Records issued a 5 record 12 inch 78 rpm Memorial Album (C-29) recorded from the RCA Magic Key program broadcast on July 10, 1938, over the NBC Radio Network. It featured the Victor Salon Group conducted by Nathaniel Shilkret and singer Jane Froman.

A 74-second newsreel film clip of Gershwin playing I Got Rhythm has survived, filmed at the opening of the Manhattan Theater (now The Ed Sullivan Theater) in August 1931.[52] There are also silent home movies of Gershwin, some of them shot on Kodachrome color film stock, which have been featured in tributes to the composer. In addition, there is newsreel footage of Gershwin playing "Mademoiselle from New Rochelle" and "Strike Up the Band" on the piano during a Broadway rehearsal of the 1930 production of Strike Up the Band. In the mid-30s, "Strike Up The Band" was given to UCLA to be used as a football fight song, "Strike Up The Band for UCLA". The comedy team of Clark and McCullough are seen conversing with Gershwin, then singing as he plays.

 
1973 U.S. commemorative stamp honoring Gershwin

In 1945, the film biography Rhapsody in Blue was made, starring Robert Alda as George Gershwin. The film contains many factual errors about Gershwin's life, but also features many examples of his music, including an almost complete performance of Rhapsody in Blue.

In 1965, Movietone Records released an album MTM 1009 featuring Gershwin's piano rolls of the titled George Gershwin plays RHAPSODY IN BLUE and his other favorite compositions. The B-side of the LP featured nine other recordings.

In 1975, Columbia Records released an album featuring Gershwin's piano rolls of Rhapsody In Blue, accompanied by the Columbia Jazz Band playing the original jazz band accompaniment, conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas. The B-side of the Columbia Masterworks release features Tilson Thomas leading the New York Philharmonic in An American In Paris.

In 1976, RCA Records, as part of its "Victrola Americana" line, released a collection of Gershwin recordings taken from 78s recorded in the 1920s and called the LP Gershwin plays Gershwin, Historic First Recordings (RCA Victrola AVM1-1740). Included were recordings of Rhapsody in Blue with the Paul Whiteman Orchestra and Gershwin on piano; An American in Paris, from 1927 with Gershwin on celesta; and Three Preludes, "Clap Yo' Hands" and Someone to Watch Over Me", among others. There are a total of ten recordings on the album. At the opening ceremony of the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, Rhapsody in Blue was performed in spectacular fashion by many pianists.

The soundtrack to Woody Allen's 1979 film Manhattan is composed entirely of Gershwin's compositions, including Rhapsody in Blue, "Love is Sweeping the Country", and "But Not for Me", performed by both the New York Philharmonic under Zubin Mehta and the Buffalo Philharmonic under Michael Tilson Thomas. The film begins with a monolog by Allen, in the role of a writer, describing a character in his book: "He adored New York City ... To him, no matter what the season was, this was still a town that existed in black and white and pulsated to the great tunes of George Gershwin."

In 1993, two audio CDs featuring piano rolls recorded by Gershwin[53] were issued by Nonesuch Records through the efforts of Artis Wodehouse, entitled Gershwin Plays Gershwin: The Piano Rolls.[54]

In 2010, Brian Wilson released Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin, consisting of ten George and Ira Gershwin songs, bookended by passages from Rhapsody in Blue, with two new songs completed from unfinished Gershwin fragments by Wilson and band member Scott Bennett.[55]

Compositions

Orchestral

Solo piano

  • Three Preludes (1926)
  • George Gershwin's Song-book (1932), solo piano arrangements of 18 songs

Operas

London musicals

Broadway musicals

Films for which Gershwin wrote original scores

Legacy

 
George Gershwin with one of his oil paintings, 1931

Estate

Gershwin died intestate, and his estate passed to his mother.[57] The estate continues to collect royalties in the United States from licensing the copyrights on his post-Rhapsody in Blue work.[58] The estate supported the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act (that extended the U.S. 75-year copyright protection an additional 20 years) because its 1923 cutoff date was shortly before Gershwin had begun to create his most popular works. The copyrights on all Gershwin's solo works expired at the end of 2007 in the European Union, based on its life-plus-70-years rule, and in the U.S. on January 1, 2020, on Gershwin's pre-1925 work.[59]

In 2005, The Guardian determined using "estimates of earnings accrued in a composer's lifetime" that George Gershwin was the wealthiest composer of all time.[60]

The George and Ira Gershwin Collection, much of which was donated by Ira and the Gershwin family estates, resides at the Library of Congress.[61]

In September 2013, a partnership between the estates of Ira and George Gershwin and the University of Michigan was created and will provide the university's School of Music, Theatre, and Dance access to Gershwin's entire body of work, which includes all of Gershwin's papers, compositional drafts, and scores.[62] This direct access to all of his works provides opportunities to musicians, composers, and scholars to analyze and reinterpret his work with the goal of accurately reflecting the composers' vision in order to preserve his legacy.[63] The first fascicles of The Gershwin Critical Edition, edited by Mark Clague, are expected in 2017; they will cover the 1924 jazz band version of Rhapsody in Blue, An American in Paris and Porgy and Bess.[64][needs update]

Awards and honors

Namesakes

  • The Gershwin Theatre on Broadway is named after George and Ira.[70]
  • The Gershwin Hotel in the Flatiron District of Manhattan in New York City was named after George and Ira.
  • In Brooklyn, George Gershwin Junior High School 166 is named after him.[71]
  • One of Holland America Line's ships, MS Koningsdam, has a Gershwin Deck (Deck 5)[72]
  • The Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song

Biopic

Portrayals in other media

  • Since 1999, Hershey Felder has produced a one-man show with him portraying George Gershwin Alone, which has played over 3,000 performances and won two 2007 Ovation Awards.[73] In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Felder launched a global live-streaming Hershey Felder Presents: Live from Florence featuring a performance of "Hershey Felder as George Gershwin Alone" in September 2020.[74]
  • Paul Rudd portrays an imaginary friend based on George Gershwin, said to be his creator's favorite composer, in the 2015 series finale of the Irish sitcom Moone Boy, "Gershwin's Bucket List".

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Carp L. George Gershwin-illustrious American composer: his fatal glioblastoma. Am J Surg Pathol 1979; 3: 473–478.
  2. ^ "Rose Gershwin". geni_family_tree.
  3. ^ "Ira Gershwin". biography.yourdictionary.com.
  4. ^ Hyland 2003, pp. 1–3.
  5. ^ Pollack 2006, p. 3.
  6. ^ Jablonski 1987, pp. 29–31.
  7. ^ Jablonski 1987, pp. 24: "Morris Gershovitz moved his family...to Brooklyn, where he had found an unprepossessing two-story brick house at 242 Snedicker Avenue... In this house on September 26, 1898, Jacob Gershwine (as George's birth certificate reads) was delivered...The name change may have been Morris's idea; it is possible that by the time he married he had streamlined his name to "Gershvin," and so would the doctor have been informed. Gershwine in a Jewish community would still be pronounced Gershvin.
  8. ^ Pollack 2006, pp. fn707: "Gershwin's birth certificate reads, 'Jacob Gershwine'; [Frances Gershwin] suggests that Morris's brother, Aaron, first changed the family name, though the latter gave his name in the 1920 census as 'Gershvin.'"
  9. ^ Jablonski 1987, pp. 25: "Eight-year old George (no one in the family remembers calling him Jake or Jacob)..."
  10. ^ Jablonski 1987, pp. 10, 29–31.
  11. ^ Pollack 2006.
  12. ^ Andrew Rosenberg, Martin Dunford (2012). The Rough Guide to New York City. Penguin. ISBN 978-1-4053-9022-4.
  13. ^ "Judaic Treasures of the Library of Congress: George Gershwin". Jewish Virtual Library. 2013. Retrieved March 10, 2013. As quoted by Abraham J. Karp (1991) From the Ends of the Earth: Judaic Treasures of the Library of Congress, p. 351, ISBN 0-8478-1450-5.
  14. ^ Schwartz, Charles (1973). Gershwin, His Life and Music. New York, NY: Da Capo Press, Inc. p. 14. ISBN 0-306-80096-9.
  15. ^ Hyland 2003, p. 13.
  16. ^ Hyland 2003, p. 14.
  17. ^ a b c Venezia, Mike (1994). Getting to Know the World's Greatest Composers: George Gerswhin. Chicago IL: Childrens Press.
  18. ^ Slide, Anthony. The Encyclopedia of Vaudeville, Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1994. p. 111.
  19. ^ Pollack 2006, pp. 191–192.
  20. ^ ​Lady, Be Good​ at the Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved August 22, 2011
  21. ^ ​Oh, Kay!​ at the Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved August 22, 2011
  22. ^ ​Strike Up the Band​ at the Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved August 22, 2011
  23. ^ Jablonski 1987, pp. 155–170.
  24. ^ Jablonski 1987, pp. 178–180.
  25. ^ ​Show Girl​ at the Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved August 22, 2011
  26. ^ ​Girl Crazy​ at the Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved August 22, 2011
  27. ^ "Drama". The Pulitzer Prizes. Retrieved August 22, 2011.
  28. ^ "Gershwin on Folly: Summertime and the livin' was easy". FollyBeach.com. December 6, 2019. Retrieved March 3, 2020.
  29. ^ Grigsby Bates, Karen. 70 Years of Gershwin's 'Porgy and Bess'" npr.org, October 10, 2005
  30. ^ Sidney Offit (September–October 2011). . Moment Magazine. Archived from the original on October 11, 2011. Retrieved October 3, 2011.
  31. ^ Hyland 2003, p. 108.
  32. ^ Kay Swift biography (Kay Swift Memorial Trust). kayswift.com. Retrieved December 28, 2007.
  33. ^ Joan Peyser, The Memory of All That: The Life of George Gershwin, 1998 ch. 4, p. 217; ch. 5, p. 262
  34. ^ Pollack 2006, p. 353.
  35. ^ Jablonski, Edward. "George Gershwin; He Couldn't Be Saved" (Letter to Editor), The New York Times, October 25, 1998, Section 2; Page 4; Column 5
  36. ^ a b Jablonski, Edward. Gershwin. New York: Doubleday, 1987. p. 323.
  37. ^ Jablonski, Edward. Gershwin. New York: Doubleday, 1987. p. 324.
  38. ^ "Music: Death of Gershwin". TIME. July 19, 1937. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  39. ^ a b Mezaki, Takahiro (2017). "George Gershwin's death and Duret haemorrhage". The Lancet. 390 (10095): 646. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(17)31623-9. PMID 28816130.
  40. ^ . Broadstreetreview.com. February 27, 2007. Archived from the original on July 26, 2011. Retrieved March 10, 2010.
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Sources

  • Hyland, William G. (2003). George Gershwin : A New Biography. Praeger. ISBN 0-275-98111-8.
  • Jablonski, Edward; Stewart, Lawrence D. (1973). The Gershwin Years: George and Ira (2nd ed.). Garden City, New Jersey: Doubleday. ISBN 0-306-80739-4.
  • Jablonski, Edward (1987). Gershwin. Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-19431-5.
  • Kimball, Robert & Alfred Simon. The Gershwins (1973), Athenium, New York, ISBN 0-689-10569-X
  • Mawer, Deborah; Cross, Jonathan, eds. (2000). The Cambridge Companion to Ravel. Cambridge Companions to Music. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-64856-4.
  • Peyser, Joan (2007). The Memory of All That:The Life of George Gershwin. Hal Leonard. ISBN 978-1-4234-1025-6.
  • Pollack, Howard (2006). George Gershwin. His Life and Work. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24864-9.
  • Rimler, Walter. A Gershwin Companion (1991), Popular Culture ISBN 1-56075-019-7
  • Rimler, Walter George Gershwin : An Intimate Portrait (2009), University of Illinois Press, ISBN 0-252-03444-9
  • Sloop, Gregory. "What Caused George Gershwin's Untimely Death?" Journal of Medical Biography 9 (February 2001): 28–30

Further reading

  • Alpert, Hollis. The Life and Times of Porgy and Bess: The Story of an American Classic (1991). Nick Hern Books. ISBN 1-85459-054-5
  • Carnovale, Norbert. George Gershwin: a Bio-Bibliography (2000. ) Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-26003-2 ISBN 0-313-26003-6
  • Feinstein, Michael. Nice Work If You Can Get It: My Life in Rhythm and Rhyme (1995), Hyperion Books. ISBN 0-7868-8220-4
  • Jablonski, Edward. Gershwin Remembered (2003). Amadeus Press. ISBN 0-931340-43-8
  • Muccigrosso, Robert, ed., Research Guide to American Historical Biography (1988) 5:2523-30
  • Rosenberg, Deena Ruth. Fascinating Rhythm: The Collaboration of George and Ira Gershwin (1991). University of Michigan Press ISBN 978-0-472-08469-2
  • Sheed, Wilfred. The House That George Built: With a Little Help from Irving, Cole, and a Crew of About Fifty (2007). Random House. ISBN 0-8129-7018-7
  • Suriano, Gregory R. (Editor). Gershwin in His Time: A Biographical Scrapbook, 1919–1937 (1998). Diane Pub Co. ISBN 0-7567-5660-X
  • Weber, Katharine. "The Memory Of All That: George Gershwin, Kay Swift, and My Family's Legacy of Infidelities" (2011). Crown Publishers, Inc./Broadway Books ISBN 978-0-307-39589-4
  • Wyatt, Robert and John Andrew Johnson (Editors). The George Gershwin Reader (2004). Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-513019-7

External links

george, gershwin, gershwin, redirects, here, brother, gershwin, other, uses, gershwin, disambiguation, ɜːr, born, jacob, gershwine, september, 1898, july, 1937, american, composer, pianist, whose, compositions, spanned, popular, jazz, classical, genres, among,. Gershwin redirects here For his brother see Ira Gershwin For other uses see Gershwin disambiguation George Gershwin ˈ ɡ ɜːr ʃ w ɪ n born Jacob Gershwine September 26 1898 July 11 1937 was an American composer and pianist whose compositions spanned popular jazz and classical genres Among his best known works are the orchestral compositions Rhapsody in Blue 1924 and An American in Paris 1928 the songs Swanee 1919 and Fascinating Rhythm 1924 the jazz standards Embraceable You 1928 and I Got Rhythm 1930 and the opera Porgy and Bess 1935 which included the hit Summertime George GershwinGershwin in 1937 by Carl Van VechtenBornJacob Gershwine 1898 09 26 September 26 1898New York City U S DiedJuly 11 1937 1937 07 11 aged 38 Los Angeles California U S Resting placeWestchester Hills CemeteryOccupationsPianistcomposerYears active1916 1937RelativesIra Gershwin brother Arthur Gershwin brother Frances Gershwin sister Gershwin studied piano under Charles Hambitzer and composition with Rubin Goldmark Henry Cowell and Joseph Brody He began his career as a song plugger but soon started composing Broadway theater works with his brother Ira Gershwin and with Buddy DeSylva He moved to Paris intending to study with Nadia Boulanger but she refused him afraid that rigorous classical study would ruin his jazz influenced style Maurice Ravel voiced similar objections when Gershwin inquired about studying with him He subsequently composed An American in Paris returned to New York City and wrote Porgy and Bess with Ira and DuBose Heyward Initially a commercial failure it came to be considered one of the most important American operas of the twentieth century and an American cultural classic Gershwin moved to Hollywood and composed numerous film scores He died in 1937 only 38 years old of a brain tumor 1 His compositions have been adapted for use in film and television with many becoming jazz standards Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Ancestors 1 2 Early life 1 3 Tin Pan Alley and Broadway 1913 1923 1 4 Musical Europe and classical music 1924 1928 1 5 New York 1929 1935 1 6 Last years 1936 1937 1 7 Illness and death 2 Musical style and influence 3 Recordings and film 4 Compositions 5 Legacy 5 1 Estate 5 2 Awards and honors 5 3 Namesakes 5 4 Biopic 5 5 Portrayals in other media 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 7 3 Further reading 8 External linksBiography EditAncestors Edit Gershwin was of Jewish ancestry His grandfather Jakov Gershowitz was born in Odesa Ukraine then part of the Russian Empire and had served for 25 years as a mechanic for the Imperial Russian Army to earn the right of free travel and residence as a Jew finally retiring near Saint Petersburg His teenage son Moishe George s father worked as a leather cutter for women s shoes His mother Roza Bruskina was born in St Petersburg Russia 2 3 Moishe met Roza in Vilnius Lithuania where her father worked as a furrier She and her family moved to New York because of increasing anti Jewish sentiment in Russia changing her first name to Rose Moishe faced with compulsory military service if he remained in Russia moved to America as soon as he could afford to Once in New York he changed his first name to Morris Gershowitz lived with a maternal uncle in Brooklyn working as a foreman in a women s shoe factory He married Rose on July 21 1895 and Gershowitz soon Anglicized his name to Gershwine 4 5 6 Their first child Ira Gershwin was born on December 6 1896 after which the family moved into a second floor apartment at 242 Snediker Avenue in the East New York neighborhood of Brooklyn Early life Edit George was born on September 26 1898 in the Snediker Avenue apartment His birth certificate identifies him as Jacob Gershwine with the surname pronounced Gersh vin in the Russian and Yiddish immigrant community 7 8 He was named after his grandfather and contrary to the American practice had no middle name He soon became known as George 9 and changed the spelling of his surname to Gershwin around the time he became a professional musician other family members followed suit 10 After Ira and George another boy Arthur Gershwin 1900 1981 and a girl Frances Gershwin 1906 1999 were born into the family The family lived in many different residences as their father changed dwellings with each new enterprise in which he became involved They grew up mostly in the Yiddish Theater District George and Ira frequented the local Yiddish theaters with George occasionally appearing onstage as an extra 11 12 13 George lived a boyhood not unusual in New York tenements which included running around with his friends roller skating and misbehaving in the streets Until 1908 he cared nothing about music Then as a ten year old he was intrigued upon hearing his friend Maxie Rosenzweig s violin recital 14 The sound and the way his friend played captivated him At about the same time George s parents had bought a piano for his older brother Ira To his parents surprise though and to Ira s relief it was George who spent more time playing it as he continued to enjoy it 15 Although his younger sister Frances Gershwin was the first in the family to make a living through her musical talents she married young and devoted herself to being a mother and housewife thus precluding spending any serious time on musical endeavors Having given up her performing career she settled upon painting as a creative outlet which had also been a hobby George briefly pursued Arthur Gershwin followed in the paths of George and Ira also becoming a composer of songs musicals and short piano pieces George studied with various piano teachers for about two years circa 1911 before finally being introduced to Charles Hambitzer by Jack Miller circa 1913 the pianist in the Beethoven Symphony Orchestra Until his death in 1918 Hambitzer remained Gershwin s musical mentor taught him conventional piano technique introduced him to music of the European classical tradition and encouraged him to attend orchestral concerts 16 Tin Pan Alley and Broadway 1913 1923 Edit Swanee source source Al Jolson s hit 1920 recording of George Gershwin and Irving Caesar s 1919 Swanee Problems playing this file See media help In 1913 Gershwin left school at the age of 15 to work as a song plugger on New York City s Tin Pan Alley He earned 15 a week from Jerome H Remick and Company a Detroit based publishing firm with a branch office in New York His first published song was When You Want Em You Can t Get Em When You ve Got Em You Don t Want Em in 1916 It earned the 17 year old 50 cents 17 In 1916 Gershwin started working for Aeolian Company and Standard Music Rolls in New York recording and arranging He produced dozens if not hundreds of rolls under his own and assumed names pseudonyms attributed to Gershwin include Fred Murtha and Bert Wynn He also recorded rolls of his own compositions for the Duo Art and Welte Mignon reproducing pianos As well as recording piano rolls Gershwin made a brief foray into vaudeville accompanying both Nora Bayes and Louise Dresser on the piano 18 His 1917 novelty ragtime Rialto Ripples was a commercial success 17 In 1919 he scored his first big national hit with his song Swanee with words by Irving Caesar Al Jolson a Broadway star and former minstrel singer heard Gershwin perform Swanee at a party and decided to sing it in one of his shows 17 In the late 1910s Gershwin met songwriter and music director William Daly The two collaborated on the Broadway musicals Piccadilly to Broadway 1920 and For Goodness Sake 1922 and jointly composed the score for Our Nell 1923 This was the beginning of a long friendship Daly was a frequent arranger orchestrator and conductor of Gershwin s music and Gershwin periodically turned to him for musical advice 19 Musical Europe and classical music 1924 1928 Edit George Gershwin c 1935 In 1924 Gershwin composed his first major work Rhapsody in Blue for orchestra and piano It was orchestrated by Ferde Grofe and premiered by Paul Whiteman s Concert Band in New York It subsequently went on to be his most popular work and established Gershwin s signature style and genius in blending vastly different musical styles including jazz and classical in revolutionary ways Since the early 1920s Gershwin had frequently worked with the lyricist Buddy DeSylva Together they created the experimental one act jazz opera Blue Monday set in Harlem It is widely regarded as a forerunner to the groundbreaking Porgy and Bess introduced in 1935 In 1924 George and Ira Gershwin collaborated on a stage musical comedy Lady Be Good which included such future standards as Fascinating Rhythm and Oh Lady Be Good 20 They followed this with Oh Kay 1926 21 Funny Face 1927 and Strike Up the Band 1927 and 1930 Gershwin allowed the latter song with a modified title to be used as a football fight song Strike Up The Band for UCLA 22 In the mid 1920s Gershwin stayed in Paris for a short period during which he applied to study composition with the noted Nadia Boulanger who along with several other prospective tutors such as Maurice Ravel turned him down afraid that rigorous classical study would ruin his jazz influenced style 23 Maurice Ravel s rejection letter to Gershwin told him Why become a second rate Ravel when you re already a first rate Gershwin While there Gershwin wrote An American in Paris This work received mixed reviews upon its first performance at Carnegie Hall on December 13 1928 but it quickly became part of the standard repertoire in Europe and the United States 24 New York 1929 1935 Edit In 1929 the Gershwin brothers created Show Girl 25 the following year brought Girl Crazy 26 which introduced the standards Embraceable You sung by Ginger Rogers and I Got Rhythm 1931 s Of Thee I Sing became the first musical comedy to win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama the winners were George S Kaufman Morrie Ryskind and Ira Gershwin 27 Gershwin spent the summer of 1934 on Folly Island in South Carolina after he was invited to visit by the author of the novel Porgy DuBose Heyward He was inspired to write the music to his opera Porgy and Bess while on this working vacation 28 Porgy and Bess was considered another American classic by the composer of Rhapsody in Blue even if critics could not quite figure out how to evaluate it or decide whether it was opera or simply an ambitious Broadway musical It crossed the barriers per theater historian Robert Kimball It wasn t a musical work per se and it wasn t a drama per se it elicited response from both music and drama critics But the work has sort of always been outside category 29 Last years 1936 1937 Edit After the commercial failure of Porgy and Bess Gershwin moved to Hollywood California In 1936 he was commissioned by RKO Pictures to write the music for the film Shall We Dance starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers Gershwin s extended score which would marry ballet with jazz in a new way runs over an hour It took Gershwin several months to compose and orchestrate Gershwin had a ten year affair with composer Kay Swift whom he frequently consulted about his music The two never married although she eventually divorced her husband James Warburg in order to commit to the relationship Swift s granddaughter Katharine Weber has suggested that the pair were not married because George s mother Rose was unhappy that Kay Swift wasn t Jewish 30 The Gershwins 1926 musical Oh Kay was named for her 31 After Gershwin s death Swift arranged some of his music transcribed several of his recordings and collaborated with his brother Ira on several projects 32 Illness and death Edit Early in 1937 Gershwin began to complain of blinding headaches and a recurring impression that he smelled burning rubber As early as February 1934 he had said he smelled burning garbage at the Detroit railway station though those with him did not 33 On February 11 1937 he performed his Piano Concerto in F in a special concert of his music with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra under the direction of French maestro Pierre Monteux 34 Gershwin normally a superb pianist in his own compositions suffered coordination problems and blackouts during the performance He was at the time working on other Hollywood film projects while living with Ira and his wife Leonore in their rented house in Beverly Hills Leonore Gershwin began to be disturbed by George s mood swings and his seeming inability to eat without spilling food at the dinner table She suspected mental illness and insisted he be moved out of their house to lyricist Yip Harburg s empty quarters nearby where he was placed in the care of his valet Paul Mueller The headaches and olfactory hallucinations continued On the night of July 9 1937 Gershwin collapsed in Harburg s house where he had been working on the score of The Goldwyn Follies He was rushed to Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in Los Angeles 35 and fell into a coma Only then did his doctors come to believe that he was suffering from a brain tumor Leonore called George s close friend Emil Mosbacher and explained the dire need to find a neurosurgeon Mosbacher immediately called pioneering neurosurgeon Harvey Cushing in Boston who retired for several years by then recommended Dr Walter Dandy who was on a boat fishing in the Chesapeake Bay with Harry Nice the governor of Maryland Mosbacher called the White House and had a Coast Guard cutter sent to find the governor s yacht and bring Dandy quickly to shore 36 Mosbacher then chartered a plane and flew Dandy to Newark Airport where he was to catch a plane to Los Angeles 37 by that time Gershwin s condition was critical and the need for surgery was immediate 36 So before Dandy could arrive 38 in the early hours of July 11 1937 doctors at Cedars removed a large brain tumor believed to have been a glioblastoma but Gershwin died that morning at the age of 38 39 The fact that he had suddenly collapsed and become comatose after he stood up on July 9 has been interpreted as brain herniation with Duret hemorrhages 39 Gershwin s mausoleum in Westchester Hills Cemetery Gershwin s friends and admirers were shocked and devastated John O Hara remarked George Gershwin died on July 11 1937 but I don t have to believe it if I don t want to 40 He was interred at Westchester Hills Cemetery in Hastings on Hudson New York A memorial concert was held at the Hollywood Bowl on September 8 1937 at which Otto Klemperer conducted his own orchestration of the second of Gershwin s Three Preludes 41 Musical style and influence Edit Birthday party honoring Maurice Ravel in New York City March 8 1928 From left Oskar Fried Eva Gauthier Ravel at piano Manoah Leide Tedesco and George Gershwin Gershwin was influenced by French composers of the early twentieth century In turn Maurice Ravel was impressed with Gershwin s abilities commenting Personally I find jazz most interesting the rhythms the way the melodies are handled the melodies themselves I have heard of George Gershwin s works and I find them intriguing 42 The orchestrations in Gershwin s symphonic works often seem similar to those of Ravel likewise Ravel s two piano concertos evince an influence of Gershwin George Gershwin asked to study with Ravel When Ravel heard how much Gershwin earned Ravel replied with words to the effect of You should give me lessons Some versions of this story feature Igor Stravinsky rather than Ravel as the composer however Stravinsky confirmed that he originally heard the story from Ravel 43 Gershwin s own Concerto in F was criticized for being related to the work of Claude Debussy more so than to the expected jazz style The comparison did not deter him from continuing to explore French styles The title of An American in Paris reflects the very journey that he had consciously taken as a composer The opening part will be developed in typical French style in the manner of Debussy and Les Six though the tunes are original 44 Gershwin was intrigued by the works of Alban Berg Dmitri Shostakovich Igor Stravinsky Darius Milhaud and Arnold Schoenberg He also asked Schoenberg for composition lessons Schoenberg refused saying I would only make you a bad Schoenberg and you re such a good Gershwin already 45 This quote is similar to one credited to Maurice Ravel during Gershwin s 1928 visit to France Why be a second rate Ravel when you are a first rate Gershwin Gershwin was particularly impressed by the music of Berg who gave him a score of the Lyric Suite He attended the American premiere of Wozzeck conducted by Leopold Stokowski in 1931 and was thrilled and deeply impressed 46 Russian Joseph Schillinger s influence as Gershwin s teacher of composition 1932 1936 was substantial in providing him with a method of composition There has been some disagreement about the nature of Schillinger s influence on Gershwin After the posthumous success of Porgy and Bess Schillinger claimed he had a large and direct influence in overseeing the creation of the opera Ira completely denied that his brother had any such assistance for this work A third account of Gershwin s musical relationship with his teacher was written by Gershwin s close friend Vernon Duke also a Schillinger student in an article for the Musical Quarterly in 1947 47 What set Gershwin apart was his ability to manipulate forms of music into his own unique voice He took the jazz he discovered on Tin Pan Alley into the mainstream by splicing its rhythms and tonality with that of the popular songs of his era Although George Gershwin would seldom make grand statements about his music he believed that true music must reflect the thought and aspirations of the people and time My people are Americans My time is today 48 In 2007 the Library of Congress named its Gershwin Prize for Popular Song after George and Ira Gershwin Recognizing the profound and positive effect of popular music on culture the prize is given annually to a composer or performer whose lifetime contributions exemplify the standard of excellence associated with the Gershwins On March 1 2007 the first Gershwin Prize was awarded to Paul Simon 49 Recordings and film EditEarly in his career under both his own name and pseudonyms Gershwin recorded more than one hundred forty player piano rolls which were a main source of his income The majority were popular music of the period and a smaller proportion were of his own works Once his musical theater writing income became substantial his regular roll recording career became superfluous He did record additional rolls throughout the 1920s of his main hits for the Aeolian Company s reproducing piano including a complete version of his Rhapsody in Blue Compared to the piano rolls there are few accessible audio recordings of Gershwin s playing His first recording was his own Swanee with the Fred Van Eps Trio in 1919 The recorded balance highlights the banjo playing of Van Eps and the piano is overshadowed The recording took place before Swanee became famous as an Al Jolson specialty in early 1920 Gershwin recorded an abridged version of Rhapsody in Blue with Paul Whiteman and his orchestra for the Victor Talking Machine Company in 1924 soon after the world premiere Gershwin and the same orchestra made an electrical recording of the abridged version for Victor in 1927 However a dispute in the studio over interpretation angered Whiteman and he walked out on the session Victor s staff conductor and arranger Nathaniel Shilkret led the orchestra though Whiteman is still credited as conductor on the original record labels 50 Gershwin made a number of solo piano recordings of tunes from his musicals some including the vocals of Fred and Adele Astaire as well as his Three Preludes for piano In 1929 Gershwin supervised the world premiere recording of An American in Paris with Nathaniel Shilkret and the Victor Symphony Orchestra Gershwin s role in the recording was rather limited particularly because Shilkret was conducting and had his own ideas about the music When it was realized that no one had been hired to play the brief celeste solo Gershwin was asked if he could and would play the instrument and he agreed Gershwin can be heard rather briefly on the recording during the slow section Gershwin appeared on several radio programs including Rudy Vallee s and played some of his compositions This included the third movement of the Concerto in F with Vallee conducting the studio orchestra Some of these performances were preserved on transcription discs and have been released on LP and CD In 1934 in an effort to earn money to finance his planned folk opera Gershwin hosted his own radio program titled Music by Gershwin The show was broadcast on the NBC Blue Network from February to May and again in September through the final show on December 23 1934 He presented his own work as well as the work of other composers 51 Recordings from this and other radio broadcasts include his Variations on I Got Rhythm portions of the Concerto in F and numerous songs from his musical comedies He also recorded a run through of his Second Rhapsody conducting the orchestra and playing the piano solos Gershwin recorded excerpts from Porgy and Bess with members of the original cast conducting the orchestra from the keyboard he even announced the selections and the names of the performers In 1935 RCA Victor asked him to supervise recordings of highlights from Porgy and Bess these were his last recordings Victor Records issued a 5 record 12 inch 78 rpm Memorial Album C 29 recorded from the RCA Magic Key program broadcast on July 10 1938 over the NBC Radio Network It featured the Victor Salon Group conducted by Nathaniel Shilkret and singer Jane Froman A 74 second newsreel film clip of Gershwin playing I Got Rhythm has survived filmed at the opening of the Manhattan Theater now The Ed Sullivan Theater in August 1931 52 There are also silent home movies of Gershwin some of them shot on Kodachrome color film stock which have been featured in tributes to the composer In addition there is newsreel footage of Gershwin playing Mademoiselle from New Rochelle and Strike Up the Band on the piano during a Broadway rehearsal of the 1930 production of Strike Up the Band In the mid 30s Strike Up The Band was given to UCLA to be used as a football fight song Strike Up The Band for UCLA The comedy team of Clark and McCullough are seen conversing with Gershwin then singing as he plays 1973 U S commemorative stamp honoring Gershwin In 1945 the film biography Rhapsody in Blue was made starring Robert Alda as George Gershwin The film contains many factual errors about Gershwin s life but also features many examples of his music including an almost complete performance of Rhapsody in Blue In 1965 Movietone Records released an album MTM 1009 featuring Gershwin s piano rolls of the titled George Gershwin plays RHAPSODY IN BLUE and his other favorite compositions The B side of the LP featured nine other recordings In 1975 Columbia Records released an album featuring Gershwin s piano rolls of Rhapsody In Blue accompanied by the Columbia Jazz Band playing the original jazz band accompaniment conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas The B side of the Columbia Masterworks release features Tilson Thomas leading the New York Philharmonic in An American In Paris In 1976 RCA Records as part of its Victrola Americana line released a collection of Gershwin recordings taken from 78s recorded in the 1920s and called the LP Gershwin plays Gershwin Historic First Recordings RCA Victrola AVM1 1740 Included were recordings of Rhapsody in Blue with the Paul Whiteman Orchestra and Gershwin on piano An American in Paris from 1927 with Gershwin on celesta and Three Preludes Clap Yo Hands and Someone to Watch Over Me among others There are a total of ten recordings on the album At the opening ceremony of the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles Rhapsody in Blue was performed in spectacular fashion by many pianists The soundtrack to Woody Allen s 1979 film Manhattan is composed entirely of Gershwin s compositions including Rhapsody in Blue Love is Sweeping the Country and But Not for Me performed by both the New York Philharmonic under Zubin Mehta and the Buffalo Philharmonic under Michael Tilson Thomas The film begins with a monolog by Allen in the role of a writer describing a character in his book He adored New York City To him no matter what the season was this was still a town that existed in black and white and pulsated to the great tunes of George Gershwin In 1993 two audio CDs featuring piano rolls recorded by Gershwin 53 were issued by Nonesuch Records through the efforts of Artis Wodehouse entitled Gershwin Plays Gershwin The Piano Rolls 54 In 2010 Brian Wilson released Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin consisting of ten George and Ira Gershwin songs bookended by passages from Rhapsody in Blue with two new songs completed from unfinished Gershwin fragments by Wilson and band member Scott Bennett 55 Compositions EditMain article List of compositions by George Gershwin Orchestral Rhapsody in Blue for piano and orchestra 1924 Concerto in F for piano and orchestra 1925 An American in Paris for orchestra 1928 Dream Sequence The Melting Pot for chorus and orchestra 1931 Second Rhapsody for piano and orchestra 1931 originally titled Rhapsody in Rivets Cuban Overture for orchestra 1932 originally entitled Rumba March from Strike Up the Band for orchestra 1934 Variations on I Got Rhythm for piano and orchestra 1934 Catfish Row for orchestra 1936 a suite based on music from Porgy and Bess Shall We Dance 1937 a movie score feature length balletSolo piano Three Preludes 1926 George Gershwin s Song book 1932 solo piano arrangements of 18 songsOperas Blue Monday 1922 one act opera Porgy and Bess 1935 at the Colonial Theatre in Boston 56 London musicals Primrose 1924 Broadway musicals George White s Scandals 1920 1924 featuring at one point the 1922 one act opera Blue Monday Lady Be Good 1924 Tip Toes 1925 Tell Me More 1925 Oh Kay 1926 Strike Up the Band 1927 Funny Face 1927 Rosalie 1928 Treasure Girl 1928 Show Girl 1929 Girl Crazy 1930 Of Thee I Sing 1931 Pardon My English 1933 Let Em Eat Cake 1933 My One and Only 1983 an original 1983 musical using previously written Gershwin songs Crazy for You 1992 a revised version of Girl Crazy Nice Work If You Can Get It 2012 a musical with a score by George and Ira Gershwin An American in Paris a musical that ran on Broadway from April 2015 to October 2016Films for which Gershwin wrote original scores Delicious 1931 an early version of the Second Rhapsody and one other musical sequence was used in this film the rest were rejected by the studio Shall We Dance 1937 original orchestral score by Gershwin no recordings available in modern stereo some sections have never been recorded Nominated Academy Award for Best Original Song They Can t Take That Away from Me A Damsel in Distress 1937 The Goldwyn Follies 1938 posthumously released The Shocking Miss Pilgrim 1947 uses previously unpublished songsLegacy Edit George Gershwin with one of his oil paintings 1931 Estate Edit Gershwin died intestate and his estate passed to his mother 57 The estate continues to collect royalties in the United States from licensing the copyrights on his post Rhapsody in Blue work 58 The estate supported the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act that extended the U S 75 year copyright protection an additional 20 years because its 1923 cutoff date was shortly before Gershwin had begun to create his most popular works The copyrights on all Gershwin s solo works expired at the end of 2007 in the European Union based on its life plus 70 years rule and in the U S on January 1 2020 on Gershwin s pre 1925 work 59 In 2005 The Guardian determined using estimates of earnings accrued in a composer s lifetime that George Gershwin was the wealthiest composer of all time 60 The George and Ira Gershwin Collection much of which was donated by Ira and the Gershwin family estates resides at the Library of Congress 61 In September 2013 a partnership between the estates of Ira and George Gershwin and the University of Michigan was created and will provide the university s School of Music Theatre and Dance access to Gershwin s entire body of work which includes all of Gershwin s papers compositional drafts and scores 62 This direct access to all of his works provides opportunities to musicians composers and scholars to analyze and reinterpret his work with the goal of accurately reflecting the composers vision in order to preserve his legacy 63 The first fascicles of The Gershwin Critical Edition edited by Mark Clague are expected in 2017 they will cover the 1924 jazz band version of Rhapsody in Blue An American in Paris and Porgy and Bess 64 needs update Awards and honors Edit In 1937 Gershwin received his sole Academy Award nomination for Best Original Song at the 1937 Oscars for They Can t Take That Away from Me written with his brother Ira for the 1937 film Shall We Dance The nomination was posthumous Gershwin died two months after the film s release 65 In 1985 the Congressional Gold Medal was awarded to George and Ira Gershwin Only three other songwriters George M Cohan Harry Chapin and Irving Berlin have received this award 66 67 In 1998 a special Pulitzer Prize was posthumously awarded to Gershwin commemorating the centennial year of his birth for his distinguished and enduring contributions to American music 68 The George and Ira Gershwin Lifetime Musical Achievement Award was established by UCLA to honor the brothers for their contribution to music and for their gift to UCLA of the fight song Strike Up the Band for UCLA In 2006 Gershwin was inducted into the Long Island Music Hall of Fame 69 Namesakes Edit The Gershwin Theatre on Broadway is named after George and Ira 70 The Gershwin Hotel in the Flatiron District of Manhattan in New York City was named after George and Ira In Brooklyn George Gershwin Junior High School 166 is named after him 71 One of Holland America Line s ships MS Koningsdam has a Gershwin Deck Deck 5 72 The Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular SongBiopic Edit The 1945 biographical film Rhapsody in Blue starred Robert Alda as George Gershwin Portrayals in other media Edit Since 1999 Hershey Felder has produced a one man show with him portraying George Gershwin Alone which has played over 3 000 performances and won two 2007 Ovation Awards 73 In response to the COVID 19 pandemic Felder launched a global live streaming Hershey Felder Presents Live from Florence featuring a performance of Hershey Felder as George Gershwin Alone in September 2020 74 Paul Rudd portrays an imaginary friend based on George Gershwin said to be his creator s favorite composer in the 2015 series finale of the Irish sitcom Moone Boy Gershwin s Bucket List See also EditList of covers of Time magazine 1920s References EditCitations Edit Carp L George Gershwin illustrious American composer his fatal glioblastoma Am J Surg Pathol 1979 3 473 478 Rose Gershwin geni family tree Ira Gershwin biography yourdictionary com Hyland 2003 pp 1 3 Pollack 2006 p 3 Jablonski 1987 pp 29 31 Jablonski 1987 pp 24 Morris Gershovitz moved his family to Brooklyn where he had found an unprepossessing two story brick house at 242 Snedicker Avenue In this house on September 26 1898 Jacob Gershwine as George s birth certificate reads was delivered The name change may have been Morris s idea it is possible that by the time he married he had streamlined his name to Gershvin and so would the doctor have been informed Gershwine in a Jewish community would still be pronounced Gershvin Pollack 2006 pp fn707 Gershwin s birth certificate reads Jacob Gershwine Frances Gershwin suggests that Morris s brother Aaron first changed the family name though the latter gave his name in the 1920 census as Gershvin Jablonski 1987 pp 25 Eight year old George no one in the family remembers calling him Jake or Jacob Jablonski 1987 pp 10 29 31 Pollack 2006 Andrew Rosenberg Martin Dunford 2012 The Rough Guide to New York City Penguin ISBN 978 1 4053 9022 4 Judaic Treasures of the Library of Congress George Gershwin Jewish Virtual Library 2013 Retrieved March 10 2013 As quoted by Abraham J Karp 1991 From the Ends of the Earth Judaic Treasures of the Library of Congress p 351 ISBN 0 8478 1450 5 Schwartz Charles 1973 Gershwin His Life and Music New York NY Da Capo Press Inc p 14 ISBN 0 306 80096 9 Hyland 2003 p 13 Hyland 2003 p 14 a b c Venezia Mike 1994 Getting to Know the World s Greatest Composers George Gerswhin Chicago IL Childrens Press Slide Anthony The Encyclopedia of Vaudeville Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press 1994 p 111 Pollack 2006 pp 191 192 Lady Be Good at the Internet Broadway Database Retrieved August 22 2011 Oh Kay at the Internet Broadway Database Retrieved August 22 2011 Strike Up the Band at the Internet Broadway Database Retrieved August 22 2011 Jablonski 1987 pp 155 170 Jablonski 1987 pp 178 180 Show Girl at the Internet Broadway Database Retrieved August 22 2011 Girl Crazy at the Internet Broadway Database Retrieved August 22 2011 Drama The Pulitzer Prizes Retrieved August 22 2011 Gershwin on Folly Summertime and the livin was easy FollyBeach com December 6 2019 Retrieved March 3 2020 Grigsby Bates Karen 70 Years of Gershwin s Porgy and Bess npr org October 10 2005 Sidney Offit September October 2011 Sins of Our Fathers and Grandmothers Moment Magazine Archived from the original on October 11 2011 Retrieved October 3 2011 Hyland 2003 p 108 Kay Swift biography Kay Swift Memorial Trust kayswift com Retrieved December 28 2007 Joan Peyser The Memory of All That The Life of George Gershwin 1998 ch 4 p 217 ch 5 p 262 Pollack 2006 p 353 Jablonski Edward George Gershwin He Couldn t Be Saved Letter to Editor The New York Times October 25 1998 Section 2 Page 4 Column 5 a b Jablonski Edward Gershwin New York Doubleday 1987 p 323 Jablonski Edward Gershwin New York Doubleday 1987 p 324 Music Death of Gershwin TIME July 19 1937 Retrieved March 17 2023 a b Mezaki Takahiro 2017 George Gershwin s death and Duret haemorrhage The Lancet 390 10095 646 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 17 31623 9 PMID 28816130 Broad Street Broadstreetreview com February 27 2007 Archived from the original on July 26 2011 Retrieved March 10 2010 Pollack 2006 p 392 Mawer amp Cross 2000 p 42 Arthur Rubinstein My Many Years Merle Armitage George Gershwin Igor Stravinsky and Robert Craft Dialogues and a Diary all quoted in Norman Lebrecht The Book of Musical Anecdotes Hyland 2003 p 126 Norman Lebrecht The Book of Musical Anecdotes Howard Pollack George Gershwin His Life and Work p 145 Retrieved June 20 2016 Dukelsky Vladimir Vernon Duke Gershwin Schillinger and Dukelsky Some Reminiscences The Musical Quarterly Volume 33 1947 102 115 doi 10 1093 mq XXXIII 1 102 George Gershwin Archived May 4 2010 at the Wayback Machine balletmet org Compiled February 2000 Retrieved April 20 2010 Paul Simon The Library Of Congress Gershwin Prize For Popular Song PBS article Peyser 2007 p 133 Pollack 2006 p 163 Jablonski amp Stewart 1973 p 70 George Gershwin and the player piano 1915 1927 Archived July 4 2008 at the Wayback Machine richard dowling com Retrieved December 28 2007 Yanow Scott Gershwin Plays Gershwin The Piano Rolls Overview allmusic com Retrieved August 22 2011 Brian Wilson Will Complete Unfinished Gershwin Compositions rollingstone com October 2009 Jablonski amp Stewart 1973 pp 25 227 229 Pollack 2006 p 7 Ira Gershwin files from the law office of Leonard Saxe Library of Congress 1924 Copyrighted Works To Become Part Of The Public Domain NPR Scott Kirsty Gershwin leads composer rich list The Guardian August 29 2005 Retrieved December 28 2007 George and Ira Gershwin collection 1895 2008 The Library of Congress Retrieved August 23 2021 U M to become epicenter of research on music of George amp Ira Gershwin Michigan News 2013 Retrieved November 26 2013 Toward a Go To Gershwin Edition New York Times 2013 Archived from the original on January 2 2022 Retrieved November 26 2013 The Gershwin Critical Edition Senza Sordino March 21 2016 Retrieved July 29 2018 1937 Song Archived December 2 2013 at the Wayback Machine oscars org Retrieved August 22 2011 In Performance at the White House The Library of Congress Gershwin Prize Archived February 26 2009 at the Wayback Machine pbs org Retrieved April 15 2010 Congressional Gold Medal Recipients 1776 to Present Office of the Clerk US House of Representatives clerk house gov Retrieved April 15 2010 The 1998 Pulitzer Prize Winners Special Awards and Citations The Pulitzer Prizes Retrieved December 3 2013 George Gershwin Long Island Music Hall of Fame www limusichalloffame org Retrieved September 18 2017 History of the Gershwin Theater Archived March 30 2010 at the Wayback Machine gershwin theater com Retrieved August 22 2011 Richardson Clem October 23 2009 Tonya Lewis brings start power and true perfect to only place to be party Daily News New York Retrieved June 15 2011 Koningsdam www hollandamerica com Retrieved January 16 2019 Favre Jeff November 4 2019 Self Starter Hershey Felder and George Gershwin Alone backstage com Retrieved August 20 2020 Hershey Felder as George Gershwin Alone Hershey Felder Presents Retrieved September 13 2020 Sources Edit Hyland William G 2003 George Gershwin A New Biography Praeger ISBN 0 275 98111 8 Jablonski Edward Stewart Lawrence D 1973 The Gershwin Years George and Ira 2nd ed Garden City New Jersey Doubleday ISBN 0 306 80739 4 Jablonski Edward 1987 Gershwin Doubleday ISBN 0 385 19431 5 Kimball Robert amp Alfred Simon The Gershwins 1973 Athenium New York ISBN 0 689 10569 X Mawer Deborah Cross Jonathan eds 2000 The Cambridge Companion to Ravel Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 64856 4 Peyser Joan 2007 The Memory of All That The Life of George Gershwin Hal Leonard ISBN 978 1 4234 1025 6 Pollack Howard 2006 George Gershwin His Life and Work University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24864 9 Rimler Walter A Gershwin Companion 1991 Popular Culture ISBN 1 56075 019 7 Rimler Walter George Gershwin An Intimate Portrait 2009 University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 03444 9 Sloop Gregory What Caused George Gershwin s Untimely Death Journal of Medical Biography 9 February 2001 28 30 Further reading Edit Alpert Hollis The Life and Times of Porgy and Bess The Story of an American Classic 1991 Nick Hern Books ISBN 1 85459 054 5 Carnovale Norbert George Gershwin a Bio Bibliography 2000 Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 26003 2 ISBN 0 313 26003 6 Feinstein Michael Nice Work If You Can Get It My Life in Rhythm and Rhyme 1995 Hyperion Books ISBN 0 7868 8220 4 Jablonski Edward Gershwin Remembered 2003 Amadeus Press ISBN 0 931340 43 8 Muccigrosso Robert ed Research Guide to American Historical Biography 1988 5 2523 30 Rosenberg Deena Ruth Fascinating Rhythm The Collaboration of George and Ira Gershwin 1991 University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 08469 2 Sheed Wilfred The House That George Built With a Little Help from Irving Cole and a Crew of About Fifty 2007 Random House ISBN 0 8129 7018 7 Suriano Gregory R Editor Gershwin in His Time A Biographical Scrapbook 1919 1937 1998 Diane Pub Co ISBN 0 7567 5660 X Weber Katharine The Memory Of All That George Gershwin Kay Swift and My Family s Legacy of Infidelities 2011 Crown Publishers Inc Broadway Books ISBN 978 0 307 39589 4 Wyatt Robert and John Andrew Johnson Editors The George Gershwin Reader 2004 Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 513019 7External links Edit Media related to George Gershwin at Wikimedia Commons Quotations related to George Gershwin at Wikiquote Official website Free scores by George Gershwin at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP George Gershwin at the Internet Broadway Database George Gershwin at IMDb George and Ira Gershwin Collection at the Library of Congress George Gershwin Bio at Jewish American Hall of Fame George Gershwin Collection Archived April 11 2013 at the Wayback Machine at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin The Gershwin Initiative at The University of Michigan George Gershwin oral histories at Oral History of American Music Gershwin s An American in Paris Performance lecture with Bruce Adolphe Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Gershwin amp oldid 1145137063, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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