Research Catalog
Showtune : a memoir / by Jerry Herman ; with Marilyn Stasio.
- Title
- Showtune : a memoir / by Jerry Herman ; with Marilyn Stasio.
- Author
- Herman, Jerry, 1931-2019
- Publication
- New York : Donald I. Fine Books, 1996.
Items in the Library & Off-site
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Text | Request in advance | ML410.H5624 H47 1996 | Off-site |
Holdings
Details
- Additional Authors
- Description
- viii, 277 p. : ill.; 25 cm.
- Summary
- The creator of three of the longest-running musicals in Broadway history, Jerry Herman is a theatrical institution. His rise from anonymity as a youth in Jersey City to become one of the most successful composer-lyricists ever is candidly recounted here in his own words. When Herman was seventeen, his mother set up, via "the mother Mafia," a meeting with the legendary composer of Guys and Dolls, Frank Loesser, who happened to be the brother of a friend of a friend of her.
- Hairdresser. Instead of the agreed-upon ten minutes, Loesser spent an entire afternoon with young Herman, encouraging him to take a shot at songwriting: "It's a tough life, but I see talent here," he said. Jerry Herman's first creation was a downtown cabaret show that soon had crowds of tuxedo-and-mink-wearing sophisticates lined up outside. (Mistaking them for patrons of the restaurant next-door, he politely asked them to move.) From there he was engaged to work on the.
- Musical that would become Milk and Honey, earning him a Tony nomination alongside Noel Coward and Richard Rodgers. Smash hits like Hello Dolly!, Mack and Mabel, La Cage aux Folles, and Mame were to follow. Herman's memoir goes beyond the creation of his legendary hits, including hitherto unrevealed, behind-the-scenes encounters with such luminaries as Angela Lansbury, Carol Channing, Barbra Streisand, Ethel Merman, Judy Garland, and the notoriously volatile Broadway.
- Producer David Merrick, whose office was an intimidating bright red, top to bottom, matching his choleric temperament. Wonderfully recreating the golden age of the Broadway musical, Jerry Herman's revealing memoir is at once frank and uplifting, a characteristic of his songs as well as a personal quality that has sustained him through a long career marked by its share of tragedy as well as triumph.
- Subject
- Genre/Form
- Biographies
- Autobiographies
- Autobiographies.
- Note
- Includes index.
- Processing Action (note)
- committed to retain
- Contents
- Introduction -- "It's today" -- "I feel wonderful" -- "Let's not waste a moment" -- "Big time" -- "A damned exasperating woman" -- "Time heals everything" -- "Penny in my pocket" -- "Open a new window" -- "My best girl" -- "Hundreds of girls" -- "I don't want to know" -- "Just go to the movies" -- "I belong here" -- "The best of times" -- "I'll be here tomorrow."
- ISBN
- 1556115024
- LCCN
- ^^^96034210^/MN
- OCLC
- 35175021
- SCSB-11552975
- Owning Institutions
- Harvard Library