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John Meyer

~ Memoirist, Novelist and Songwriter

John Meyer

Tag Archives: entertainment

Sam Goody’s Record Shop & Goddard Lieberson

04 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by meyerwire in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

celebrities, entertainment, music

Pal Joey(Dah dah) YOU’RE THE TOP/(A-Boop-a-dee Dah dah) YOU’RE THE DAM AT BOULDER/( Dah dah) YOU’RE THE MOON (A-Boop-a-dee dah dah) OVER MAE WEST’S SHOULDER.  That’s Cole Porter. Here’s Lorenz Hart: DON’T CHANGE A HAIR FOR ME/NOT IF YOU CARE FOR ME.  

At the age of thirteen, I found these lyrics on cast albums issued by Goddard Lieberson.  This producer, who worked for Columbia records, shaped my musical (and lyrical) sensibility. He initiated a project: re-recording the scores of the most significant musicals of the 1920’S and 30’s, songs by the best composers and lyricists America ever produced. Take a look at the fantastic roster of brilliant scores: Girl Crazy and Oh, Kay (the Gershwins) and four by Rodgers & Hart –Boys From Syracuse, Babes in Arms, On Your Toes and Pal Joey.  Cole Porter’s Anything Goes. Not to mention The Bandwagon (Dietz & Schwartz)  I ALWAYS GO TO BED AT TEN/OH ISN’T THAT A BORE?/I ALWAYS GO TO BED AT TEN/BUT I GET HOME AT FOUR. Racy stuff for a fourteen year old, in 1951.

Girl CrazyMary Martin was the star on many of these albums, supported by an accomplished cast of Broadway voices: Jack Cassidy, Portia Nelson, Bibi Osterwald -all conducted by the man who later ran the BMI workshop –Lehman Engel. My total allowance went to Sam Goody’s record emporium on West 49th St. -the Broadway Section. Saturdays would find me there, picking through whatever new titles had just been released, and -as I got to know the composers- if there was no new show album that week, I’d search names like Vernon Duke and Vincent Youmans to find whatever related treasures might be beckoning within the thin plywood separators. Of course, listening to these discs over and over, at your most learning-intensive stage, embedded these songs so firmly in my mind that, later, I was able to make a living at the piano, singing these gems to audiences who responded to the fervor in my presentation. “Here’s a song from Anything Goes,” I’d inform them, “introduced by Ethel Merman in 1934.” And I’d sing I Get a Kick Out of You. But I’m digressing -I’ll deal with my adventures at the keyboard in another post. I simply want to record here my passion for this music; I was lucky to be born in New York, and to have parents to whom the theater was a bi-monthly event -they gave me and my sister tickets to My Fair Lady in it’s first week (they’d won the seats in a raffle, had seen it already). By that time (1956) I was a show veteran, having already taken in Broadway offerings Guys & Dolls, Where’s Charley (Frank Loesser), Make A Wish (Hugh Martin), House of Flowers (Harold Arlen), The Threepenny Opera (Kurt Weill), Pardon Our French (Victor Young) and both Hazel Flagg and Two On the Aisle (Jule Styne).

As for the content -the books- of these musicals, it was, admittedly, pretty slim. Of the shows listed above, I can cite only Guys & Dolls as having a book which matched the score. Without realizing it, I found myself gravitating towards revues like Two on the Aisle, which starred Bert Lahr and the very hot Dolores Gray. At least the sketches (Nat Hiken, Comden & Green) had point and were funny. Mel Brooks wrote his Death of a Salesman parody for New Faces of 1952 –which introduced me to both Ronny Graham and Eartha Kitt (years later, Eartha sang a song of mine at the Carlyle, A Voice Full of Yes). I finally got around to Rodgers & Hammerstein (never my favorites) in 1953 with Me and Juliet –a pallid piece. (to be continued)

S.J. Perelman and the Failed Marriage

12 Saturday May 2012

Posted by meyerwire in Celebrity Encounters

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Tags

entertainment, megan hilty, s j perelman

Button-cute, rapier-keen, wafer-thin and pauper-poor…is how S.J. Perelman described himself.

They were in line before me, waiting to give their tickets to the ticket-taker. “Now what’s this we’re seeing again?” she asked him. He was short, eager, perhaps late thirties; he had a nice energy about him, he was reminiscent of say, Jerry Stiller. She was younger than he, undeniably attractive, but with that rapacious look you sometimes see in the ambitious. Reminiscent, perhaps, of Megan Hilty. From their body language, I guessed they were in the early stages of their courtship -this was maybe their second date. We were waiting to see Lewis Stadlen, that fabulous actor, who was appearing in his one-man tribute to Sid Perelman, the great humor writer. “It’s Perelman,” he explained to his date, “he’s the guy wrote all the scripts for the Marx Brothers -you like the Marx Brothers, don’t you?” he asked, the end of his sentence curling upwards in a wisp of hopefulness.

Groucho Marx, S.J. Perelman, and Kenneth Tynan

Groucho Marx, S.J. Perelman, and Kenneth Tynan (Photo credit: John McNab)

 And then she threw the line that -I predicted, I just knew- doomed this relationship. “In moderation,” she said.  

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