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Encyclopedia > Jerome David Kern

Jerome David Kern (January 27, 1885 - November 11, 1945) was an American popular composer. He wrote around 700 songs and more than 100 complete scores for shows and films in a career lasting from 1902 until his death.


Jerome Kern was born in New York City. His parents named him Jerome because they lived near Jerome Park, a favourite place of theirs (Jerome Park was named after Leonard Jerome, who was the father of Jennie Jerome, mother of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill).


He grew up on East 56th Street in Midtown Manhattan, where he attended public schools. He studied at the New York College of Music and then in Heidelberg, Germany. When he came back to New York, he started working as a rehearsal pianist, but it didn't take long for him to become a prominent and renowned composer. By 1915, he was represented in many Broadway shows. In 1920, he wrote "Look for the Silver Lining" for the musical Sally.


1925 was a major turning point in Kern's career, for he met Oscar Hammerstein II, with whom he would entertain a lifelong friendship and collaboration. Their first show (written together with Otto Harbach) was Sunny. Together, they produced next the famous Show Boat in 1927, which includes the well-known songs "Ol' Man River" and "Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man". The musical Roberta (1933) gave us "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes".


In 1935, Jerome Kern moved to Hollywood and started working on music for films but continued working on Broadway productions, too. His last Broadway show was the rather unsuccessful Very Warm For May in 1939; the score included another Kern–Hammerstein classic, "All The Things You Are".


Kern's Hollywood career was successful indeed. For Swing Time (starring Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire), he wrote "The Way You Look Tonight" (lyrics: Dorothy Fields), which won the Academy Award in 1936 for the best song. In 1941, he and Hammerstein wrote "The Last Time I Saw Paris", a homage to the French city just recently occupied by the Germans. The song was introduced in the movie Lady Be Good and won another Oscar for Best Song.


Jerome Kern died at the age of 60 in New York.


External link

  • Jerome Kern's biography (http://www.songwritershalloffame.org/exhibit_home_page.asp?exhibitId=67) at the "Songwriters Hall of Fame".

  Results from FactBites:
 
Jerome Kern - Academic Kids (481 words)
Jerome David Kern (January 27, 1885 – November 11, 1945) was an American popular composer.
Jerome Kern was born in New York City.
Jerome Kern died at the age of 60 in New York.
Jerome Kern at AllExperts (1449 words)
Kern spent a lot of time in London during the turn of the century and he married in Walton-on-Thames in 1910.
Although Kern generally wrote for musical theatre, the harmonic richness of his compositions lend themselves well to the jazz idiom, which typically emphasizes improvisation based on a harmonic structure — many have been adopted by jazz musicians and have become standard tunes.
Jerome Kern died from a stroke in 1945, at the age of 60 in New York.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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