The Sound of Music: Enchanting Melodies of Rodgers and Hammerstein
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Richard Rodgers (1902-1979) Enchanting Melodies of Rodgers and Hammerstein II Pre-eminent in his contributions to musical theatre and the film-musical, and...
Richard Rodgers (1902-1979)
Enchanting Melodies of Rodgers and Hammerstein II
Pre-eminent in his contributions to musical theatre and
the film-musical, and one of the finest of twentiethcentury
popular songwriters, pianist-composer and
producer Richard Charles Rodgers was born at Long
Island, New York on 28th June, 1902. The son of
doctor of medicine William Abraham Rodgers and
pianist Mamie Levy, his keyboard skills and composing
flair were encouraged from an early age and as a
schoolboy 'Dick' reputedly spent his pocket-money at
Saturday matinees of Jerome Kern musicals. He is also
said to have written his first song at the age of eleven
and his earliest surviving song, 'My Auto Show Girl',
when he was fourteen, yet for several years his activity
was confined to writing music and occasionally lyrics
for social club shows until his talent was first
recognised, by Max Dreyfus of Harms music
publishers, around 1917. The following year, at sixteen,
he enrolled at Columbia University and there met his
first major collaborator in a fellow New Yorker, the
lyricist Lorenz Hart (1895-1943).
Hart had already had experience as a 'ghost' lyricist
for, among others, Billy Rose, before he co-wrote with
Rodgers a single item for the short-lived 1919
Broadway musical A Lonely Romeo. The Rodgers-Hart
team began to write for Broadway in earnest with Poor
Little Ritz Girl (1920) but their first real Golden Mile
break came in 1925 with their contributions to The
Garrick Gaieties. In the media of stage and screen (they
were based in Hollywood from 1931 to 1935), they
were soon to become the most applauded of the inter-
War-year song-writing duos, co-writing (or at least
contributing to) 35 musicals and 23 films, in a 25-year
working partnership that ended only with Hart's
premature death, after a long illness, on 22nd
November, 1943.
Hart survived long enough to attend the première of
Oklahoma!, the show which launched Rodgers'
working association with an old friend who was to
become his second major lyricist. The grandson of the
celebrated German-born entrepreneur and opera
impresario Oscar Hammerstein I (1846-1919), lyricistauthor
and producer Oscar Greeley Clendenning
Hammerstein II had the theatre in his blood. He had,
moreover, during the 1920s and 1930s, acquired a
reputation in operetta equal to Rodgers's own standing
in musical comedy. Born in New York City on 12th
July, 1895, Oscar Jr. grew up a scion of one of
Broadway's most formidable dynasties (his uncle,
Arthur Hammerstein, was the acclaimed producer of,
among other shows, Naughty Marietta, Firefly and Rose
Marie), although he took no real interest in the theatre
until his college days.
A student at New York's Hamilton Institute from
1904, in 1912 Oscar Hammerstein enrolled at Columbia
University, graduating with a B.A., in law, in 1916.
While at Columbia he took various acting leads, and
even wrote books and lyrics for Columbia Players'
productions, but was a practicing attorney before
deciding, after some persuasion from his uncle, to make
the theatre his niche. Having first gained theatrical
experience as both stage-hand and stage-manager, he
first wrote a few plays, all of which flopped, prior to
making his Broadway musical entree, although again
initially with only limited success, as librettist-lyricist
on Herbert Stothart's short-lived Always You, in 1920.
Further essays followed, with Otto Harbach and others
as co-writer, before Vincent Youmans' musical
Wildflower (1923) marked Hammerstein out as a
librettist-lyricist of genius who, for Nicolas Slonimsky,
combined 'appealing sentiment and sophisticated
nostalgia...particularly well suited to the modern
theater'.
The landmark stage works of Hammerstein's pre-
Rodgers operetta and musical comedy years included
Rose Marie (with Sigmund Romberg) 1924, Sunny
(with Jerome Kern) and Song Of The Flame (with
Stothart and George Gershwin) both 1925, The Desert
Song (with Romberg) and The Wild Rose (with Rudolf
Friml) both 1926, Show Boat (with Kern) 1927, The
New Moon (with Romberg) 1928, Music In The Air
(with Kern) 1924 and Carmen Jones (music by Bizet)
1943. His screen-credits, apart from adaptations of
these stage-scores, include Viennese Nights (score by
Romberg, 1930), Give Us This Night (score by Erich
Wolfgang Korngold, 1936), High, Wide And Handsome
(score by Kern, 1937) and The Great Waltz (score by
Dimitri Tiomkin, 1938).
The 1944 Pulitzer Prize winner, Oklahoma! (1943),
at 2,212 performances (a record that remained unbroken
until My Fair Lady, in 1956) enjoyed one of the longestever
runs in the United States. The first example of an
overtly romantic new genre dubbed 'the musical play',
a hybrid fusion of musical comedy and operetta, and
based on Lynn Riggs's 1931 play Green Grow The
Lilacs, it was the culmination of the old-style musical in
the tradition of Show Boat. First produced on the
London stage in 1947 (1548 performances), the musical
score of its 1955 Technicolor film production won an
Academy Award. Oklahoma!'s sequel Carousel (1945),
heralded by Brooks Atkinson as 'the most glorious of
the Rodgers and Hammerstein works' (and Rodgers'
own personal favourite), allegorised in a modern idiom
the triumph of love over evil. Adapted by Hammerstein
from Liliom, a 1909 play by the Hungarian novelistdramatist
Ferenc? Molnar frequently given in New York
from 1921 onwards, its initial Donaldson Awardwinning
Broadway run lasted for 890 performances.
First produced in London in 1950, it was filmed by
Twentieth Century Fox in 1956.
The only Rodgers and Hammerstein collaboration
that did not start out as a stage-show was the film State
Fair (Twentieth Century Fox, 1945, starring Charles
Winninger, Jeanne Crain, Dana Andrews, Vivian Blaine
and Dick Haymes). Awarded an Oscar for the song 'It
Might As Well Be Spring', it also earned a Nomination
for its musical direction, under Alfred Newman. (A new
version, adapted from the film musical in 1992 by Tom
Briggs and Louis Mattioli, opened on Broadway in
1996). Rodgers and Hammerstein's next Broadway
venture, Allegro (315 performances, 1947) was
followed, in 1949, by the magnificent, idyllic South
Pacific. With libretto by Hammerstein and his coproducer
Joshua Logan (1908-1988), its compelling
plot (based on two separate episodes from James
Mitchener's Tales Of The South Pacific),
complemented by some immortally nostalgic Rodgers
tunes and Mary Martin and emeritus Metropolitan
Opera bass Ezio Pinza in the leading parts, made it a
sure winner. Following an initial Broadway run of 1925
performances, its outstanding popularity led to a tour of
118 American cities and, opening in London in
November 1951, it ran for a further 802 performances.
The long-awaited 1958 screening, however, a $5million
Magna spectacular, starring Mitzi Gaynor and Rossano
Brazzi, with overdubbed vocals by the opera baritone
Giorgio Tozzi, paled alongside the original show.
Staged two years after South Pacific, the story of
The King And I was already familiar to a wide audience
via the acclaimed 1946 Twentieth Century Fox filmversion
starring Rex Harrison and Irene Dunne.
Similarly based on Margaret Landon's novel Anna And
The King Of Siam (the idea for a show was suggested by
Gertrude Lawrence, the original Anna Leonowens) the
Rodgers-Hammerstein Broadway musical version
opened in March 1951 and ran for 1246 performances,
Yul Bynner's earnest portrayal of the King earning him
a Tony. Its subsequent London production (1953,
starring Valerie Hobson and Herbert Lom) ran a further
946 performances. Filmed in Cinemascope by Fox in
1956, with the Oscar-nominated Deborah Kerr and the
Oscar-winning Brynner taking the leads, the filmmusical
won in total four Awards and four Nominations
and later, on stage, the show-version was frequently
revived (notably on Broadway in 1977 and 1985 and
London in 1979).
A series of tuneful if however less enduring works
followed, including Me And Juliet (1953; 358
performances), Pipe Dream (1955; 246 perfs),
Cinderella (first produced for television (it was later
resurrected in that medium in 1965) and staged, both
times unsuccessfully, in 1958 and 1960, in London) and
Flower Drum Song (1958; 600 perfs.) - all prior to the
most financially resounding of all their creations.
Dismissed by some critics as the apotheosis of
sentimental Rodgers & Hammersteinian escapism, The
Sound Of Music ranks nonetheless among the most
successful musicals of all time. Starring Mary Martin
and directed by Vincent Donahue, its initial Broadway
production run of 1443 performances, complemented
by a protracted 'parallel' American tour, was followed
in 1961 by a record-breaking London West End
production of 2385 showings. The show's 1965 filmversion
(Twentieth Century Fox; starring Julie Andrews
and Christopher Plummer) won three Oscars and three
nominations. In terms of box office and record sales (on
LP it became one of the best-selling soundtrack albums
of all time) and overall longevity (the show was
resurrected as recently as 1997 in London and 1998 on
Broadway), sentimental or otherwise, The Sound Of
Music provided the most lasting testament to the duo's
sixteen-year-long Broadway tenure.
Rodgers' activity following Hammerstein's death
(at Highland Farms, Doylestown, Philadelphia, on 23rd
August, 1960) coincided with the rapid decline of the
traditional Broadway musical. The last remaining
colossus of American theatre composers, without his
former partner's fecund theatrical talent to frame his
melodies the composer, now past his prime, gradually
lost the popular touch. And indeed, in terms of boxoffice
receipts, his various attempts to recover his
earlier form (starting in 1962 with No Strings, for which
Rodgers wrote both lyrics and music which won him
two Tony awards) were more brave than earthshattering.
Rodgers' next venture, in 1965, was to have
been I Picked A Daisy, with lyricist Alan Jay Lerner, but
the idea foundered and the score of the show which
finally emerged as On A Clear Day You Can See
Forever, was written instead by Burton Lane.
Also from 1965 comes Do I Hear A Waltz?, based
on the Arthur Laurents play The Time Of The Cuckoo.
Although generally considered the best of Rodgers'
post-Hammerstein creations -not least on account of the
fine contribution of lyricist Stephen Sondheim (born
New York City, 1930)- this also rated, at a mere 220
performances, a failure. Subsequently, Rodgers penned
two more flops: Two By Two (1970, on the theme of
Noah's ark, with lyrics by director Martin Charnin), Rex
(1976; about Henry VIII, with lyrics by Sheldon
Harnick, surviving only 49 performances) while with
I Remember Mama (1979, with Charnin and Raymond
Jessel, based on a successful 1950s TV series and a
musical version of an even earlier Van Druten play set
in pre-earthquake San Francisco, which Rodgers and
Hammerstein had themselves produced, in 1944) the
descending parabola of Richard Rodgers reached its
natural conclusion.
Richard Rodgers died in New York on 30th
December, 1979, leaving a legacy of achievement
unparalleled in theatre history. His partnership with
Hammerstein earned 34 Tony Awards, 15 Oscars, two
Pulitzers, two Grammy and two Emmy Awards and the
1979 Lawrence Langner Award for distinguish lifetime
achievement in the Theatre. In 1998 the duo were
placed by Time Magazine and CBS News among the top
twenty most influential artists of the twentieth century.
In 1990 Rodgers was posthumously honoured with a
permanent memorial when Broadway's 46th Street
Theater (now the permanent home of the Richard
Rodgers Gallery) was renamed the Richard Rodgers
Theater.
Peter Dempsey
The Sound of Music (Selection) (more info)
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The Sound of Music (Selection) - 11:39
Do I Hear a Waltz?: Do I Hear a Waltz? (more info)
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Do I Hear a Waltz?: Do I Hear a Waltz? - 2:54
Carousel (Selection) (more info)
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Carousel (Selection) - 10:11
State Fair: Our State Fair (more info)
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State Fair: Our State Fair - 3:10
Oklahoma (Selection) (more info)
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Oklahoma (Selection) - 12:20
State Fair: It's a Grand Night for Singing (more info)
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State Fair: It's a Grand Night for Singing - 2:29
South Pacific (Selection) (more info)
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South Pacific (Selection) - 15:30
State Fair: That's for Me (more info)
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State Fair: That's for Me - 3:06
The King and I (Selection) (more info)
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The King and I (Selection) - 12:14
No Strings: The Sweetest Sounds (more info)
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No Strings: The Sweetest Sounds - 3:22