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Irving Berlin

Irving Berlin (born Israel Beilin; Yiddish: ישראל ביילין;[1] May 11, 1888[2] – September 22, 1989) was an American composer and lyricist. His music forms a large part of the Great American Songbook.

Irving Berlin
Berlin in 1948
Born
Israel Beilin

(1888-05-11)May 11, 1888
DiedSeptember 22, 1989(1989-09-22) (aged 101)
Occupations
  • Composer
  • songwriter
  • lyricist
Years active1907–1971
Known forPopular songs, ragtime, Broadway musicals, show tunes
Spouse(s)
Dorothy Goetz
(m. 1912; died 1912)

(m. 1926; died 1988)
Children4, including Mary Ellin Barrett
Military career
Allegiance United States
Service/branchUnited States Army
Years of service1918–1919
Rank Sergeant
Unit152 Depot Brigade
Battles/warsWorld War I

Born in Imperial Russia, Berlin arrived in the United States at the age of five. He published his first song, "Marie from Sunny Italy", in 1907, receiving 33 cents for the publishing rights,[3] and became known for international hits, such as 1911's "Alexander's Ragtime Band". He also was an owner of the Music Box Theatre on Broadway. For much of his career Berlin could not read sheet music, and was such a limited piano player that he could only play in the key of F-sharp; he used his custom piano equipped with a transposing lever when he needed to play in keys other than F-sharp.[4]

"Alexander's Ragtime Band", performed by Billy Murray, Edison Amberol cylinder, 1911

"Alexander's Ragtime Band" sparked an international dance craze in places as far away as Berlin's native Russia, which also "flung itself into the ragtime beat with an abandon bordering on mania". Over the years he was known for writing music and lyrics in the American vernacular: uncomplicated, simple and direct, with his stated aim being to "reach the heart of the average American," whom he saw as the "real soul of the country".[5] In doing so, said Walter Cronkite, at Berlin's 100th birthday tribute, he "helped write the story of this country, capturing the best of who we are and the dreams that shape our lives".[6]

He wrote hundreds of songs, many becoming major hits, which made him famous before he turned thirty. During his 60-year career he wrote an estimated 1,500 songs, including the scores for 20 original Broadway shows and 15 original Hollywood films, with his songs nominated eight times for Academy Awards.[1] Many songs became popular themes and anthems, including "Alexander's Ragtime Band", "Easter Parade", "Puttin' on the Ritz", "Cheek to Cheek", "White Christmas", "Happy Holiday", "Anything You Can Do (I Can Do Better)", and "There's No Business Like Show Business". His Broadway musical and 1943 film This Is the Army,[7] with Ronald Reagan, had Kate Smith singing Berlin's "God Bless America" which was first performed in 1938.[8]

Berlin's songs have reached the top of the charts 25 times and have been extensively re-recorded by numerous singers including The Andrews Sisters, Perry Como, Eddie Fisher, Al Jolson, Fred Astaire, Ethel Merman, Louis Armstrong, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Elvis Presley, Judy Garland, Tiny Tim, Barbra Streisand, Linda Ronstadt, Rosemary Clooney, Cher, Diana Ross, Bing Crosby, Sarah Vaughan, Ruth Etting, Fanny Brice, Marilyn Miller, Rudy Vallée, Nat King Cole, Billie Holiday, Doris Day, Jerry Garcia, Taco, Willie Nelson, Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Ella Fitzgerald, Michael Buble, Lady Gaga, and Christina Aguilera.

Berlin died in 1989 at the age of 101. Composer Douglas Moore sets Berlin apart from all other contemporary songwriters, and includes him instead with Stephen Foster, Walt Whitman, and Carl Sandburg, as a "great American minstrel"—someone who has "caught and immortalized in his songs what we say, what we think about, and what we believe."[5] Composer George Gershwin called him "the greatest songwriter that has ever lived",[9]: 117  and composer Jerome Kern concluded that "Irving Berlin has no place in American music—he is American music."[10]

Early life

Jewish immigrant

Life in Russia

Berlin was born Israel Beilin[11] on May 11, 1888, in the Russian Empire.[12] Although his family came from the shtetl of Tolochin (Yiddish: טאָלאָטשין; today Talachyn, Талачын, in Belarus), Berlin later learned that he was probably born in Tyumen, Siberia, where his father, an itinerant cantor, had taken his family.[12] He was one of eight children of Moses (1848–1901) and Lena Lipkin Beilin (1850–1922).

From Tyumen, the family returned to Tolochin, and from there, they travelled to Antwerp and left the old continent aboard the SS Rhynland from the Red Star Line.[13] On September 14, 1893,[14] the family arrived at Ellis Island in New York City. When they arrived, Israel was put in a pen with his brother and five sisters until immigration officials declared them fit to be allowed into the city.[15] After their arrival, the name "Beilin" was changed to "Baline".

According to biographer Laurence Bergreen, as an adult Berlin admitted to no memories of his first five years in Russia except for one: "he was lying on a blanket by the side of a road, watching his house burn to the ground. By daylight the house was in ashes."[16]: 10  As an adult, Berlin said he was unaware of being raised in abject poverty since he knew no other life.[17]: 19 

The Berlins were one of hundreds of thousands of Jewish families who emigrated to the United States in the late 1800s and early 1900s, escaping discrimination, poverty and brutal pogroms. Other such families included those of George and Ira Gershwin, Al Jolson, Sophie Tucker, L. Wolfe Gilbert, Jack Yellen, Louis B. Mayer (of MGM), and the Warner brothers.[17]: 14 

Settling in New York City

 
Lower East Side in the early 1900s

After their arrival in New York City, the Baline family lived briefly in a basement flat on Monroe Street, and then moved to a three-room tenement at 330 Cherry Street.[1] His father, unable to find comparable work as a cantor in New York, took a job at a kosher meat market and gave Hebrew lessons on the side to support his family. He died a few years later when Irving was thirteen years old.[17]

Now, with only a few years of schooling, eight-year-old Irving began helping to support his family.[5] He became a newspaper boy, hawking The Evening Journal. One day while delivering newspapers, according to Berlin's biographer and friend, Alexander Woollcott, he stopped to look at a ship departing for China and became so entranced that he did not see a swinging crane, which knocked him into the river. When he was fished out after going down for the third time, he was still holding in his clenched fist the five pennies he earned that day.[5][18]

His mother took a job as a midwife, and three of his sisters worked wrapping cigars, common for immigrant girls. His older brother worked in a sweatshop assembling shirts. Each evening, when the family came home from their day's work, Bergreen writes, "they would deposit the coins they had earned that day into Lena's outspread apron."[16] : 11 

Music historian Philip Furia writes that when "Izzy" began to sell newspapers in the Bowery, he was exposed to the music and sounds coming from saloons and restaurants that lined the crowded streets. Young Berlin sang some of the songs he heard while selling papers, and people would toss him some coins. He confessed to his mother one evening that his newest ambition in life was to become a singing waiter in a saloon.[19]: 48  From this he stepped up to work as a song plugger and singing waiter in cafes and restaurants in the downtown areas of New York City. His first lyric, written with a café pianist, earned him a royalty of thirty-seven cents.[20]

However, before Berlin was fourteen his meager income was still adding less than his sisters' to the family's budget, which made him feel worthless.[18] He then decided to leave home and join the city's ragged army of other young immigrants.[16]: 15  He lived in the Bowery, taking up residence in one of the lodging houses that sheltered the thousands of other homeless boys in the Lower East Side. Bergreen describes them as being uncharitable living quarters, "Dickensian in their meanness, filth, and insensitivity to ordinary human beings."[16]: 15 

Early jobs

 
Berlin at his first job with a music publisher, aged 18

Having left school around the age of thirteen,[12] Berlin had few survival skills and realized that formal employment was out of the question. His only ability was acquired from his father's vocation as a singer, and he joined with several other youngsters who went to saloons on the Bowery and sang to customers. Itinerant young singers like them were common on the Lower East Side. Berlin would sing a few of the popular ballads he heard on the street, hoping people would pitch him a few pennies. From these seamy surroundings, he became streetwise, with real and lasting education. Music was his only source of income and he picked up the language and culture of the ghetto lifestyle.[21]

Berlin learned what kind of songs appealed to audiences, writes Bergreen: "well-known tunes expressing simple sentiments were the most reliable."[16]: 17  He soon began plugging songs at Tony Pastor's Music Hall in Union Square and in 1906, when he was 18, got a job as a singing waiter at the Pelham Cafe in Chinatown. Besides serving drinks, he sang made-up "blue" parodies of hit songs to the delight of customers.

Biographer Charles Hamm writes that in Berlin's free time after hours, he taught himself to play the piano.[22] Never having had lessons, after the bar closed for the night, young Berlin would sit at a piano in the back and begin improvising tunes.[5] He published his first song, "Marie from Sunny Italy", written in collaboration with the Pelham's resident pianist Mike Nicholson,[12] in 1907, receiving 33 cents for the publishing rights.[3] The sheet music to the published song presented his name as "I. Berlin".[23]

 
Berlin photographed in 1907 in Pach Brothers Studio

Berlin continued writing and playing music at Pelham Cafe and developing an early style. He liked the words to other people's songs but sometimes the rhythms were "kind of boggy," and he might change them. One night he delivered some hits composed by his friend, George M. Cohan, another kid who was getting known on Broadway with his own songs. When Berlin ended with Cohan's "Yankee Doodle Boy", notes Whitcomb, "everybody in the joint applauded the feisty little fellow."

Recognition as songwriter

Max Winslow (c. 1883–1942), a staff member at music publisher Harry Von Tilzer Company, noticed Berlin's singing on many occasions and became so taken with his talent that he tried to get him a job with his firm.[24] Von Tilzer said that Max claimed to have "discovered a great kid," and raved about him so much that Von Tilzer hired Berlin[when?].[22]: viii 

In 1908, when he was 20, Berlin took a new job at a saloon named Jimmy Kelly's in the Union Square neighborhood.[1] There, he was able to collaborate with other young songwriters, such as Edgar Leslie, Ted Snyder, Al Piantadosi, and George A. Whiting. In 1909, the year of the premiere of Israel Zangwill's The Melting Pot, he got another big break as a staff lyricist with the Ted Snyder Company.

Installed as a staff lyricist with a leading Tin Pan Alley music publishing house, Berlin quickly established himself as one of that frantic industry's top writers of words to other composer's melodies. By 1910 he was already in demand and even appeared in a Shubert Broadway revue performing his own songs.[20] It was purely by chance that Berlin started composing music to the words of his songs. A lyric he had submitted to a publisher was thought to be complete with music. Not wishing to lose the sale, Berlin quickly wrote a melody. It was accepted and published .The success of this first effort opened the door to his career as a composer of music as well as lyrics.[20] In 1910, Berlin wrote a hit that solidly established him as one of Tin Pan Alley's leading composers. Alexander's Ragtime Band not only popularized the vogue for "ragtime," but later inspired a major motion picture.[20]

Songwriting career

Before 1920

"Alexander's Ragtime Band" (1911)

Ragtime a Form of Insanity

'Alexander's Ragtime Band' is a public menace....Hysteria is the form of insanity that an abnormal love for ragtime seems to produce. It is as much a mental disease as acute mania—it has the same symptoms. When there is nothing done to check this form it produces idiocy.

— Dr. Ludwig Gruener
German newspaper story[25]: 23 

Berlin rose as a songwriter in Tin Pan Alley and on Broadway. In 1911, Emma Carus introduced his first world-famous hit, "Alexander's Ragtime Band", followed by a performance from Berlin himself at the Friars' Frolic of 1911.[1] He became an instant celebrity, and the featured performer later that year at Oscar Hammerstein's vaudeville house, where he introduced dozens of other songs. The New York Telegraph described how two hundred of his street friends came to see "their boy" onstage: "All the little writer could do was to finger the buttons on his coat while tears ran down his cheeks—in a vaudeville house!"[22]: ix 

 
Berlin with film stars Alice Faye, Tyrone Power and Don Ameche singing chorus from Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938)

Richard Corliss, in a Time profile of Berlin, described "Alexander's Ragtime Band" as a march, not a rag, "its savviest musicality comprised quotes from a bugle call and "Swanee River". The tune revived the ragtime fervor that Scott Joplin had begun a decade earlier, and made Berlin a songwriting star.[26] From its first and subsequent releases, the song was near the top of the charts as others sang it: Bessie Smith, in 1927, and Louis Armstrong, in 1937; no. 1 by Bing Crosby and Connee Boswell; Johnny Mercer in 1945; Al Jolson, in 1947 and Nellie Lutcher in 1948. Add Ray Charles's big-band version in 1959, and "Alexander" had a dozen hit versions in just under a half century.[26]

Initially the song was not recognized as a hit, however; Broadway producer Jesse Lasky was uncertain about using it, although he did include it in his "Follies" show. It was performed as an instrumental but did not impress audiences, and was soon dropped from the show's score. Berlin regarded it as a failure. He then wrote lyrics to the score, played it again in another Broadway Review, and this time Variety news weekly called it "the musical sensation of the decade".[16]: 68  Composer George Gershwin, foreseeing its influence, said it was "the first real American musical work," adding, "Berlin had shown us the way; it was now easier to attain our ideal."[9]: 117 

Sparking a national dance craze

 
Enjoying early success in New York, c. 1911

Berlin was "flabbergasted" by the sudden international popularity of the song, and wondered why it became a sudden hit. He decided it was partly because the lyrics, "silly though it was, was fundamentally right...[and] the melody... started the heels and shoulders of all America and a good section of Europe to rocking."[16]: 69  In 1913, Berlin was featured in the London revue Hello Ragtime, where he introduced "That International Rag", a song he had written for the occasion.[1]

Watch Your Step

Furia writes that the international success of "Alexander's Ragtime Band" gave ragtime "new life and sparked a national dance craze". Two dancers who expressed that craze were Vernon and Irene Castle. In 1914, Berlin wrote a ragtime revue, Watch Your Step, which starred the couple and showcased their talents on stage. That musical revue became Berlin's first complete score with songs that "radiated musical and lyrical sophistication". Berlin's songs signified modernism, and they signified the cultural struggle between Victorian gentility and the "purveyors of liberation, indulgence, and leisure," says Furia. The song "Play a Simple Melody" became the first of his famous "double" songs in which two different melodies and lyrics are counterpointed against one another.[19][27]

Variety called Watch Your Step the "first syncopated musical", where the "sets and the girls were gorgeous". Berlin was then 26, and the success of the show was riding on his name alone. Variety said the show was a "terrific hit" from its opening night. It compared Berlin's newfound status as a composer with that of the Times building: "That youthful marvel of syncopated melody is proving things in Watch Your Step, firstly that he is not alone a rag composer, and that he is one of the greatest lyric writers America has ever produced."[17]: 173 

Whitcomb also points out the irony that Russia, the country Berlin's family was forced to leave, flung itself into "the ragtime beat with an abandon bordering on mania". For example, Prince Felix Yusupov, a recent Oxford undergraduate of Russian noble lineage and heir to the largest estate in Russia, was described by his dance partner as "wriggling around the ballroom like a demented worm, screaming for 'more ragtime and more champagne'".[17]: 183 

Simple and romantic ballads

My ambition is to reach the heart of the average American, not the highbrow nor the lowbrow but that vast intermediate crew which is the real soul of the country. The highbrow is likely to be superficial, overtrained, supersensitive. The lowbrow is warped, subnormal. My public is the real people.

— Irving Berlin[5]: 11 

 
With Al Jolson (r), star of The Jazz Singer, c. 1927

Some of the songs Berlin created came out of his own sadness. For instance, in 1912 he married Dorothy Goetz, the sister of songwriter E. Ray Goetz. She died six months later of typhoid fever contracted during their honeymoon in Havana. The song he wrote to express his grief, "When I Lost You", was his first ballad. It was an immediate popular hit and sold more than a million copies.[5]

He began to realize that ragtime was not a good musical style for serious romantic expression, and over the next few years adapted his style by writing more love songs.[19] In 1915 he wrote the hit "I Love a Piano", a comical and erotic ragtime love song.[28]

By 1918 he had written hundreds of songs, mostly topical, which enjoyed brief popularity. Many of the songs were for the new dances then appearing, such as the grizzly bear, chicken walk, or foxtrot. After a Hawaiian dance craze began, he wrote "That Hula-Hula", and then did a string of Southern songs, such as "When the Midnight Choo-Choo Leaves for Alabam". During this period, he was creating a few new songs every week, including songs aimed at the various immigrant cultures arriving from Europe. On one occasion, Berlin, whose face was still not known, was on a train trip and decided to entertain the fellow passengers with some music. They asked him how he knew so many hit songs, and Berlin modestly replied, "I wrote them."[19]: 53 

An important song that Berlin wrote during his transition from writing ragtime to lyrical ballads was "A Pretty Girl is Like a Melody", which became one of Berlin's "first big guns", says historian Alec Wilder. The song was written for Ziegfeld's Follies of 1919 and became the musical's lead song. Its popularity was so great that it later became the theme for all of Ziegfeld's revues, and the theme song in the 1936 film The Great Ziegfeld.[29] Wilder puts it on the same level as Jerome Kern's "pure melodies", and in comparison with Berlin's earlier music, says it is "extraordinary that such a development in style and sophistication should have taken place in a single year".[19]: 53 

World War I

On April 1, 1917, after President Woodrow Wilson declared that America would enter World War I, Berlin felt that Tin Pan Alley should do its duty and support the war with inspirational songs. Berlin wrote the song "For Your Country and My Country", stating that "we must speak with the sword not the pen to show our appreciation to America for opening up her heart and welcoming every immigrant group." He also co-wrote a song aimed at ending ethnic conflict, "Let's All Be Americans Now".[17]: 197 

Yip Yip Yaphank

At the grand finale... Sergeant Berlin led the entire 300-person cast off the stage, marching them down the theater's aisles, singing 'We're on Our Way to France,' all to tumultuous applause. The cast carried off their little producer like he was victor ludorum ... Tin Pan Alley had joined hands with real life

— biographer Ian Whitcomb.[17]: 199 [30]

In 1917, Berlin was drafted into the United States Army, and his induction became headline news, with one paper headline reading, "Army Takes Berlin!" But the Army wanted Berlin, now aged 30, to do what he knew best: write songs. While stationed with the 152nd Depot Brigade at Camp Upton, he then composed an all-soldier musical revue titled Yip Yip Yaphank, written as a patriotic tribute to the United States Army. The show was taken to Broadway where it also included a number of hits, including "Mandy" and "Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning", which Berlin performed himself.[5]

The shows earned $150,000 for a camp service center. One song he wrote for the show but decided not to use, he would introduce 20 years later: "God Bless America".[26][31]

1920 to 1940

 
c. 1920
 
I'll See You in C-U-B-A, cover of 1920 sheet music

Berlin returned to Tin Pan Alley after the war and in 1921 created a partnership with Sam Harris to build the Music Box Theater. He maintained an interest in the theater throughout his life, and even in his last years was known to call the Shubert Organization, his partner, to check on the receipts. In its early years, the theater was a showcase for revues by Berlin. As theater owner, producer and composer, he looked after every detail of his shows, from the costumes and sets to the casting and musical arrangements.[32]

According to Berlin biographer David Leopold, the theater, located at 239 West 45th St., was the only Broadway house built to accommodate the works of a songwriter. It was the home of Berlin's Music Box Revue from 1921 to 1925 and As Thousands Cheer in 1933 and today includes an exhibition devoted to Berlin in the lobby.[33]

Various hit songs by Berlin

By 1926, Berlin had written the scores to two editions of the Ziegfeld Follies and four annual editions of his Music Box Revue. These shows spanned the years of 1921–1926, premiering songs such as "Say It With Music", "Everybody Step", and "Pack Up Your Things and Go to the Devil".[1] Life magazine called Berlin the "Lullaby Kid", noting that "couples at country-club dances grew misty-eyed when the band went into 'Always', because they were positive that Berlin had written it just for them. When they quarreled and parted in the bitter-sweetness of the 1920s, it was Berlin who gave eloquence to their heartbreak by way of 'What'll I Do' and 'Remember' and 'All Alone'".[34]

"What'll I Do?" (1924)

This ballad of love and longing was a hit record for Paul Whiteman and had several other successful recordings in 1924. Twenty-four years later, the song went to no. 22 for Nat King Cole and no. 23 for Frank Sinatra.[26]

"Always" (1925)

Written when he fell in love with Ellin Mackay, who later became his wife. The song became a hit twice (for Vincent Lopez and George Olsen) in its first incarnation. There were four more hit versions in 1944–45. In 1959, Sammy Turner took the song to no. 2 on the R&B chart. It became Patsy Cline's postmortem anthem and hit no. 18 on the country chart in 1980, 17 years after her death, and a tribute musical called "Always... Patsy Cline", played a two-year Nashville run that ended in 1995.[26] Leonard Cohen included a cover of this song on his 1992 release The Future (Leonard Cohen album).

"Blue Skies" (1926)

Written after his first daughter's birth, he distilled his feelings about being married and a father for the first time: "Blue days, all of them gone; nothing but blue skies, from now on."[35] The song was introduced by Belle Baker in Betsy, a Ziegfeld production.[1] It became a hit recording for Ben Selvin and one of several Berlin hits in 1927. It was performed by Al Jolson in the first feature sound film, The Jazz Singer, that same year. In 1946, it returned to the top 10 on the charts with Count Basie and Benny Goodman. In 1978, Willie Nelson made the song a no. 1 country hit, 52 years after it was written.[26]

"Puttin' On the Ritz" (1928)

An instant standard with one of Berlin's most "intricately syncopated choruses", this song is associated with Fred Astaire, who sang and danced to it in the 1946 film Blue Skies. The song was written in 1928 with a separate set of lyrics and was introduced by Harry Richman in a 1930 film of the same name. In 1939, Clark Gable sang it in the movie Idiot's Delight. In 1974 it was featured in the movie Young Frankenstein by Mel Brooks, and was a no. 4 hit for synth-pop artist Taco in 1983.[36] In 2012 it was used for a flash mob wedding event in Moscow.[37]

"Marie" (1929)

This waltz-time song was a hit for Rudy Vallée in 1929, and in 1937, updated to a four-quarter-time swing arrangement, was a top hit for Tommy Dorsey. It was on the charts at no. 13 in 1953 for The Four Tunes and at no. 15 for the Bachelors in 1965, 36 years after its first appearance.[26]

"Say It Isn't So" (1932)

Rudy Vallée performed it on his radio show, and the song was a hit for George Olsen, Connee Boswell (she was still known as Connie), and Ozzie Nelson's band. Aretha Franklin produced a single of the song in 1963, 31 years later.[26] Furia notes that when Vallée first introduced the song on his radio show, the "song not only became an overnight hit, it saved Vallée's marriage: The Vallées had planned to get a divorce, but after Vallée sang Berlin's romantic lyrics on the air, "both he and his wife dissolved in tears" and decided to stay together.[19]

"I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm" (1937)

Performed by Dick Powell in the 1937 film On the Avenue. Later it had four top-12 versions, including by Billie Holiday and Les Brown, who took it to no. 1.[26]

"God Bless America" (1938)

The song's introduction at that time enshrines a strain of official patriotism intertwined with a religious faith that runs deep in the American psyche. Patriotic razzle-dazzle, sophisticated melancholy and humble sentiments: Berlin songs span the emotional terrain of America with a thoroughness that others may have equaled but none have surpassed.

The New York Times[10]

The song was written by Berlin twenty years earlier, but he filed it away until 1938 when Kate Smith needed a patriotic song to mark the 20th anniversary of Armistice Day, celebrating the end of World War I.[26] Its release near the end of the Depression, which had by then gone on for nine years, enshrined a "strain of official patriotism intertwined with a religious faith that runs deep in the American psyche," stated The New York Times.[10]

Berlin's daughter, Mary Ellin Barrett, states that the song was actually "very personal" for her father, and was intended as an expression of his deep gratitude to the nation for merely "allowing" him, an immigrant raised in poverty, to become a successful songwriter.[38] "To me," said Berlin, "'God Bless America' was not just a song but an expression of my feeling toward the country to which I owe what I have and what I am."[39] The Economist magazine writes that "Berlin was producing a deep-felt paean to the country that had given him what he would have said was everything."[40]

 
Singing "God Bless America" at the Pentagon memorial dedication, September 11, 2008

It quickly became a second national anthem[1] after America entered World War II a few years later. Over the decades it has earned millions for the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, to whom Berlin assigned all royalties.[26][31][unreliable source?] In 1954, Berlin received a special Congressional Gold Medal from President Dwight D. Eisenhower for contributing the song.[41]

The song was heard after September 11, 2001, as U.S. senators and congressmen stood on the capitol steps and sang it after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. It is often played by sports teams such as major league baseball. The Philadelphia Flyers hockey team started playing it before crucial contests. When the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team pulled off the "greatest upset in sports history," referred to as the "Miracle on Ice", the players spontaneously sang it as Americans were overcome by patriotism.[42][43]

Other songs

Though most of his works for the Broadway stage took the form of revues—collections of songs with no unifying plot—he did write a number of book shows. The Cocoanuts (1929) was a light comedy with a cast featuring, among others, the Marx Brothers. Face the Music (1932) was a political satire with a book by Moss Hart, and Louisiana Purchase (1940) was a satire of a Southern politician obviously based on the exploits of Huey Long. As Thousands Cheer (1933) was a revue, also with book by Moss Hart, with a theme: each number was presented as an item in a newspaper, some of them touching on issues of the day. The show yielded a succession of hit songs, including "Easter Parade" sung by Marilyn Miller and Clifton Webb, "Heat Wave" (presented as the weather forecast), "Harlem on My Mind", and "Supper Time", a song about racial violence inspired by a newspaper headline about a lynching, sung by Ethel Waters. She once said about the song, "If one song can tell the whole tragic history of a race, 'Supper Time' was that song. In singing it I was telling my comfortable, well-fed, well-dressed listeners about my people...those who had been slaves and those who were now downtrodden and oppressed."[44]

1941 to 1962

World War II patriotism—"This is the Army" (1943)

 
Irving Berlin singing and conducting aboard USS Arkansas, 1944

Berlin loved his country, and wrote many songs reflecting his patriotism. Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau requested a song to inspire Americans to buy war bonds, for which he wrote "Any Bonds Today?"[1] He assigned all royalties to the United States Treasury Department. He then wrote songs for various government agencies and likewise assigned all profits to them: "Angels of Mercy" for the American Red Cross; "Arms for the Love of America", for the U.S. Army Ordnance Department; and "I Paid My Income Tax Today",[45] again to Treasury.[26]

When the United States joined World War II after the attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, Berlin immediately began composing a number of patriotic songs. His most notable and valuable contribution to the war effort was a stage show he wrote called "This Is The Army". It was taken to Broadway and then on to Washington, D.C. (where President Franklin D. Roosevelt attended). It was eventually shown at military bases throughout the world, including London, North Africa, Italy, Middle East, and Pacific countries, sometimes in close proximity to battle zones. Berlin wrote nearly three dozen songs for the show which contained a cast of 300 men. He supervised the production and traveled with it, always singing "Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning". The show kept him away from his family for three and a half years, during which time he took neither salary nor expenses, and turned over all profits to the Army Emergency Relief Fund.[46]: 81 

The play was adapted into a movie of the same name in 1943, directed by Michael Curtiz, co-starring Joan Leslie and Ronald Reagan, who was then an army lieutenant. Kate Smith also sang "God Bless America" in the film with a backdrop showing families anxious over the coming war. The show became a hit movie and a morale-boosting road show that toured the battlefronts of Europe.[47] The shows and movie combined raised more than $10 million for the Army,[26] and in recognition of his contributions to troop morale, Berlin was awarded the Medal for Merit by President Harry S. Truman. His daughter, Mary Ellin Barrett, who was 15 when she was at the opening-night performance of "This is the Army" on Broadway, remembered that when her father, who normally shunned the spotlight, appeared in the second act in soldier's garb to sing "Oh, How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning", he was greeted with a standing ovation that lasted 10 minutes. She adds that he was in his mid-50s at the time, and later declared those years with the show were the "most thrilling time of his life".[47]

Annie Get Your Gun (1946)

The grueling tours Berlin did performing "This Is The Army" left him exhausted, but when his longtime close friend Jerome Kern, who was the composer for Annie Get Your Gun, died suddenly, producers Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II persuaded Berlin to take over composing the score.

What distinguishes Berlin is the brilliance of his lyrics. 'You Can't Get a Man With a Gun'—that's as good a comic song as has ever been written by anybody. You look at the jokes and how quickly they're told, and it still has a plot to it. It's sophisticated and very underrated.

— composer-lyricist Stephen Sondheim[48][49]

Loosely based on the life of sharpshooter Annie Oakley, the music and lyrics were written by Berlin, with a book by Herbert Fields and his sister Dorothy Fields, and directed by Joshua Logan. At first Berlin refused to take on the job, claiming that he knew nothing about "hillbilly music", but the show ran for 1,147 performances and became his most successful score and biggest box office success.[20] It is said that the showstopper song "There's No Business Like Show Business" was almost left out of the show altogether because Berlin mistakenly thought that Rodgers and Hammerstein didn't like it. However, it became the "ultimate uptempo show tune".

On the origin of another of the play's leading songs, Logan described how he and Hammerstein privately discussed wanting another duet between Annie and Frank. Berlin overheard their conversation, and although the show was to go into rehearsal within days, he wrote the song "Anything You Can Do" a few hours later.[50]

One reviewer commented about the play's score, that "its tough wisecracking lyrics are as tersely all-knowing as its melody, which is nailed down in brassy syncopated lines that have been copied—but never equaled in sheer melodic memorability—by hundreds of theater composers ever since."[10] Singer and musicologist Susannah McCorkle writes that the score "meant more to me than ever, now that I knew that he wrote it after a grueling world tour and years of separation from his wife and daughters."[46]: 81  Historian and composer Alec Wilder says that the perfection of the score, when compared to his earlier works, was "a profound shock".[51]: 94 

Apparently the "creative spurt" in which Berlin turned out several songs for the score in a single weekend was an anomaly. According to his daughter, he usually "sweated blood" to write his songs.[47] Annie Get Your Gun is considered to be Berlin's best musical theatre score not only because of the number of hits it contains, but because its songs successfully combine character and plot development. The song "There's No Business Like Show Business" became "Ethel Merman's trademark".[10]

Final shows

Berlin's next show, Miss Liberty (1949), was disappointing, but Call Me Madam (1950), starring Ethel Merman as Sally Adams, a Washington, D.C., socialite, loosely based on the famous Washington hostess Perle Mesta, fared better, giving him his second-greatest success. Berlin made two attempts to write a musical about his friend, the colorful Addison Mizner, and Addison's con-man brother Wilson. The first was the uncompleted The Last Resorts (1952); a manuscript of Act I is in the Library of Congress. Wise Guy (1956) was completed but never produced, although songs have been published and recorded on The Unsung Irving Berlin (1995). After a failed attempt at retirement, in 1962, at the age of 74, he returned to Broadway with Mr. President. Although it ran for eight months, (with the premiere attended by President John F. Kennedy), it was not one of his successful plays.[26]

Afterwards, Berlin officially announced his retirement and spent his remaining years in New York. He did, however, write one new song, "An Old-Fashioned Wedding", for the 1966 Broadway revival of Annie Get Your Gun starring Ethel Merman. Though he lived 23 more years, this would be one of Berlin's final published compositions.

Berlin maintained a low profile through the last decades of his life, almost never appearing in public after the late 1960s, even for events held in his honor. However, he continued to maintain control of his songs through his own music publishing company, which remained in operation for the rest of his life.

Film scores

1920s–1950s

In 1927, his song "Blue Skies", was featured in the first feature-length talkie, The Jazz Singer, with Al Jolson. Later, movies such as Top Hat (1935) became the first of a series of distinctive film musicals by Berlin starring performers Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire, Judy Garland, Ginger Rogers, and Alice Faye. Top Hat featured a brand new score, as did several more, including Follow the Fleet (1936), On the Avenue (1937), Carefree (1938), and Second Fiddle (1939). Starting with Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938), he often blended new songs with existing ones from his catalog. He continued this process with the films Holiday Inn (1942), Blue Skies (1946) and Easter Parade (1948), with Judy Garland and Fred Astaire, and There's No Business Like Show Business (1954).[1]

"White Christmas" (1942)

The 1942 film Holiday Inn introduced "White Christmas", one of the most recorded songs in history. First sung in the film by Bing Crosby (along with Marjorie Reynolds, whose voice was dubbed by Martha Mears[52]), it has sold over 50 million records and stayed no. 1 on the pop and R&B charts for 10 weeks. Crosby's version is the best-selling single of all time. Music critic Stephen Holden credits this partly to the fact that "the song also evokes a primal nostalgia—a pure childlike longing for roots, home and childhood—that goes way beyond the greeting imagery."[10]

Richard Corliss also notes that the song was even more significant having been released soon after America entered World War II: [it] "connected with... GIs in their first winter away from home. To them it voiced the ache of separation and the wistfulness they felt for the girl back home, for the innocence of youth...."[26] Poet Carl Sandburg wrote, "We have learned to be a little sad and a little lonesome without being sickly about it. This feeling is caught in the song of a thousand jukeboxes and tune whistled in streets and homes. "I'm Dreaming of a White Christmas'. When we sing that we don't hate anybody. And there are things we love that we're going to have sometimes if the breaks are not too bad against us. Way down under this latest hit of his, Irving Berlin catches us where we love peace."[26][1]

"White Christmas" won Berlin the Academy Award for Best Music in an Original Song, one of seven Oscar nominations he received during his career. In subsequent years, it was re-recorded and became a top-10 seller for numerous artists: Frank Sinatra, Jo Stafford, Ernest Tubb, The Ravens and The Drifters. It would also be the last time a Berlin song went to no. 1 upon its release.

Berlin is the only Academy Award presenter and Academy Award winner to open the "envelope" and read his or her own name (for "White Christmas"). This result was so awkward for Berlin (since he had to present the Oscar to himself) that the Academy changed the rules of protocol the following year to prevent this situation from arising again.

Talking about Irving Berlin's "White Christmas", composer–lyricist Garrison Hintz stated that although songwriting can be a complicated process, its final result should sound simple. Considering the fact that "White Christmas" has only eight sentences in the entire song, lyrically Mr. Berlin achieved all that was necessary to eventually sell over 100 million copies and capture the hearts of the American public at the same time.[53]

Songwriting methods

According to Saul Bornstein (a.k.a. Sol Bourne, Saul Bourne), Berlin's publishing company manager, "It was a ritual for Berlin to write a complete song, words and music, every day."[51]: 92  Berlin said that he "did not believe in inspiration," and felt that although he might be gifted in certain areas, his most successful compositions were the "result of work". He said that he did most of his work under pressure. He would typically begin writing after dinner and continue until 4 or 5 in the morning. "Each day I would attend rehearsals," he said, "and at night write another song and bring it down the next day."[54]

Not always certain about his own writing abilities, he once asked a songwriter friend, Victor Herbert, whether he should study composition. "You have a natural gift for words and music," Mr. Herbert told him. "Learning theory might help you a little, but it could cramp your style." Berlin took his advice. Herbert later became a moving force behind the creation of ASCAP, the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. In 1914, Berlin joined him as a charter member of the organization that has protected the royalties of composers and writers ever since.[5] In 1920, Irving Berlin became a member of SACEM, the French Society of Authors, Composers, and Publishers.[1]

In later years, Berlin emphasized his conviction, saying that "it's the lyrics that makes a song a hit, although the tune, of course, is what makes it last."[55]: 234  He played almost entirely in the key of F sharp so that he could stay on the black keys and owned three transposing pianos so as to change keys by moving a lever.[56] Though Berlin eventually learned how to produce written music, he never changed his method of dictating songs to a "musical secretary".[57][a]

As a result, Wilder says that many admirers of the music of Jerome Kern, Richard Rodgers and Cole Porter were unlikely to consider Berlin's work in the same category because they forgot or never realized that Berlin wrote many popular tunes, such as "Soft Lights and Sweet Music", "Supper Time", and "Cheek to Cheek". Some are even more confused because he also wrote more romantic melodies, such as "What'll I Do?" and "Always".[51] Wilder adds that "in his lyrics as in his melodies, Berlin reveals a constant awareness of the world around him: the pulse of the times, the society in which his is functioning. There is nothing of the hothouse about his work, urban though it may be."[51]

Music styles

His music has that vitality—both rhythmic and melodic—which never seems to lose any of its exuberant freshness; it has that rich, colorful melodic flow which is ever the wonder of all those of who, too, compose songs; his ideas are endless.

— composer George Gershwin[9]: 117 

Composer Jerome Kern recognized that the essence of Irving Berlin's lyrics was his "faith in the American vernacular" and was so profound that his best-known songs "seem indivisible from the country's history and self-image". Kern, along with George Gershwin, Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II and Cole Porter, brought together Afro-American, Latin American, rural pop, and European operetta.[10]

Berlin, however, did not follow that method. Instead, says music critic Stephen Holden, Berlin's songs were always simple, "exquisitely crafted street songs whose diction feels so natural that one scarcely notices the craft....they seem to flow straight out of the rhythms and inflections of everyday speech."[10] It led composer George Gershwin to claim that he learned from Berlin that ragtime, which later became jazz, "was the only musical idiom in existence that could aptly express America".[9]: 117 

Among Berlin's contemporaries was Cole Porter, whose music style was often considered more "witty, sophisticated, [and] dirty," according to musicologist Susannah McCorkle. Of the five top songwriters, only Porter and Berlin wrote both their own words and music. However, she notes that Porter, unlike Berlin, was a Yale-educated and wealthy Midwesterner whose songs were not successful until he was in his thirties. She notes further that it was "Berlin [who] got Porter the show that launched his career."[46]: 76 

Personal life

Marriages

 
Irving Berlin and first wife Dorothy Goetz in 1912

In February 1912, after a brief whirlwind courtship, he married 20-year-old Dorothy Goetz of Buffalo, New York, the sister of one of Berlin's collaborators, E. Ray Goetz. During their honeymoon in Havana, she contracted typhoid fever, and doctors were unable to treat her illness when she returned to New York. She died July 17 of that year. Left with writer's block for months after Goetz's death, he eventually wrote his first ballad, "When I Lost You", to express his grief.

 
With wife Ellin, ca. 1926

Years later in the 1920s, he fell in love with a young author and heiress, Ellin Mackay.[58] Because Berlin was Jewish and she was a Catholic of Irish descent, their life was followed in every possible detail by the press, which found the romance of an immigrant from the Lower East Side and a young heiress a good story.[5] Mackay's father, Clarence Mackay, the socially prominent head of the Postal Telegraph Cable Company, objected to their marriage.[20][58]

They met in 1924, and her father opposed the match from the start. He went so far as to send her off to Europe to find other suitors and forget Berlin. However, Berlin wooed her with letters and songs over the airwaves such as "Remember," "Remember"[20] and "All Alone", and she wrote him daily.[59] Biographer Philip Furia writes that newspapers rumored they were engaged before she returned from Europe, and some Broadway shows even performed skits of the "lovelorn songwriter". After her return, she and Berlin were besieged by the press, which followed them everywhere. Variety reported that her father vowed that their marriage "would only happen 'over my dead body.'"[55] As a result, they decided to elope and were married in a simple civil ceremony at the Municipal Building away from media attention.

The wedding news made the front page of The New York Times. The marriage took her father by surprise, and he was stunned upon reading about it. The bride's mother, however, who was at the time divorced from Mackay, wanted her daughter to follow the dictates of her own heart. Berlin had gone to her mother's home before the wedding and had obtained her blessing.[60][59]

There followed reports that the bride's father disowned his daughter because of the marriage. In response, Berlin gave the rights to "Always", a song still played at weddings, to her as a wedding present.[12] Ellin was thereby guaranteed a steady income regardless of what might happen with the marriage. For nearly three years Mackay refused to speak to the Berlins, but they reconciled after the death of the Berlins' son, Irving Berlin Jr., on Christmas Day 1928, less than one month after he was born.[12]

Their marriage remained a love affair and they were inseparable until she died in July 1988 at the age of 85. They had four children during their 63 years of marriage: Mary Ellin Barrett in 1926, Irving Berlin Jr., who died in infancy in 1928, Linda Louise Emmet in 1932, and Elizabeth Irving Peters in 1936.[5]

Lifestyle

In 1916, in the earlier phase of Berlin's career, producer and composer George M. Cohan, during a toast to the young Berlin at a Friar's Club dinner in his honor, said, "The thing I like about Irvie is that although he has moved up-town and made lots of money, it hasn't turned his head. He hasn't forgotten his friends, he doesn't wear funny clothes, and you will find his watch and his handkerchief in his pockets, where they belong."[54]

 
Lower East Side in 1909. He said he never forgot his childhood years when he slept under tenement steps, ate scraps, wore secondhand clothes and sold newspapers. "Every man should have a Lower East Side in his life," said Berlin.

Furia says that throughout Berlin's life he often returned on foot to his old neighborhoods in Union Square, Chinatown, and the Bowery.[55] He never forgot those childhood years when he "slept under tenement steps, ate scraps, and wore secondhand clothes," and described those years as hard but good. "Every man should have a Lower East Side in his life," he said. He used to visit The Music Box Theater, which he founded and which still stands at 239 West 45th St. From 1947 to 1989, Berlin's home in New York City was 17 Beekman Place.[61]

George Frazier of Life magazine found Berlin to be "intensely nervous," with a habit of tapping his listener with his index finger to emphasize a point, and continually pressing his hair down in back" and "picking up any stray crumbs left on a table after a meal". While listening, "he leans forward tensely, with his hands clasped below his knees like a prizefighter waiting in his corner for the bell.... For a man who has known so much glory," writes Frazier, "Berlin has somehow managed to retain the enthusiasm of a novice."[34]

Berlin's daughter wrote in her memoir that her father was a loving, if workaholic, family man who was "basically an upbeat person, with down periods". In his final decades he retreated from public life.[46] As such, he did not attend the televised 100th birthday celebration at Carnegie Hall.[62] Her parents liked to celebrate every single holiday with their children, and "They seemed to understand the importance, particularly in childhood, of the special day, the same every year, the special stories, foods, and decorations and that special sense of well-being that accompanies a holiday."[46]: 80  Although he did comment to his daughter about her mother's lavish Christmas spending, "I gave up trying to get your mother to economize. It was easier just to make more money."[46]

Berlin voted for both Democratic and Republican presidential candidates,[59] but he supported the presidential candidacy of General Dwight Eisenhower, and his song "I Like Ike" featured prominently in the Eisenhower campaign. In his later years he also became more conservative in his views on music. According to his daughter, "He was consumed by patriotism." He often said, "I owe all my success to my adopted country" and once rejected his lawyers' advice of investing in tax shelters, insisting, "I want to pay taxes. I love this country."[46]: 80 

Berlin was a Freemason, and was a member of Munn Lodge no. 190, New York City, the Scottish Rite Valley of New York City, and Mecca Shrine Temple.[63]

Berlin was a noted member of The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks.[64]

Berlin was a staunch advocate of civil rights. Berlin was honored in 1944 by the National Conference of Christians and Jews for "advancing the aims of the conference to eliminate religious and racial conflict".[65] His 1943 production "This Is The Army", was the first integrated division army unit in the United States.[66] In 1949, the Young Men's Hebrew Association (YMHA) honored him as one of the twelve "most outstanding Americans of Jewish faith".[65] While he was ethnically and culturally Jewish, he was religiously agnostic.[59] Berlin's Civil Rights Movement support also made him a target of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, who continuously investigated him for years.[67]

Death

 
The grave of Irving Berlin in Woodlawn Cemetery, the Bronx, New York City

Berlin died in his sleep at his 17 Beekman Place town house in Manhattan on September 22, 1989, of a heart attack and other natural causes at the age of 101. He was interred in the Woodlawn Cemetery in The Bronx, New York City.[5]

On the evening following the announcement of his death, the marquee lights of Broadway playhouses were dimmed before curtain time in his memory. President George H. W. Bush said Berlin was "a legendary man whose words and music will help define the history of our nation". Just minutes before the President's statement was released, he joined a crowd of thousands to sing Berlin's "God Bless America" at a luncheon in Boston. Former President Ronald Reagan, who costarred in Berlin's 1943 musical This Is the Army, said, "Nancy and I are deeply saddened by the death of a wonderfully talented man whose musical genius delighted and stirred millions and will live on forever."[68]

Morton Gould, the composer and conductor who was president of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), of which Berlin was a founder, said, "What to me is fascinating about this unique genius is that he touched so many people in so many age groups over so many years. He sounded our deepest feelings—happiness, sadness, celebration, loneliness." Ginger Rogers, who danced to Berlin tunes with Fred Astaire, told The Associated Press upon hearing of his death that working with Berlin had been "like heaven".[68][b]

Legacy and influence

Other nations are defined by their classical composers. America is appropriately defined musically by this Russian immigrant...Germany has Beethoven, France, Ravel, Poland, Chopin, Italy, Verdi; America has Irving Berlin. Though he's not here with us tonight, he will be with us always. Wherever there is America, there is Irving Berlin.

Walter Cronkite
Kennedy Center Tribute to Irving Berlin, 1987[69]

The New York Times, after his death in 1989, wrote, "Irving Berlin set the tone and the tempo for the tunes America played and sang and danced to for much of the 20th century." An immigrant from Russia, his life became the "classic rags-to-riches story that he never forgot could have happened only in America".[5] During his career he wrote an estimated 1,500 songs and was a legend by the time he turned 30.[32] He went on to write the scores for 20 original Broadway shows and 15 original Hollywood films,[1] with his songs nominated for Academy Awards on eight occasions. Music historian Susannah McCorkle writes that "in scope, quantity, and quality his work was amazing."[46] Others, such as Broadway musician Anne Phillips, says simply that "the man is an American institution."[70]

During his six-decade career, from 1907 to 1966, he produced sheet music, Broadway shows, recordings, and scores played on radio, in films and on television, and his tunes continue to evoke powerful emotions for millions around the world. He wrote songs like "Alexander's Ragtime Band", "Cheek to Cheek", "There's No Business Like Show Business", "Blue Skies" and "Puttin' On the Ritz". Some of his songs have become holiday anthems, such as "Easter Parade", "White Christmas" and "Happy Holiday". "White Christmas" alone sold over 50 million records, the top single selling song in recording history, won an ASCAP and an Academy Award, and is one of the most frequently played songs ever written.[5]

In 1938, "God Bless America" became the unofficial national anthem of the United States, and on September 11, 2001, members of the House of Representatives stood on the steps of the Capitol and solemnly sang "God Bless America" together. The song again became popular shortly after 9/11, when Celine Dion recorded it as the title track of a 9/11 benefit album. The following year, the Postal Service issued a commemorative stamp of Berlin. By then, the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts of New York had received more than $10 million in royalties from "God Bless America" as a result of Berlin's donation of royalties.[32] According to music historian Gary Giddins, "No other songwriter has written as many anthems... No one else has written as many pop songs, period... [H]is gift for economy, directness, and slang, presents Berlin as an obsessive, often despairing commentator on the passing scene."[71]: 405 

In 1934, Time[72] put him on its cover and inside hailed "this itinerant son of a Russian cantor" as "an American institution".[35] And again, in 1943, the same magazine described his songs as follows:

They possess a permanence not generally associated with Tin Pan Alley products and it is more than remotely possible that in days to come Berlin will be looked upon as the Stephen Foster of the 20th century.[34]

At various times, his songs were also rallying cries for different causes: He produced musical editorials supporting Al Smith and Dwight Eisenhower as presidential candidates, he wrote songs opposing Prohibition, defending the gold standard, calming the wounds of the Great Depression, and helping the war against Hitler, and in 1950 he wrote an anthem for the state of Israel.[26] Biographer David Leopold adds that "We all know his songs... they are all part of who we are."

Berlin inadvertently influenced American law when his publishing group sued Mad Magazine for copyright infringement in 1961. The humor magazine had published a collection of parody lyrics which it said could be "sung to the tune of" many popular songs. Berlin objected, and Irving Berlin et al. v. E.C. Publications, Inc. would ultimately become a landmark case. Mad prevailed at every stage. The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled largely in favor of Mad in 1963, but Judge Charles Metzner decided that two of the 25 disputed parodies - "Always" (sung to the tune of "Always") and "There's No Business Like No Business" (sung to the tune of "There's No Business Like Show Business") - would require a trial because they relied on the same verbal hooks ("always" and "business") as the originals.

The music publishers pressed on. The following year, the U.S. Court of Appeals not only upheld the pro-Mad decision in regard to the 23 songs, it adopted an approach that was broad enough to strip the publishers of their limited victory regarding the remaining two songs. Writing a unanimous opinion for the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, Circuit Judge Irving Kaufman observed, "We doubt that even so eminent a composer as plaintiff Irving Berlin should be permitted to claim a property interest in iambic pentameter."[73] The publishers again appealed, but the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear the appeal, allowing the decision to stand.[74] The precedent-setting 1964 ruling established the rights of parodists and satirists to mimic the meter of popular songs.

At his 100th-birthday celebration in May 1988, violinist Isaac Stern said, "The career of Irving Berlin and American music were intertwined forever—American music was born at his piano,"[5] while songwriter Sammy Cahn pointed out: "If a man, in a lifetime of 50 years, can point to six songs that are immediately identifiable, he has achieved something. Irving Berlin can sing 60 that are immediately identifiable... [Y]ou couldn't have a holiday without his permission."[5] Composer Douglas Moore added:

It's a rare gift which sets Irving Berlin apart from all other contemporary songwriters. It is a gift which qualifies him, along with Stephen Foster, Walt Whitman, Vachel Lindsay and Carl Sandburg, as a great American minstrel. He has caught and immortalized in his songs what we say, what we think about, and what we believe.[5]

ASCAP's records show that 25 of Berlin's songs reached the top of the charts and were re-recorded by dozens of famous singers over the years, such as Eddie Fisher, Al Jolson, Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Barbra Streisand, Linda Ronstadt, Rosemary Clooney, Doris Day, Diana Ross, Nat King Cole and Ella Fitzgerald. In 1924, when Berlin was 36, his biography, The Story of Irving Berlin, was being written by Alexander Woollcott. In a letter to Woollcott, Jerome Kern offered what one writer said "may be the last word" on the significance of Irving Berlin:

Irving Berlin has no place in American music—he is American music. Emotionally, he honestly absorbs the vibrations emanating from the people, manners and life of his time and, in turn, gives these impressions back to the world—simplified, clarified and glorified.[10]

Composer George Gershwin (1898–1937) also tried to describe the importance of Berlin's compositions:

I want to say at once that I frankly believe that Irving Berlin is the greatest songwriter that has ever lived.... His songs are exquisite cameos of perfection, and each one of them is as beautiful as its neighbor. Irving Berlin remains, I think, America's Schubert. But apart from his genuine talent for song-writing, Irving Berlin has had a greater influence upon American music than any other one man. It was Irving Berlin who was the very first to have created a real, inherent American music.... Irving Berlin was the first to free the American song from the nauseating sentimentality which had previously characterized it, and by introducing and perfecting ragtime he had actually given us the first germ of an American musical idiom; he had sown the first seeds of an American music.[9]: 117 

Awards and honors

Musical scores

The following list includes scores mostly produced by Berlin. Although some of the plays using his songs were later adapted to films, the list will not include the film unless he was the primary composer.[16]

Stage

Film scores

*Denotes films originally written for the stage

Song lists

Notes

  1. ^ Berlin never learned to play in more than one key and used two special pianos (his first piano, purchased second-hand in 1909, was made by Weser Brothers, augmented in 1921 by a second from Somner Brothers) with transposing levers to change keys. Berlin demonstrated his transposing keyboard during a television show with Dinah Shore, and the piano was placed on display in Belgium's Red Star Line Museum in 2013, on loan from the Emmet family. A second transposing piano is on loan from the Peters family to the National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia.
  2. ^ After his death, Irving Berlin's three daughters donated the songwriter's musical collection of 750,000 items to the music archives of the Library of Congress.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Kimball, Robert; Linda Emmet, eds. (2001). The complete lyrics of Irving Berlin (reprint ed.). Applause Theatre & Cinema Books. p. XXI. ISBN 978-1557836816.
  2. ^ "Irving Berlin". Irving Berlin. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  3. ^ a b Starr, Larry and Waterman, Christopher, American Popular Music: From Minstrelsy to MP3, Oxford University Press, 2009, pg. 64
  4. ^ Marcus, Gary (January 19, 2012). Guitar Zero. Penguin Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-1101552285.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "Irving Berlin, Nation's Songwriter, Dies", The New York Times, September 23, 1989
  6. ^ Carnegie Hall, May 27, 1988, Irving Berlin's 100th birthday celebration
  7. ^ This Is the Army (1943), retrieved September 6, 2017
  8. ^ "Kate Smith, "God Bless America", 5 min.
  9. ^ a b c d e Wyatt, Robert; Johnson, John A. The George Gershwin Reader, Oxford Univ. Press (2004)
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Pop View; Irving Berlin's American Landscape", The New York Times, May 10, 1987
  11. ^ "Irving Berlin". Irving Berlin. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Furia, Philip; Wood, Graham (1998). Irving Berlin: A Life in Song. New York: Schirmer Books. ISBN 978-0-02-864815-6.
  13. ^ Bello, Grace (November 27, 2013). "Red Star Line Museum Recalls the Ships That Brought Einstein and Irving Berlin to America". Tablet Magazine. Retrieved September 28, 2022.
  14. ^ "Passenger list of the Beilin family". Ancestry.com.[permanent dead link]
  15. ^ "Irving Berlin - The Voice of the City", BBC Bristol and A&E network's 1988 broadcast
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h Bergreen, Laurence (March 22, 1996). As Thousands Cheer (reprint ed.). Hachette Books. ISBN 978-0306806759.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g Whitcomb, Ian (1987). Irving Berlin and Ragtime America. Century. ISBN 9780712616645.
  18. ^ a b Woollcott, Alexander (September 26, 2016). The Story of Irving Berlin. Read Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1473359604. Retrieved June 5, 2020.
  19. ^ a b c d e f Furia, Philip (June 25, 1992). The Poets of Tin Pan Alley. Oxford Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0198022886.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g
     

    "The Waltzes of Irving Berlin", 1962

  21. ^ Maslon, Laurence. "Early Career and Tin Pan Alley". Irving Berlin. The Irving Berlin Music Company. Retrieved October 13, 2018.
  22. ^ a b c Hamm, Charles. Irving Berlin: Songs from the Melting Pot, Oxford Univ. Press, 1997
  23. ^ Freedland, Michael. 'Irving Berlin', Stein and Day, 1974
  24. ^ "Max Winslow Dead; Music Publisher, 59". The New York Times. June 9, 1942. Retrieved June 5, 2020.
  25. ^ Leopold, David. Irving Berlin's Show Business, Harry Abrams (2005)
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Corliss, Richard (December 24, 2001). Time.
  27. ^ audio: "Play A Simple Melody", with Bing and Gary Crosby
  28. ^ . Sing365.com. Archived from the original on June 28, 2013. Retrieved January 19, 2013.
  29. ^ video: "A Pretty Girl is Like a Melody"
  30. ^ video:Irving Berlin's "We're on our way to France", from This is the Army (1943)
  31. ^ a b . Tom Smith Big Band. 2009. Archived from the original on February 28, 2010. Retrieved January 12, 2010.
  32. ^ a b c "Dreaming of Irving Berlin In the Season That He Owned", The New York Times, December 23, 2005.
  33. ^ Leopold, David. Irving Berlin's Show Business: Broadway—Hollywood—America, Harry N. Abrams, 2005
  34. ^ a b c Frazier, George. Life, April 5, 1943, pgs. 79–88.
  35. ^ a b Irving Berlin: An American Song, film, 1999
  36. ^ "Taco - Puttin on the Ritz (1983)". YouTube. Retrieved October 17, 2019.
  37. ^ "Flashmob Moscow (Russia) : Putting on the ritz 2012". YouTube. Archived from the original on October 30, 2021. Retrieved October 17, 2019.
  38. ^ "Irving Berlin Spotlight Interview" on YouTube
  39. ^ Galewitz, Herb. Music: A Book of Quotations, Courier Dover Publ. (2001) p. 4
  40. ^ "Hand on heart. (Irving Berlin)". The Economist. London. September 30, 1989.
  41. ^ video: "Irving Berlin gets medal from Ike 1954" on YouTube, 1 min.
  42. ^ Bacon, John U. (February 19, 2010). . Ann Arbor Chronicle. Archived from the original on July 27, 2011.
  43. ^ "College kids perform Olympic miracle" ESPN TV network
  44. ^ Waters, Ethel; Charles Samuels (March 22, 1992). His eye is on the sparrow: an autobiography (1st ed.). New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0306804779.
  45. ^ Danny Kaye's Musical Tribute to the Income Tax August 26, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, George Mason's History News Network, November 14, 2008, retrieved April 17, 2012
  46. ^ a b c d e f g h McCorkle, Susannah (November 1998). "Always: A Singer's Journey Through the Life of Irving Berlin". American Heritage. Vol. 49. pp. 74–84.
  47. ^ a b c "BOOKS OF THE TIMES; Recalling the Somber Man Behind So Many Happy Songs", The New York Times (book review), January 20, 1995
  48. ^ Rich, Frank."Conversations With Sondheim", The New York Times, March 12, 2000
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Sources

  • Barrett, Mary Ellin (1994). Irving Berlin: A Daughter's Memoir. ISBN 0-671-72533-5.
  • Hamm, Charles, editor (1994). Early Songs, 1907–1914. Music of the United States of America (MUSA) volume 2. Madison, Wisconsin: A-R Editions.
  • Hischak, Thomas S. (1991). Word Crazy, Broadway Lyricists from Cohan to Sondheim. ISBN 0-275-93849-2.
  • Magee, Jeffrey (2012). Irving Berlin's American Musical Theatre. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012. ISBN 978-0-19-539826-7.
  • Rosen, Jody (2002). White Christmas: The Story of an American Song. ISBN 0-7432-1875-2.
  • Sears, Benjamin, editor (2012). The Irving Berlin Reader. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012. ISBN 978-0-19-538374-4.

External links

irving, berlin, born, israel, beilin, yiddish, ישראל, ביילין, 1888, september, 1989, american, composer, lyricist, music, forms, large, part, great, american, songbook, berlin, 1948bornisrael, beilin, 1888, 1888tyumen, russian, empirediedseptember, 1989, 1989,. Irving Berlin born Israel Beilin Yiddish ישראל ביילין 1 May 11 1888 2 September 22 1989 was an American composer and lyricist His music forms a large part of the Great American Songbook Irving BerlinBerlin in 1948BornIsrael Beilin 1888 05 11 May 11 1888Tyumen Russian EmpireDiedSeptember 22 1989 1989 09 22 aged 101 New York City U S OccupationsComposersongwriterlyricistYears active1907 1971Known forPopular songs ragtime Broadway musicals show tunesSpouse s Dorothy Goetz m 1912 died 1912 wbr Ellin Mackay m 1926 died 1988 wbr Children4 including Mary Ellin BarrettMilitary careerAllegiance United StatesService wbr branchUnited States ArmyYears of service1918 1919RankSergeantUnit152 Depot BrigadeBattles warsWorld War IBorn in Imperial Russia Berlin arrived in the United States at the age of five He published his first song Marie from Sunny Italy in 1907 receiving 33 cents for the publishing rights 3 and became known for international hits such as 1911 s Alexander s Ragtime Band He also was an owner of the Music Box Theatre on Broadway For much of his career Berlin could not read sheet music and was such a limited piano player that he could only play in the key of F sharp he used his custom piano equipped with a transposing lever when he needed to play in keys other than F sharp 4 source source Alexander s Ragtime Band performed by Billy Murray Edison Amberol cylinder 1911 Alexander s Ragtime Band sparked an international dance craze in places as far away as Berlin s native Russia which also flung itself into the ragtime beat with an abandon bordering on mania Over the years he was known for writing music and lyrics in the American vernacular uncomplicated simple and direct with his stated aim being to reach the heart of the average American whom he saw as the real soul of the country 5 In doing so said Walter Cronkite at Berlin s 100th birthday tribute he helped write the story of this country capturing the best of who we are and the dreams that shape our lives 6 He wrote hundreds of songs many becoming major hits which made him famous before he turned thirty During his 60 year career he wrote an estimated 1 500 songs including the scores for 20 original Broadway shows and 15 original Hollywood films with his songs nominated eight times for Academy Awards 1 Many songs became popular themes and anthems including Alexander s Ragtime Band Easter Parade Puttin on the Ritz Cheek to Cheek White Christmas Happy Holiday Anything You Can Do I Can Do Better and There s No Business Like Show Business His Broadway musical and 1943 film This Is the Army 7 with Ronald Reagan had Kate Smith singing Berlin s God Bless America which was first performed in 1938 8 Berlin s songs have reached the top of the charts 25 times and have been extensively re recorded by numerous singers including The Andrews Sisters Perry Como Eddie Fisher Al Jolson Fred Astaire Ethel Merman Louis Armstrong Frank Sinatra Dean Martin Sammy Davis Jr Elvis Presley Judy Garland Tiny Tim Barbra Streisand Linda Ronstadt Rosemary Clooney Cher Diana Ross Bing Crosby Sarah Vaughan Ruth Etting Fanny Brice Marilyn Miller Rudy Vallee Nat King Cole Billie Holiday Doris Day Jerry Garcia Taco Willie Nelson Bob Dylan Leonard Cohen Ella Fitzgerald Michael Buble Lady Gaga and Christina Aguilera Berlin died in 1989 at the age of 101 Composer Douglas Moore sets Berlin apart from all other contemporary songwriters and includes him instead with Stephen Foster Walt Whitman and Carl Sandburg as a great American minstrel someone who has caught and immortalized in his songs what we say what we think about and what we believe 5 Composer George Gershwin called him the greatest songwriter that has ever lived 9 117 and composer Jerome Kern concluded that Irving Berlin has no place in American music he is American music 10 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Jewish immigrant 1 1 1 Life in Russia 1 1 2 Settling in New York City 1 2 Early jobs 1 3 Recognition as songwriter 2 Songwriting career 2 1 Before 1920 2 1 1 Alexander s Ragtime Band 1911 2 1 2 Sparking a national dance craze 2 1 3 Simple and romantic ballads 2 1 4 World War I 2 1 4 1 Yip Yip Yaphank 2 2 1920 to 1940 2 2 1 Various hit songs by Berlin 2 2 2 God Bless America 1938 2 2 3 Other songs 2 3 1941 to 1962 2 3 1 World War II patriotism This is the Army 1943 2 3 2 Annie Get Your Gun 1946 2 3 3 Final shows 3 Film scores 3 1 1920s 1950s 3 1 1 White Christmas 1942 4 Songwriting methods 5 Music styles 6 Personal life 6 1 Marriages 6 2 Lifestyle 7 Death 8 Legacy and influence 9 Awards and honors 10 Musical scores 10 1 Stage 10 2 Film scores 11 Song lists 12 Notes 13 References 14 Sources 15 External linksEarly life EditJewish immigrant Edit Life in Russia Edit Berlin was born Israel Beilin 11 on May 11 1888 in the Russian Empire 12 Although his family came from the shtetl of Tolochin Yiddish טא לא טשין today Talachyn Talachyn in Belarus Berlin later learned that he was probably born in Tyumen Siberia where his father an itinerant cantor had taken his family 12 He was one of eight children of Moses 1848 1901 and Lena Lipkin Beilin 1850 1922 From Tyumen the family returned to Tolochin and from there they travelled to Antwerp and left the old continent aboard the SS Rhynland from the Red Star Line 13 On September 14 1893 14 the family arrived at Ellis Island in New York City When they arrived Israel was put in a pen with his brother and five sisters until immigration officials declared them fit to be allowed into the city 15 After their arrival the name Beilin was changed to Baline According to biographer Laurence Bergreen as an adult Berlin admitted to no memories of his first five years in Russia except for one he was lying on a blanket by the side of a road watching his house burn to the ground By daylight the house was in ashes 16 10 As an adult Berlin said he was unaware of being raised in abject poverty since he knew no other life 17 19 The Berlins were one of hundreds of thousands of Jewish families who emigrated to the United States in the late 1800s and early 1900s escaping discrimination poverty and brutal pogroms Other such families included those of George and Ira Gershwin Al Jolson Sophie Tucker L Wolfe Gilbert Jack Yellen Louis B Mayer of MGM and the Warner brothers 17 14 Settling in New York City Edit Lower East Side in the early 1900s After their arrival in New York City the Baline family lived briefly in a basement flat on Monroe Street and then moved to a three room tenement at 330 Cherry Street 1 His father unable to find comparable work as a cantor in New York took a job at a kosher meat market and gave Hebrew lessons on the side to support his family He died a few years later when Irving was thirteen years old 17 Now with only a few years of schooling eight year old Irving began helping to support his family 5 He became a newspaper boy hawking The Evening Journal One day while delivering newspapers according to Berlin s biographer and friend Alexander Woollcott he stopped to look at a ship departing for China and became so entranced that he did not see a swinging crane which knocked him into the river When he was fished out after going down for the third time he was still holding in his clenched fist the five pennies he earned that day 5 18 His mother took a job as a midwife and three of his sisters worked wrapping cigars common for immigrant girls His older brother worked in a sweatshop assembling shirts Each evening when the family came home from their day s work Bergreen writes they would deposit the coins they had earned that day into Lena s outspread apron 16 11 Music historian Philip Furia writes that when Izzy began to sell newspapers in the Bowery he was exposed to the music and sounds coming from saloons and restaurants that lined the crowded streets Young Berlin sang some of the songs he heard while selling papers and people would toss him some coins He confessed to his mother one evening that his newest ambition in life was to become a singing waiter in a saloon 19 48 From this he stepped up to work as a song plugger and singing waiter in cafes and restaurants in the downtown areas of New York City His first lyric written with a cafe pianist earned him a royalty of thirty seven cents 20 However before Berlin was fourteen his meager income was still adding less than his sisters to the family s budget which made him feel worthless 18 He then decided to leave home and join the city s ragged army of other young immigrants 16 15 He lived in the Bowery taking up residence in one of the lodging houses that sheltered the thousands of other homeless boys in the Lower East Side Bergreen describes them as being uncharitable living quarters Dickensian in their meanness filth and insensitivity to ordinary human beings 16 15 Early jobs Edit Berlin at his first job with a music publisher aged 18 Having left school around the age of thirteen 12 Berlin had few survival skills and realized that formal employment was out of the question His only ability was acquired from his father s vocation as a singer and he joined with several other youngsters who went to saloons on the Bowery and sang to customers Itinerant young singers like them were common on the Lower East Side Berlin would sing a few of the popular ballads he heard on the street hoping people would pitch him a few pennies From these seamy surroundings he became streetwise with real and lasting education Music was his only source of income and he picked up the language and culture of the ghetto lifestyle 21 Berlin learned what kind of songs appealed to audiences writes Bergreen well known tunes expressing simple sentiments were the most reliable 16 17 He soon began plugging songs at Tony Pastor s Music Hall in Union Square and in 1906 when he was 18 got a job as a singing waiter at the Pelham Cafe in Chinatown Besides serving drinks he sang made up blue parodies of hit songs to the delight of customers Biographer Charles Hamm writes that in Berlin s free time after hours he taught himself to play the piano 22 Never having had lessons after the bar closed for the night young Berlin would sit at a piano in the back and begin improvising tunes 5 He published his first song Marie from Sunny Italy written in collaboration with the Pelham s resident pianist Mike Nicholson 12 in 1907 receiving 33 cents for the publishing rights 3 The sheet music to the published song presented his name as I Berlin 23 Berlin photographed in 1907 in Pach Brothers Studio Berlin continued writing and playing music at Pelham Cafe and developing an early style He liked the words to other people s songs but sometimes the rhythms were kind of boggy and he might change them One night he delivered some hits composed by his friend George M Cohan another kid who was getting known on Broadway with his own songs When Berlin ended with Cohan s Yankee Doodle Boy notes Whitcomb everybody in the joint applauded the feisty little fellow Recognition as songwriter Edit Max Winslow c 1883 1942 a staff member at music publisher Harry Von Tilzer Company noticed Berlin s singing on many occasions and became so taken with his talent that he tried to get him a job with his firm 24 Von Tilzer said that Max claimed to have discovered a great kid and raved about him so much that Von Tilzer hired Berlin when 22 viii In 1908 when he was 20 Berlin took a new job at a saloon named Jimmy Kelly s in the Union Square neighborhood 1 There he was able to collaborate with other young songwriters such as Edgar Leslie Ted Snyder Al Piantadosi and George A Whiting In 1909 the year of the premiere of Israel Zangwill s The Melting Pot he got another big break as a staff lyricist with the Ted Snyder Company Installed as a staff lyricist with a leading Tin Pan Alley music publishing house Berlin quickly established himself as one of that frantic industry s top writers of words to other composer s melodies By 1910 he was already in demand and even appeared in a Shubert Broadway revue performing his own songs 20 It was purely by chance that Berlin started composing music to the words of his songs A lyric he had submitted to a publisher was thought to be complete with music Not wishing to lose the sale Berlin quickly wrote a melody It was accepted and published The success of this first effort opened the door to his career as a composer of music as well as lyrics 20 In 1910 Berlin wrote a hit that solidly established him as one of Tin Pan Alley s leading composers Alexander s Ragtime Band not only popularized the vogue for ragtime but later inspired a major motion picture 20 Songwriting career EditBefore 1920 Edit Alexander s Ragtime Band 1911 Edit Ragtime a Form of Insanity Alexander s Ragtime Band is a public menace Hysteria is the form of insanity that an abnormal love for ragtime seems to produce It is as much a mental disease as acute mania it has the same symptoms When there is nothing done to check this form it produces idiocy Dr Ludwig GruenerGerman newspaper story 25 23 Berlin rose as a songwriter in Tin Pan Alley and on Broadway In 1911 Emma Carus introduced his first world famous hit Alexander s Ragtime Band followed by a performance from Berlin himself at the Friars Frolic of 1911 1 He became an instant celebrity and the featured performer later that year at Oscar Hammerstein s vaudeville house where he introduced dozens of other songs The New York Telegraph described how two hundred of his street friends came to see their boy onstage All the little writer could do was to finger the buttons on his coat while tears ran down his cheeks in a vaudeville house 22 ix Berlin with film stars Alice Faye Tyrone Power and Don Ameche singing chorus from Alexander s Ragtime Band 1938 Richard Corliss in a Time profile of Berlin described Alexander s Ragtime Band as a march not a rag its savviest musicality comprised quotes from a bugle call and Swanee River The tune revived the ragtime fervor that Scott Joplin had begun a decade earlier and made Berlin a songwriting star 26 From its first and subsequent releases the song was near the top of the charts as others sang it Bessie Smith in 1927 and Louis Armstrong in 1937 no 1 by Bing Crosby and Connee Boswell Johnny Mercer in 1945 Al Jolson in 1947 and Nellie Lutcher in 1948 Add Ray Charles s big band version in 1959 and Alexander had a dozen hit versions in just under a half century 26 Initially the song was not recognized as a hit however Broadway producer Jesse Lasky was uncertain about using it although he did include it in his Follies show It was performed as an instrumental but did not impress audiences and was soon dropped from the show s score Berlin regarded it as a failure He then wrote lyrics to the score played it again in another Broadway Review and this time Variety news weekly called it the musical sensation of the decade 16 68 Composer George Gershwin foreseeing its influence said it was the first real American musical work adding Berlin had shown us the way it was now easier to attain our ideal 9 117 Sparking a national dance craze Edit Enjoying early success in New York c 1911 Berlin was flabbergasted by the sudden international popularity of the song and wondered why it became a sudden hit He decided it was partly because the lyrics silly though it was was fundamentally right and the melody started the heels and shoulders of all America and a good section of Europe to rocking 16 69 In 1913 Berlin was featured in the London revue Hello Ragtime where he introduced That International Rag a song he had written for the occasion 1 Watch Your StepFuria writes that the international success of Alexander s Ragtime Band gave ragtime new life and sparked a national dance craze Two dancers who expressed that craze were Vernon and Irene Castle In 1914 Berlin wrote a ragtime revue Watch Your Step which starred the couple and showcased their talents on stage That musical revue became Berlin s first complete score with songs that radiated musical and lyrical sophistication Berlin s songs signified modernism and they signified the cultural struggle between Victorian gentility and the purveyors of liberation indulgence and leisure says Furia The song Play a Simple Melody became the first of his famous double songs in which two different melodies and lyrics are counterpointed against one another 19 27 Variety called Watch Your Step the first syncopated musical where the sets and the girls were gorgeous Berlin was then 26 and the success of the show was riding on his name alone Variety said the show was a terrific hit from its opening night It compared Berlin s newfound status as a composer with that of the Times building That youthful marvel of syncopated melody is proving things in Watch Your Step firstly that he is not alone a rag composer and that he is one of the greatest lyric writers America has ever produced 17 173 Whitcomb also points out the irony that Russia the country Berlin s family was forced to leave flung itself into the ragtime beat with an abandon bordering on mania For example Prince Felix Yusupov a recent Oxford undergraduate of Russian noble lineage and heir to the largest estate in Russia was described by his dance partner as wriggling around the ballroom like a demented worm screaming for more ragtime and more champagne 17 183 Simple and romantic ballads Edit My ambition is to reach the heart of the average American not the highbrow nor the lowbrow but that vast intermediate crew which is the real soul of the country The highbrow is likely to be superficial overtrained supersensitive The lowbrow is warped subnormal My public is the real people Irving Berlin 5 11 With Al Jolson r star of The Jazz Singer c 1927 Some of the songs Berlin created came out of his own sadness For instance in 1912 he married Dorothy Goetz the sister of songwriter E Ray Goetz She died six months later of typhoid fever contracted during their honeymoon in Havana The song he wrote to express his grief When I Lost You was his first ballad It was an immediate popular hit and sold more than a million copies 5 He began to realize that ragtime was not a good musical style for serious romantic expression and over the next few years adapted his style by writing more love songs 19 In 1915 he wrote the hit I Love a Piano a comical and erotic ragtime love song 28 By 1918 he had written hundreds of songs mostly topical which enjoyed brief popularity Many of the songs were for the new dances then appearing such as the grizzly bear chicken walk or foxtrot After a Hawaiian dance craze began he wrote That Hula Hula and then did a string of Southern songs such as When the Midnight Choo Choo Leaves for Alabam During this period he was creating a few new songs every week including songs aimed at the various immigrant cultures arriving from Europe On one occasion Berlin whose face was still not known was on a train trip and decided to entertain the fellow passengers with some music They asked him how he knew so many hit songs and Berlin modestly replied I wrote them 19 53 An important song that Berlin wrote during his transition from writing ragtime to lyrical ballads was A Pretty Girl is Like a Melody which became one of Berlin s first big guns says historian Alec Wilder The song was written for Ziegfeld s Follies of 1919 and became the musical s lead song Its popularity was so great that it later became the theme for all of Ziegfeld s revues and the theme song in the 1936 film The Great Ziegfeld 29 Wilder puts it on the same level as Jerome Kern s pure melodies and in comparison with Berlin s earlier music says it is extraordinary that such a development in style and sophistication should have taken place in a single year 19 53 World War I Edit On April 1 1917 after President Woodrow Wilson declared that America would enter World War I Berlin felt that Tin Pan Alley should do its duty and support the war with inspirational songs Berlin wrote the song For Your Country and My Country stating that we must speak with the sword not the pen to show our appreciation to America for opening up her heart and welcoming every immigrant group He also co wrote a song aimed at ending ethnic conflict Let s All Be Americans Now 17 197 Yip Yip Yaphank Edit At the grand finale Sergeant Berlin led the entire 300 person cast off the stage marching them down the theater s aisles singing We re on Our Way to France all to tumultuous applause The cast carried off their little producer like he was victor ludorum Tin Pan Alley had joined hands with real life biographer Ian Whitcomb 17 199 30 In 1917 Berlin was drafted into the United States Army and his induction became headline news with one paper headline reading Army Takes Berlin But the Army wanted Berlin now aged 30 to do what he knew best write songs While stationed with the 152nd Depot Brigade at Camp Upton he then composed an all soldier musical revue titled Yip Yip Yaphank written as a patriotic tribute to the United States Army The show was taken to Broadway where it also included a number of hits including Mandy and Oh How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning which Berlin performed himself 5 The shows earned 150 000 for a camp service center One song he wrote for the show but decided not to use he would introduce 20 years later God Bless America 26 31 1920 to 1940 Edit c 1920 I ll See You in C U B A cover of 1920 sheet music Berlin returned to Tin Pan Alley after the war and in 1921 created a partnership with Sam Harris to build the Music Box Theater He maintained an interest in the theater throughout his life and even in his last years was known to call the Shubert Organization his partner to check on the receipts In its early years the theater was a showcase for revues by Berlin As theater owner producer and composer he looked after every detail of his shows from the costumes and sets to the casting and musical arrangements 32 According to Berlin biographer David Leopold the theater located at 239 West 45th St was the only Broadway house built to accommodate the works of a songwriter It was the home of Berlin s Music Box Revue from 1921 to 1925 and As Thousands Cheer in 1933 and today includes an exhibition devoted to Berlin in the lobby 33 Various hit songs by Berlin Edit By 1926 Berlin had written the scores to two editions of the Ziegfeld Follies and four annual editions of his Music Box Revue These shows spanned the years of 1921 1926 premiering songs such as Say It With Music Everybody Step and Pack Up Your Things and Go to the Devil 1 Life magazine called Berlin the Lullaby Kid noting that couples at country club dances grew misty eyed when the band went into Always because they were positive that Berlin had written it just for them When they quarreled and parted in the bitter sweetness of the 1920s it was Berlin who gave eloquence to their heartbreak by way of What ll I Do and Remember and All Alone 34 What ll I Do 1924 This ballad of love and longing was a hit record for Paul Whiteman and had several other successful recordings in 1924 Twenty four years later the song went to no 22 for Nat King Cole and no 23 for Frank Sinatra 26 Always 1925 Written when he fell in love with Ellin Mackay who later became his wife The song became a hit twice for Vincent Lopez and George Olsen in its first incarnation There were four more hit versions in 1944 45 In 1959 Sammy Turner took the song to no 2 on the R amp B chart It became Patsy Cline s postmortem anthem and hit no 18 on the country chart in 1980 17 years after her death and a tribute musical called Always Patsy Cline played a two year Nashville run that ended in 1995 26 Leonard Cohen included a cover of this song on his 1992 release The Future Leonard Cohen album Blue Skies 1926 Written after his first daughter s birth he distilled his feelings about being married and a father for the first time Blue days all of them gone nothing but blue skies from now on 35 The song was introduced by Belle Baker in Betsy a Ziegfeld production 1 It became a hit recording for Ben Selvin and one of several Berlin hits in 1927 It was performed by Al Jolson in the first feature sound film The Jazz Singer that same year In 1946 it returned to the top 10 on the charts with Count Basie and Benny Goodman In 1978 Willie Nelson made the song a no 1 country hit 52 years after it was written 26 Puttin On the Ritz 1928 An instant standard with one of Berlin s most intricately syncopated choruses this song is associated with Fred Astaire who sang and danced to it in the 1946 film Blue Skies The song was written in 1928 with a separate set of lyrics and was introduced by Harry Richman in a 1930 film of the same name In 1939 Clark Gable sang it in the movie Idiot s Delight In 1974 it was featured in the movie Young Frankenstein by Mel Brooks and was a no 4 hit for synth pop artist Taco in 1983 36 In 2012 it was used for a flash mob wedding event in Moscow 37 Marie 1929 This waltz time song was a hit for Rudy Vallee in 1929 and in 1937 updated to a four quarter time swing arrangement was a top hit for Tommy Dorsey It was on the charts at no 13 in 1953 for The Four Tunes and at no 15 for the Bachelors in 1965 36 years after its first appearance 26 Say It Isn t So 1932 Rudy Vallee performed it on his radio show and the song was a hit for George Olsen Connee Boswell she was still known as Connie and Ozzie Nelson s band Aretha Franklin produced a single of the song in 1963 31 years later 26 Furia notes that when Vallee first introduced the song on his radio show the song not only became an overnight hit it saved Vallee s marriage The Vallees had planned to get a divorce but after Vallee sang Berlin s romantic lyrics on the air both he and his wife dissolved in tears and decided to stay together 19 I ve Got My Love to Keep Me Warm 1937 Performed by Dick Powell in the 1937 film On the Avenue Later it had four top 12 versions including by Billie Holiday and Les Brown who took it to no 1 26 God Bless America 1938 Edit Main article God Bless America The song s introduction at that time enshrines a strain of official patriotism intertwined with a religious faith that runs deep in the American psyche Patriotic razzle dazzle sophisticated melancholy and humble sentiments Berlin songs span the emotional terrain of America with a thoroughness that others may have equaled but none have surpassed The New York Times 10 The song was written by Berlin twenty years earlier but he filed it away until 1938 when Kate Smith needed a patriotic song to mark the 20th anniversary of Armistice Day celebrating the end of World War I 26 Its release near the end of the Depression which had by then gone on for nine years enshrined a strain of official patriotism intertwined with a religious faith that runs deep in the American psyche stated The New York Times 10 Berlin s daughter Mary Ellin Barrett states that the song was actually very personal for her father and was intended as an expression of his deep gratitude to the nation for merely allowing him an immigrant raised in poverty to become a successful songwriter 38 To me said Berlin God Bless America was not just a song but an expression of my feeling toward the country to which I owe what I have and what I am 39 The Economist magazine writes that Berlin was producing a deep felt paean to the country that had given him what he would have said was everything 40 Singing God Bless America at the Pentagon memorial dedication September 11 2008 It quickly became a second national anthem 1 after America entered World War II a few years later Over the decades it has earned millions for the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts to whom Berlin assigned all royalties 26 31 unreliable source In 1954 Berlin received a special Congressional Gold Medal from President Dwight D Eisenhower for contributing the song 41 The song was heard after September 11 2001 as U S senators and congressmen stood on the capitol steps and sang it after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center It is often played by sports teams such as major league baseball The Philadelphia Flyers hockey team started playing it before crucial contests When the 1980 U S Olympic hockey team pulled off the greatest upset in sports history referred to as the Miracle on Ice the players spontaneously sang it as Americans were overcome by patriotism 42 43 Other songs Edit Though most of his works for the Broadway stage took the form of revues collections of songs with no unifying plot he did write a number of book shows The Cocoanuts 1929 was a light comedy with a cast featuring among others the Marx Brothers Face the Music 1932 was a political satire with a book by Moss Hart and Louisiana Purchase 1940 was a satire of a Southern politician obviously based on the exploits of Huey Long As Thousands Cheer 1933 was a revue also with book by Moss Hart with a theme each number was presented as an item in a newspaper some of them touching on issues of the day The show yielded a succession of hit songs including Easter Parade sung by Marilyn Miller and Clifton Webb Heat Wave presented as the weather forecast Harlem on My Mind and Supper Time a song about racial violence inspired by a newspaper headline about a lynching sung by Ethel Waters She once said about the song If one song can tell the whole tragic history of a race Supper Time was that song In singing it I was telling my comfortable well fed well dressed listeners about my people those who had been slaves and those who were now downtrodden and oppressed 44 1941 to 1962 Edit World War II patriotism This is the Army 1943 Edit Irving Berlin singing and conducting aboard USS Arkansas 1944 Berlin loved his country and wrote many songs reflecting his patriotism Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau requested a song to inspire Americans to buy war bonds for which he wrote Any Bonds Today 1 He assigned all royalties to the United States Treasury Department He then wrote songs for various government agencies and likewise assigned all profits to them Angels of Mercy for the American Red Cross Arms for the Love of America for the U S Army Ordnance Department and I Paid My Income Tax Today 45 again to Treasury 26 When the United States joined World War II after the attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941 Berlin immediately began composing a number of patriotic songs His most notable and valuable contribution to the war effort was a stage show he wrote called This Is The Army It was taken to Broadway and then on to Washington D C where President Franklin D Roosevelt attended It was eventually shown at military bases throughout the world including London North Africa Italy Middle East and Pacific countries sometimes in close proximity to battle zones Berlin wrote nearly three dozen songs for the show which contained a cast of 300 men He supervised the production and traveled with it always singing Oh How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning The show kept him away from his family for three and a half years during which time he took neither salary nor expenses and turned over all profits to the Army Emergency Relief Fund 46 81 The play was adapted into a movie of the same name in 1943 directed by Michael Curtiz co starring Joan Leslie and Ronald Reagan who was then an army lieutenant Kate Smith also sang God Bless America in the film with a backdrop showing families anxious over the coming war The show became a hit movie and a morale boosting road show that toured the battlefronts of Europe 47 The shows and movie combined raised more than 10 million for the Army 26 and in recognition of his contributions to troop morale Berlin was awarded the Medal for Merit by President Harry S Truman His daughter Mary Ellin Barrett who was 15 when she was at the opening night performance of This is the Army on Broadway remembered that when her father who normally shunned the spotlight appeared in the second act in soldier s garb to sing Oh How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning he was greeted with a standing ovation that lasted 10 minutes She adds that he was in his mid 50s at the time and later declared those years with the show were the most thrilling time of his life 47 Annie Get Your Gun 1946 Edit The grueling tours Berlin did performing This Is The Army left him exhausted but when his longtime close friend Jerome Kern who was the composer for Annie Get Your Gun died suddenly producers Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II persuaded Berlin to take over composing the score What distinguishes Berlin is the brilliance of his lyrics You Can t Get a Man With a Gun that s as good a comic song as has ever been written by anybody You look at the jokes and how quickly they re told and it still has a plot to it It s sophisticated and very underrated composer lyricist Stephen Sondheim 48 49 Loosely based on the life of sharpshooter Annie Oakley the music and lyrics were written by Berlin with a book by Herbert Fields and his sister Dorothy Fields and directed by Joshua Logan At first Berlin refused to take on the job claiming that he knew nothing about hillbilly music but the show ran for 1 147 performances and became his most successful score and biggest box office success 20 It is said that the showstopper song There s No Business Like Show Business was almost left out of the show altogether because Berlin mistakenly thought that Rodgers and Hammerstein didn t like it However it became the ultimate uptempo show tune On the origin of another of the play s leading songs Logan described how he and Hammerstein privately discussed wanting another duet between Annie and Frank Berlin overheard their conversation and although the show was to go into rehearsal within days he wrote the song Anything You Can Do a few hours later 50 One reviewer commented about the play s score that its tough wisecracking lyrics are as tersely all knowing as its melody which is nailed down in brassy syncopated lines that have been copied but never equaled in sheer melodic memorability by hundreds of theater composers ever since 10 Singer and musicologist Susannah McCorkle writes that the score meant more to me than ever now that I knew that he wrote it after a grueling world tour and years of separation from his wife and daughters 46 81 Historian and composer Alec Wilder says that the perfection of the score when compared to his earlier works was a profound shock 51 94 Apparently the creative spurt in which Berlin turned out several songs for the score in a single weekend was an anomaly According to his daughter he usually sweated blood to write his songs 47 Annie Get Your Gun is considered to be Berlin s best musical theatre score not only because of the number of hits it contains but because its songs successfully combine character and plot development The song There s No Business Like Show Business became Ethel Merman s trademark 10 Final shows Edit Berlin s next show Miss Liberty 1949 was disappointing but Call Me Madam 1950 starring Ethel Merman as Sally Adams a Washington D C socialite loosely based on the famous Washington hostess Perle Mesta fared better giving him his second greatest success Berlin made two attempts to write a musical about his friend the colorful Addison Mizner and Addison s con man brother Wilson The first was the uncompleted The Last Resorts 1952 a manuscript of Act I is in the Library of Congress Wise Guy 1956 was completed but never produced although songs have been published and recorded on The Unsung Irving Berlin 1995 After a failed attempt at retirement in 1962 at the age of 74 he returned to Broadway with Mr President Although it ran for eight months with the premiere attended by President John F Kennedy it was not one of his successful plays 26 Afterwards Berlin officially announced his retirement and spent his remaining years in New York He did however write one new song An Old Fashioned Wedding for the 1966 Broadway revival of Annie Get Your Gun starring Ethel Merman Though he lived 23 more years this would be one of Berlin s final published compositions Berlin maintained a low profile through the last decades of his life almost never appearing in public after the late 1960s even for events held in his honor However he continued to maintain control of his songs through his own music publishing company which remained in operation for the rest of his life Film scores Edit1920s 1950s Edit In 1927 his song Blue Skies was featured in the first feature length talkie The Jazz Singer with Al Jolson Later movies such as Top Hat 1935 became the first of a series of distinctive film musicals by Berlin starring performers Bing Crosby Fred Astaire Judy Garland Ginger Rogers and Alice Faye Top Hat featured a brand new score as did several more including Follow the Fleet 1936 On the Avenue 1937 Carefree 1938 and Second Fiddle 1939 Starting with Alexander s Ragtime Band 1938 he often blended new songs with existing ones from his catalog He continued this process with the films Holiday Inn 1942 Blue Skies 1946 and Easter Parade 1948 with Judy Garland and Fred Astaire and There s No Business Like Show Business 1954 1 White Christmas 1942 Edit The 1942 film Holiday Inn introduced White Christmas one of the most recorded songs in history First sung in the film by Bing Crosby along with Marjorie Reynolds whose voice was dubbed by Martha Mears 52 it has sold over 50 million records and stayed no 1 on the pop and R amp B charts for 10 weeks Crosby s version is the best selling single of all time Music critic Stephen Holden credits this partly to the fact that the song also evokes a primal nostalgia a pure childlike longing for roots home and childhood that goes way beyond the greeting imagery 10 Richard Corliss also notes that the song was even more significant having been released soon after America entered World War II it connected with GIs in their first winter away from home To them it voiced the ache of separation and the wistfulness they felt for the girl back home for the innocence of youth 26 Poet Carl Sandburg wrote We have learned to be a little sad and a little lonesome without being sickly about it This feeling is caught in the song of a thousand jukeboxes and tune whistled in streets and homes I m Dreaming of a White Christmas When we sing that we don t hate anybody And there are things we love that we re going to have sometimes if the breaks are not too bad against us Way down under this latest hit of his Irving Berlin catches us where we love peace 26 1 White Christmas won Berlin the Academy Award for Best Music in an Original Song one of seven Oscar nominations he received during his career In subsequent years it was re recorded and became a top 10 seller for numerous artists Frank Sinatra Jo Stafford Ernest Tubb The Ravens and The Drifters It would also be the last time a Berlin song went to no 1 upon its release Berlin is the only Academy Award presenter and Academy Award winner to open the envelope and read his or her own name for White Christmas This result was so awkward for Berlin since he had to present the Oscar to himself that the Academy changed the rules of protocol the following year to prevent this situation from arising again Talking about Irving Berlin s White Christmas composer lyricist Garrison Hintz stated that although songwriting can be a complicated process its final result should sound simple Considering the fact that White Christmas has only eight sentences in the entire song lyrically Mr Berlin achieved all that was necessary to eventually sell over 100 million copies and capture the hearts of the American public at the same time 53 Songwriting methods EditAccording to Saul Bornstein a k a Sol Bourne Saul Bourne Berlin s publishing company manager It was a ritual for Berlin to write a complete song words and music every day 51 92 Berlin said that he did not believe in inspiration and felt that although he might be gifted in certain areas his most successful compositions were the result of work He said that he did most of his work under pressure He would typically begin writing after dinner and continue until 4 or 5 in the morning Each day I would attend rehearsals he said and at night write another song and bring it down the next day 54 Not always certain about his own writing abilities he once asked a songwriter friend Victor Herbert whether he should study composition You have a natural gift for words and music Mr Herbert told him Learning theory might help you a little but it could cramp your style Berlin took his advice Herbert later became a moving force behind the creation of ASCAP the American Society of Composers Authors and Publishers In 1914 Berlin joined him as a charter member of the organization that has protected the royalties of composers and writers ever since 5 In 1920 Irving Berlin became a member of SACEM the French Society of Authors Composers and Publishers 1 In later years Berlin emphasized his conviction saying that it s the lyrics that makes a song a hit although the tune of course is what makes it last 55 234 He played almost entirely in the key of F sharp so that he could stay on the black keys and owned three transposing pianos so as to change keys by moving a lever 56 Though Berlin eventually learned how to produce written music he never changed his method of dictating songs to a musical secretary 57 a As a result Wilder says that many admirers of the music of Jerome Kern Richard Rodgers and Cole Porter were unlikely to consider Berlin s work in the same category because they forgot or never realized that Berlin wrote many popular tunes such as Soft Lights and Sweet Music Supper Time and Cheek to Cheek Some are even more confused because he also wrote more romantic melodies such as What ll I Do and Always 51 Wilder adds that in his lyrics as in his melodies Berlin reveals a constant awareness of the world around him the pulse of the times the society in which his is functioning There is nothing of the hothouse about his work urban though it may be 51 Music styles EditHis music has that vitality both rhythmic and melodic which never seems to lose any of its exuberant freshness it has that rich colorful melodic flow which is ever the wonder of all those of who too compose songs his ideas are endless composer George Gershwin 9 117 Composer Jerome Kern recognized that the essence of Irving Berlin s lyrics was his faith in the American vernacular and was so profound that his best known songs seem indivisible from the country s history and self image Kern along with George Gershwin Richard Rodgers Oscar Hammerstein II and Cole Porter brought together Afro American Latin American rural pop and European operetta 10 Berlin however did not follow that method Instead says music critic Stephen Holden Berlin s songs were always simple exquisitely crafted street songs whose diction feels so natural that one scarcely notices the craft they seem to flow straight out of the rhythms and inflections of everyday speech 10 It led composer George Gershwin to claim that he learned from Berlin that ragtime which later became jazz was the only musical idiom in existence that could aptly express America 9 117 Among Berlin s contemporaries was Cole Porter whose music style was often considered more witty sophisticated and dirty according to musicologist Susannah McCorkle Of the five top songwriters only Porter and Berlin wrote both their own words and music However she notes that Porter unlike Berlin was a Yale educated and wealthy Midwesterner whose songs were not successful until he was in his thirties She notes further that it was Berlin who got Porter the show that launched his career 46 76 Personal life EditMarriages Edit Irving Berlin and first wife Dorothy Goetz in 1912 In February 1912 after a brief whirlwind courtship he married 20 year old Dorothy Goetz of Buffalo New York the sister of one of Berlin s collaborators E Ray Goetz During their honeymoon in Havana she contracted typhoid fever and doctors were unable to treat her illness when she returned to New York She died July 17 of that year Left with writer s block for months after Goetz s death he eventually wrote his first ballad When I Lost You to express his grief With wife Ellin ca 1926 Years later in the 1920s he fell in love with a young author and heiress Ellin Mackay 58 Because Berlin was Jewish and she was a Catholic of Irish descent their life was followed in every possible detail by the press which found the romance of an immigrant from the Lower East Side and a young heiress a good story 5 Mackay s father Clarence Mackay the socially prominent head of the Postal Telegraph Cable Company objected to their marriage 20 58 They met in 1924 and her father opposed the match from the start He went so far as to send her off to Europe to find other suitors and forget Berlin However Berlin wooed her with letters and songs over the airwaves such as Remember Remember 20 and All Alone and she wrote him daily 59 Biographer Philip Furia writes that newspapers rumored they were engaged before she returned from Europe and some Broadway shows even performed skits of the lovelorn songwriter After her return she and Berlin were besieged by the press which followed them everywhere Variety reported that her father vowed that their marriage would only happen over my dead body 55 As a result they decided to elope and were married in a simple civil ceremony at the Municipal Building away from media attention The wedding news made the front page of The New York Times The marriage took her father by surprise and he was stunned upon reading about it The bride s mother however who was at the time divorced from Mackay wanted her daughter to follow the dictates of her own heart Berlin had gone to her mother s home before the wedding and had obtained her blessing 60 59 There followed reports that the bride s father disowned his daughter because of the marriage In response Berlin gave the rights to Always a song still played at weddings to her as a wedding present 12 Ellin was thereby guaranteed a steady income regardless of what might happen with the marriage For nearly three years Mackay refused to speak to the Berlins but they reconciled after the death of the Berlins son Irving Berlin Jr on Christmas Day 1928 less than one month after he was born 12 Their marriage remained a love affair and they were inseparable until she died in July 1988 at the age of 85 They had four children during their 63 years of marriage Mary Ellin Barrett in 1926 Irving Berlin Jr who died in infancy in 1928 Linda Louise Emmet in 1932 and Elizabeth Irving Peters in 1936 5 Lifestyle Edit In 1916 in the earlier phase of Berlin s career producer and composer George M Cohan during a toast to the young Berlin at a Friar s Club dinner in his honor said The thing I like about Irvie is that although he has moved up town and made lots of money it hasn t turned his head He hasn t forgotten his friends he doesn t wear funny clothes and you will find his watch and his handkerchief in his pockets where they belong 54 Lower East Side in 1909 He said he never forgot his childhood years when he slept under tenement steps ate scraps wore secondhand clothes and sold newspapers Every man should have a Lower East Side in his life said Berlin Furia says that throughout Berlin s life he often returned on foot to his old neighborhoods in Union Square Chinatown and the Bowery 55 He never forgot those childhood years when he slept under tenement steps ate scraps and wore secondhand clothes and described those years as hard but good Every man should have a Lower East Side in his life he said He used to visit The Music Box Theater which he founded and which still stands at 239 West 45th St From 1947 to 1989 Berlin s home in New York City was 17 Beekman Place 61 George Frazier of Life magazine found Berlin to be intensely nervous with a habit of tapping his listener with his index finger to emphasize a point and continually pressing his hair down in back and picking up any stray crumbs left on a table after a meal While listening he leans forward tensely with his hands clasped below his knees like a prizefighter waiting in his corner for the bell For a man who has known so much glory writes Frazier Berlin has somehow managed to retain the enthusiasm of a novice 34 Berlin s daughter wrote in her memoir that her father was a loving if workaholic family man who was basically an upbeat person with down periods In his final decades he retreated from public life 46 As such he did not attend the televised 100th birthday celebration at Carnegie Hall 62 Her parents liked to celebrate every single holiday with their children and They seemed to understand the importance particularly in childhood of the special day the same every year the special stories foods and decorations and that special sense of well being that accompanies a holiday 46 80 Although he did comment to his daughter about her mother s lavish Christmas spending I gave up trying to get your mother to economize It was easier just to make more money 46 Berlin voted for both Democratic and Republican presidential candidates 59 but he supported the presidential candidacy of General Dwight Eisenhower and his song I Like Ike featured prominently in the Eisenhower campaign In his later years he also became more conservative in his views on music According to his daughter He was consumed by patriotism He often said I owe all my success to my adopted country and once rejected his lawyers advice of investing in tax shelters insisting I want to pay taxes I love this country 46 80 Berlin was a Freemason and was a member of Munn Lodge no 190 New York City the Scottish Rite Valley of New York City and Mecca Shrine Temple 63 Berlin was a noted member of The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks 64 Berlin was a staunch advocate of civil rights Berlin was honored in 1944 by the National Conference of Christians and Jews for advancing the aims of the conference to eliminate religious and racial conflict 65 His 1943 production This Is The Army was the first integrated division army unit in the United States 66 In 1949 the Young Men s Hebrew Association YMHA honored him as one of the twelve most outstanding Americans of Jewish faith 65 While he was ethnically and culturally Jewish he was religiously agnostic 59 Berlin s Civil Rights Movement support also made him a target of FBI Director J Edgar Hoover who continuously investigated him for years 67 Death Edit The grave of Irving Berlin in Woodlawn Cemetery the Bronx New York City Berlin died in his sleep at his 17 Beekman Place town house in Manhattan on September 22 1989 of a heart attack and other natural causes at the age of 101 He was interred in the Woodlawn Cemetery in The Bronx New York City 5 On the evening following the announcement of his death the marquee lights of Broadway playhouses were dimmed before curtain time in his memory President George H W Bush said Berlin was a legendary man whose words and music will help define the history of our nation Just minutes before the President s statement was released he joined a crowd of thousands to sing Berlin s God Bless America at a luncheon in Boston Former President Ronald Reagan who costarred in Berlin s 1943 musical This Is the Army said Nancy and I are deeply saddened by the death of a wonderfully talented man whose musical genius delighted and stirred millions and will live on forever 68 Morton Gould the composer and conductor who was president of the American Society of Composers Authors and Publishers ASCAP of which Berlin was a founder said What to me is fascinating about this unique genius is that he touched so many people in so many age groups over so many years He sounded our deepest feelings happiness sadness celebration loneliness Ginger Rogers who danced to Berlin tunes with Fred Astaire told The Associated Press upon hearing of his death that working with Berlin had been like heaven 68 b Legacy and influence EditOther nations are defined by their classical composers America is appropriately defined musically by this Russian immigrant Germany has Beethoven France Ravel Poland Chopin Italy Verdi America has Irving Berlin Though he s not here with us tonight he will be with us always Wherever there is America there is Irving Berlin Walter CronkiteKennedy Center Tribute to Irving Berlin 1987 69 The New York Times after his death in 1989 wrote Irving Berlin set the tone and the tempo for the tunes America played and sang and danced to for much of the 20th century An immigrant from Russia his life became the classic rags to riches story that he never forgot could have happened only in America 5 During his career he wrote an estimated 1 500 songs and was a legend by the time he turned 30 32 He went on to write the scores for 20 original Broadway shows and 15 original Hollywood films 1 with his songs nominated for Academy Awards on eight occasions Music historian Susannah McCorkle writes that in scope quantity and quality his work was amazing 46 Others such as Broadway musician Anne Phillips says simply that the man is an American institution 70 During his six decade career from 1907 to 1966 he produced sheet music Broadway shows recordings and scores played on radio in films and on television and his tunes continue to evoke powerful emotions for millions around the world He wrote songs like Alexander s Ragtime Band Cheek to Cheek There s No Business Like Show Business Blue Skies and Puttin On the Ritz Some of his songs have become holiday anthems such as Easter Parade White Christmas and Happy Holiday White Christmas alone sold over 50 million records the top single selling song in recording history won an ASCAP and an Academy Award and is one of the most frequently played songs ever written 5 In 1938 God Bless America became the unofficial national anthem of the United States and on September 11 2001 members of the House of Representatives stood on the steps of the Capitol and solemnly sang God Bless America together The song again became popular shortly after 9 11 when Celine Dion recorded it as the title track of a 9 11 benefit album The following year the Postal Service issued a commemorative stamp of Berlin By then the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts of New York had received more than 10 million in royalties from God Bless America as a result of Berlin s donation of royalties 32 According to music historian Gary Giddins No other songwriter has written as many anthems No one else has written as many pop songs period H is gift for economy directness and slang presents Berlin as an obsessive often despairing commentator on the passing scene 71 405 In 1934 Time 72 put him on its cover and inside hailed this itinerant son of a Russian cantor as an American institution 35 And again in 1943 the same magazine described his songs as follows They possess a permanence not generally associated with Tin Pan Alley products and it is more than remotely possible that in days to come Berlin will be looked upon as the Stephen Foster of the 20th century 34 At various times his songs were also rallying cries for different causes He produced musical editorials supporting Al Smith and Dwight Eisenhower as presidential candidates he wrote songs opposing Prohibition defending the gold standard calming the wounds of the Great Depression and helping the war against Hitler and in 1950 he wrote an anthem for the state of Israel 26 Biographer David Leopold adds that We all know his songs they are all part of who we are Berlin inadvertently influenced American law when his publishing group sued Mad Magazine for copyright infringement in 1961 The humor magazine had published a collection of parody lyrics which it said could be sung to the tune of many popular songs Berlin objected and Irving Berlin et al v E C Publications Inc would ultimately become a landmark case Mad prevailed at every stage The U S District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled largely in favor of Mad in 1963 but Judge Charles Metzner decided that two of the 25 disputed parodies Always sung to the tune of Always and There s No Business Like No Business sung to the tune of There s No Business Like Show Business would require a trial because they relied on the same verbal hooks always and business as the originals The music publishers pressed on The following year the U S Court of Appeals not only upheld the pro Mad decision in regard to the 23 songs it adopted an approach that was broad enough to strip the publishers of their limited victory regarding the remaining two songs Writing a unanimous opinion for the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit Circuit Judge Irving Kaufman observed We doubt that even so eminent a composer as plaintiff Irving Berlin should be permitted to claim a property interest in iambic pentameter 73 The publishers again appealed but the U S Supreme Court refused to hear the appeal allowing the decision to stand 74 The precedent setting 1964 ruling established the rights of parodists and satirists to mimic the meter of popular songs At his 100th birthday celebration in May 1988 violinist Isaac Stern said The career of Irving Berlin and American music were intertwined forever American music was born at his piano 5 while songwriter Sammy Cahn pointed out If a man in a lifetime of 50 years can point to six songs that are immediately identifiable he has achieved something Irving Berlin can sing 60 that are immediately identifiable Y ou couldn t have a holiday without his permission 5 Composer Douglas Moore added It s a rare gift which sets Irving Berlin apart from all other contemporary songwriters It is a gift which qualifies him along with Stephen Foster Walt Whitman Vachel Lindsay and Carl Sandburg as a great American minstrel He has caught and immortalized in his songs what we say what we think about and what we believe 5 ASCAP s records show that 25 of Berlin s songs reached the top of the charts and were re recorded by dozens of famous singers over the years such as Eddie Fisher Al Jolson Bing Crosby Frank Sinatra Barbra Streisand Linda Ronstadt Rosemary Clooney Doris Day Diana Ross Nat King Cole and Ella Fitzgerald In 1924 when Berlin was 36 his biography The Story of Irving Berlin was being written by Alexander Woollcott In a letter to Woollcott Jerome Kern offered what one writer said may be the last word on the significance of Irving Berlin Irving Berlin has no place in American music he is American music Emotionally he honestly absorbs the vibrations emanating from the people manners and life of his time and in turn gives these impressions back to the world simplified clarified and glorified 10 Composer George Gershwin 1898 1937 also tried to describe the importance of Berlin s compositions I want to say at once that I frankly believe that Irving Berlin is the greatest songwriter that has ever lived His songs are exquisite cameos of perfection and each one of them is as beautiful as its neighbor Irving Berlin remains I think America s Schubert But apart from his genuine talent for song writing Irving Berlin has had a greater influence upon American music than any other one man It was Irving Berlin who was the very first to have created a real inherent American music Irving Berlin was the first to free the American song from the nauseating sentimentality which had previously characterized it and by introducing and perfecting ragtime he had actually given us the first germ of an American musical idiom he had sown the first seeds of an American music 9 117 Awards and honors EditAcademy Award for Best Original Song in 1943 for White Christmas in Holiday Inn 75 76 US Army Medal of Merit from General George Marshall at the direction of President Harry S Truman 75 5 Tony Award in 1951 for Best Score for the musical Call Me Madam 77 Congressional Gold Medal in 1954 from President Dwight D Eisenhower for contributing many patriotic songs including God Bless America 78 Special Tony Award in 1963 79 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1968 80 Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970 which celebrated its First annual Induction and Awards Ceremony in New York City 81 82 Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1977 by President Gerald Ford The citation reads in part Musician Composer Humanitarian And Patriot Irving Berlin Has Captured The Fondest Dreams And Deepest Emotions Of The American People In The Form Of Popular Music 83 84 Lawrence Langner Tony Award in 1978 79 Medal of Liberty during centennial celebrations for the Statue of Liberty in 1986 85 100th birthday celebration concert was for the benefit of Carnegie Hall and ASCAP on May 11 1988 5 Jewish American Hall of Fame in 1988 65 86 Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on February 1 1994 87 American Theater Hall of Fame 88 89 Musical scores EditThe following list includes scores mostly produced by Berlin Although some of the plays using his songs were later adapted to films the list will not include the film unless he was the primary composer 16 Stage Edit Watch Your Step 1914 Stop Look Listen 1915 The Century Girl 1916 Yip Yip Yaphank 1918 Ziegfeld Follies 1919 Ziegfeld Follies 1920 Music Box Revue 1921 Music Box Revue 1922 Music Box Revue 1923 Music Box Revue 1924 The Cocoanuts 1925 Ziegfeld Follies 1927 Face the Music 1932 As Thousands Cheer 1933 Louisiana Purchase 1940 This Is The Army 1942 Annie Get Your Gun 1946 Miss Liberty 1949 Call Me Madam 1950 Mr President 1962 White Christmas 2004 post mortem production Top Hat 2012 post mortem production Holiday Inn 2016 post mortem production Film scores Edit The Cocoanuts 1929 Hallelujah 1929 Puttin On the Ritz 1930 Mammy 1930 Reaching for the Moon 1930 Top Hat 1935 Follow the Fleet 1936 On the Avenue 1937 Carefree 1938 Alexander s Ragtime Band 1938 Second Fiddle 1939 Holiday Inn 1942 This Is the Army 1943 Blue Skies 1946 Easter Parade 1948 Annie Get Your Gun 1950 Call Me Madam 1953 There s No Business Like Show Business 1954 White Christmas 1954 Denotes films originally written for the stageSong lists EditMain article List of Irving Berlin songsNotes Edit Berlin never learned to play in more than one key and used two special pianos his first piano purchased second hand in 1909 was made by Weser Brothers augmented in 1921 by a second from Somner Brothers with transposing levers to change keys Berlin demonstrated his transposing keyboard during a television show with Dinah Shore and the piano was placed on display in Belgium s Red Star Line Museum in 2013 on loan from the Emmet family A second transposing piano is on loan from the Peters family to the National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia After his death Irving Berlin s three daughters donated the songwriter s musical collection of 750 000 items to the music archives of the Library of Congress References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Kimball Robert Linda Emmet eds 2001 The complete lyrics of Irving Berlin reprint ed Applause Theatre amp Cinema Books p XXI ISBN 978 1557836816 Irving Berlin Irving Berlin Retrieved June 2 2020 a b Starr Larry and Waterman Christopher American Popular Music From Minstrelsy to MP3 Oxford University Press 2009 pg 64 Marcus Gary January 19 2012 Guitar Zero Penguin Press p 164 ISBN 978 1101552285 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Irving Berlin Nation s Songwriter Dies The New York Times September 23 1989 Carnegie Hall May 27 1988 Irving Berlin s 100th birthday celebration This Is the Army 1943 retrieved September 6 2017 Kate Smith God Bless America 5 min a b c d e Wyatt Robert Johnson John A The George Gershwin Reader Oxford Univ Press 2004 a b c d e f g h i Pop View Irving Berlin s American Landscape The New York Times May 10 1987 Irving Berlin Irving Berlin Retrieved June 2 2020 a b c d e f Furia Philip Wood Graham 1998 Irving Berlin A Life in Song New York Schirmer Books ISBN 978 0 02 864815 6 Bello Grace November 27 2013 Red Star Line Museum Recalls the Ships That Brought Einstein and Irving Berlin to America Tablet Magazine Retrieved September 28 2022 Passenger list of the Beilin family Ancestry com permanent dead link Irving Berlin The Voice of the City BBC Bristol and A amp E network s 1988 broadcast a b c d e f g h Bergreen Laurence March 22 1996 As Thousands Cheer reprint ed Hachette Books ISBN 978 0306806759 a b c d e f g Whitcomb Ian 1987 Irving Berlin and Ragtime America Century ISBN 9780712616645 a b Woollcott Alexander September 26 2016 The Story of Irving Berlin Read Books Ltd ISBN 978 1473359604 Retrieved June 5 2020 a b c d e f Furia Philip June 25 1992 The Poets of Tin Pan Alley Oxford Univ Press ISBN 978 0198022886 a b c d e f g The Waltzes of Irving Berlin 1962 Maslon Laurence Early Career and Tin Pan Alley Irving Berlin The Irving Berlin Music Company Retrieved October 13 2018 a b c Hamm Charles Irving Berlin Songs from the Melting Pot Oxford Univ Press 1997 Freedland Michael Irving Berlin Stein and Day 1974 Max Winslow Dead Music Publisher 59 The New York Times June 9 1942 Retrieved June 5 2020 Leopold David Irving Berlin s Show Business Harry Abrams 2005 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Corliss Richard December 24 2001 That Old Christmas Feeling Irving America Richard Corliss remembers Irving Berlin Time audio Play A Simple Melody with Bing and Gary Crosby I Love A Piano Lyrics Irving Berlin Sing365 com Archived from the original on June 28 2013 Retrieved January 19 2013 video A Pretty Girl is Like a Melody video Irving Berlin s We re on our way to France from This is the Army 1943 a b Swing Music History Tom Smith Big Band 2009 Archived from the original on February 28 2010 Retrieved January 12 2010 a b c Dreaming of Irving Berlin In the Season That He Owned The New York Times December 23 2005 Leopold David Irving Berlin s Show Business Broadway Hollywood America Harry N Abrams 2005 a b c Frazier George Life April 5 1943 pgs 79 88 a b Irving Berlin An American Song film 1999 Taco Puttin on the Ritz 1983 YouTube Retrieved October 17 2019 Flashmob Moscow Russia Putting on the ritz 2012 YouTube Archived from the original on October 30 2021 Retrieved October 17 2019 Irving Berlin Spotlight Interview on YouTube Galewitz Herb Music A Book of Quotations Courier Dover Publ 2001 p 4 Hand on heart Irving Berlin The Economist London September 30 1989 video Irving Berlin gets medal from Ike 1954 on YouTube 1 min Bacon John U February 19 2010 Oh Say Can You See a New Anthem Ann Arbor Chronicle Archived from the original on July 27 2011 College kids perform Olympic miracle ESPN TV network Waters Ethel Charles Samuels March 22 1992 His eye is on the sparrow an autobiography 1st ed New York Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0306804779 Danny Kaye s Musical Tribute to the Income Tax Archived August 26 2011 at the Wayback Machine George Mason s History News Network November 14 2008 retrieved April 17 2012 a b c d e f g h McCorkle Susannah November 1998 Always A Singer s Journey Through the Life of Irving Berlin American Heritage Vol 49 pp 74 84 a b c BOOKS OF THE TIMES Recalling the Somber Man Behind So Many Happy Songs The New York Times book review January 20 1995 Rich Frank Conversations With Sondheim The New York Times March 12 2000 Betty Hutton sings You Can t Get A Man With A Gun YouTube Archived from the original on October 30 2021 Retrieved October 17 2019 Ethel Merman Joshua Logan 90th Birthday Tribute to Irving Berlin YouTube Archived from the original on October 30 2021 Retrieved October 17 2019 a b c d Wilder Alec American Popular Song The Great Innovators 1900 1950 Oxford Univ Press 1972 Obituary Marjorie Reynolds The Independent London February 15 1997 Retrieved September 28 2017 Ascap magazine article Tribute to Irving Berlin December 1989 a b The Story of Irving Berlin The New York Times January 2 1916 a b c Furia Philip Irving Berlin A Life in Song Schirmer Books 1998 The Straight Dope If Irving Berlin couldn t read or write music how did he compose The Straight Dope 2006 The Irving Berlin reader Sears Benjamin New York Oxford University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0195383744 OCLC 708648754 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Krebs Albin July 30 1988 Ellin Berlin 85 a Novelist Dies The Songwriter s Wife of 62 Years The New York Times p 32 Sec 1 a b c d Barrett Mary Ellin 1995 Irving Berlin a daughter s memoir Simon amp Schuster pp 98 99 123 124 ISBN 978 0671711498 All three of us would share our father s agnosticism and sidestep our husbands faiths If I can picture my father the nonbeliever it is listening to the reading learning just like me for he had long ago forgotten the story pleased that this is what my mother and I are doing Ellin Mackay Wed to Irving Berlin Surprises Father The New York Times p 1 January 5 1926 Johnson Mary July 14 2011 Irving Berlin s Former Beekman Place Home Chronicled in New Book DNAinfo New York Archived from the original on August 26 2014 Winship Frederick M May 6 1988 Happy 100th Irving Berlin UPI United Press International Retrieved June 5 2020 Famous Masons I Dreamers and Doers Grand Lodge of the State of New York Archived from the original on November 10 2013 Retrieved January 10 2014 Congressional Record U S Government Printing Office 1968 p 3726 Retrieved August 30 2022 a b c Jewish American Hall of Fame Virtual Tour Amuseum org January 15 2007 Retrieved December 10 2011 Best Band in the Land Segregation and Musicals During World War II Michael Feinstein s American Songbook October 13 2010 PBS Retrieved June 5 2020 Congressional Record V 144 Pt 1 January 27 1998 to February 13 1998 pg 679 a b Berlin s Work Is Recalled With Words and Music The New York Times September 24 1989 YouTube YouTube Archived from the original on February 2 2019 Retrieved October 17 2019 SING SING SING Salutes Irving Berlin Broadwayworld com November 3 2010 Giddins Gary November 15 2004 Weather Bird Jazz at the Dawn of its Second Century Oxford Univ Press ISBN 978 0195348163 TIME Magazine Cover Irving Berlin Time May 28 1934 Retrieved September 28 2017 Irving Berlin et al v E C Publications Inc 329 F 2d 541 2d Cir 1964 Retrieved on November 20 2020 via George Washington University Music Copyright Infringement Resource Archived from the original on August 15 2020 Jacobs Frank 1972 The Mad World of William M Gaines Lyle Stuart Inc p Library of Congress Card No 72 91781 a b Irving Berlin Biography TCM retrieved May 9 2018 The 15th Academy Awards 1943 Nominees and Winners oscars org retrieved May 13 2018 Call Me Madam Broadway Playbill vault retrieved May 9 2018 Glassman Matthew Eric February 13 2017 Congressional Gold Medals 1776 2016 PDF Archived PDF from the original on November 5 2016 a b Irving Berlin Awards Playbill vault retrieved May 9 2018 Lifetime Achievement Award Grammy com retrieved May 9 2018 Irving Berlin Songwriters Hall of Fame Songhall org retrieved May 9 2018 January 1st 1970 1970 Inaugural Induction Ceremony Songhall org retrieved May 13 2018 Medal of Freedom Citations PDF John Marsh Files at the Gerald R Ford Presidential Library January 3 1977 Archived PDF from the original on September 6 2015 Retrieved June 5 2020 Nordlinger Jay December 17 2007 A Tasty Presidential Perk National Review Rimer Sara 12 Naturalized Citizens To Get Medal Of Liberty The New York Times March 2 1986 Irving Berlin 1888 1989 amuseum org retrieved May 13 2018 Irving Berlin walkoffame com retrieved May 9 2018 Theater Hall of Fame The Official Website Members Preserve the Past Honor the Present Encourage the Future Theaterhalloffame org Retrieved October 17 2019 Who s in the Theatre Hall of Fame Playbill June 12 1996Sources EditBarrett Mary Ellin 1994 Irving Berlin A Daughter s Memoir ISBN 0 671 72533 5 Hamm Charles editor 1994 Early Songs 1907 1914 Music of the United States of America MUSA volume 2 Madison Wisconsin A R Editions Hischak Thomas S 1991 Word Crazy Broadway Lyricists from Cohan to Sondheim ISBN 0 275 93849 2 Magee Jeffrey 2012 Irving Berlin s American Musical Theatre Oxford Oxford University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 19 539826 7 Rosen Jody 2002 White Christmas The Story of an American Song ISBN 0 7432 1875 2 Sears Benjamin editor 2012 The Irving Berlin Reader Oxford Oxford University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 19 538374 4 External links EditIrving Berlin at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Official Irving Berlin Website Irving Berlin Collection at the Library of Congress Papers of Irving Berlin Dwight D Eisenhower Presidential Library Works by Irving Berlin at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Irving Berlin at Internet Archive Irving Berlin recordings at the Discography of American Historical Recordings Irving Berlin at the Internet Broadway Database Irving Berlin at the Internet Off Broadway Database Irving Berlin at IMDb Irving Berlin at FBI Records The Vault Irving Berlin collection of non commercial sound recordings at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Irving Berlin at Music of the United States of America MUSA Free scores by Irving Berlin at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Irving Berlin amp oldid 1142565735, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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