'E. Y. ''"Yip"'' Harburg' (
April 8 1896 –
March 4 1981) was an
American lyricist who worked with many well-known composers.
Background
Harburg was born 'Isidore Hochberg' to immigrant
Jewish parents on the
Lower East Side of
New York City. His irrepressible energy as a child earned him the nickname "Yipsel", meaning "squirrel" in
Yiddish. This was often shortened to "Yip", and, even after he adopted the name Edgar Harburg, he was best known as Edgar "Yip" Harburg. Harburg attended
Townsend Harris High School, where he and
Ira Gershwin, who met over a shared fondness for
Gilbert and Sullivan, worked on the school paper and became life-long friends. They went on to attend
City College (later part of the
City University of New York) together.
[1]
After graduating from university, Harburg spent three years in
Uruguay to avoid involvement in
World War I, which he opposed as a committed
socialist. There he worked as a factory supervisor. After the war he returned to New York, married and had two children and started writing light verse for local newspapers. He became co-owner of
Consolidated Electrical Appliance Company. The company went bankrupt following the
crash of 1929, leaving Harburg "anywhere from $50,000 - $70,000 in debt,"
[2] which he insisted on paying back over the course of the next few decades. At this point, Ira Gershwin and Yip Harburg agreed that Yip should start writing song lyrics.
Gershwin introduced Harburg to
Jay Gorney, who collaborated with him on songs for an
Earl Carroll Broadway review (''Earl Carroll's Sketchbook''): the show was successful and Harburg was engaged as lyricist for a series of successful reviews, including ''Americana'' in
1932, for which he wrote the lyrics of ''
Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?'' to the tune of a lullaby Gorney had learned as a child in
Russia. This song swept the nation, becoming an anthem of the
Great Depression.
A good example of his clever lyrics is in the "Riddle Me This?" (a song sung in a Casino setting) from
Ballyhoo of 32;
"Love a little, sin a little;
play the game and win a little;
Lonely to lose.
Listen to the money jingle;
isn't it a funny chingle;
ending with blues."
Harburg and Gorney were offered a contract with
Paramount: in
Hollywood, Harburg worked with composers
Harold Arlen,
Vernon Duke,
Jerome Kern,
Jule Styne, and
Burton Lane, and wrote the lyrics for ''
The Wizard of Oz'' for which he won the
Academy Award for Best Music, Original Song for ''
Over the Rainbow''.
Another excellent example of his lyric brilliance is the obscure song "Down With Love" from the 1937 show 'Horray For What?" (music by Harold Arlen):
"Down with love, flowers and rice and shoes.
Down with love, the root of all midnight blues.
Down with things that give you that well-known ping.
Take that moon and wrap it in cellophane!
Down with love, let’s liquidate all its friends:
Moon and June and roses and rainbow’s ends.
Down with songs that moan about night and day.
Down with love, just take it away, away.
Away.
Take it away.
Give it back to the birds and bees and the Viennese!
Down with eyes, romantic and stupid,
Down with sighs, down with cupid.
Brother, let’s stuff that dove! Down with love!"
"So anyhow, Yip also wrote all the dialogue in that time and the setup to the songs and he also wrote the part where they give out the heart, the brains and the nerve, because he was the final script editor. And he - there was eleven screenwriters on that. And he pulled the whole thing together, wrote his own lines and gave the thing a coherence and unity which made it a work of art. But he doesn’t get credit for that. He gets lyrics by E. Y. Harburg, you see. But nevertheless, he put his influence on the thing." - Ernie Harburg, Yip's biographer[2]
Working in Hollywood did not stop Harburg's career on Broadway. In the 40s he wrote a series of ''book'' musicals with social messages, including the quite successful ''
Bloomer Girl'' (
1944) (about suffragette and abolitionist
Dolly Bloomer) and his most famous Broadway show, ''
Finian's Rainbow'' (1947) (perhaps the first Broadway musical with a racially integrated chorus line, featuring Harburg's "When the Idle Poor Become the Idle Rich").
During the
McCarthy era, from about
1951 to
1962, Yip Harburg was a victim of the
Hollywood blacklist when
movie studio bosses
blacklisted industry people for their involvement with the
American Communist Party. No longer able to work in Hollywood, he nevertheless continued to write musicals for Broadway, among them was ''
Jamaica'', which featured
Lena Horne.
Awards
In 1940 Harburg won an
Oscar, shared with
Harold Arlen, for Best Music, Original Song
for "
The Wizard of Oz", (1939). In addition, he was nominated for an Oscar for Best Music, Original Song, along with Arlen,
for "
Cabin in the Sky ", (1943) and Best Music, Original Song
for "
Can't Help Singing", shared with
Jerome Kern in (1944).
[4]
Harburg was inducted into the
Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1972; nine years later (1981) he died in a
Los Angeles car accident.
.jpg)
U.S. postage stamp honoring Harburg
In April
2005, the
United States Postal Service issued a commemorative stamp recognizing his accomplishments. The stamp is drawn from a portrait taken by photographer
Barbara Bordnick in 1978 along with a rainbow and lyric from ''Over the Rainbow''. The first day ceremony was held at the
92nd Street Y in New York.
In 1998 Harburg received a pop culture credit by having a ship's captain named after him in the ''Wizard of Oz''-themed ''X-Files'' episode entitled "Triangle".
__NOTOC__
Songs
★ "
Over the Rainbow"
★ "
Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?" with composer
Jay Gorney in 1932
★ "
Cabin in the Sky" with Harold Arlen, 1943
★ "
Bloomer Girl" with Harold Arlen, 1944
★ ''
April in Paris''
★ ''
It's Only a Paper Moon''
★ ''
Lydia the Tattooed Lady''
★ ''
How Are Things in Glocca Morra?''
★ ''
Old Devil Moon''
★ ''Then I'll Be Tired of You''
★ ''When the Idle Poor Become the Idle Rich''
★ "
Down with Love"
Broadway Revues
★ ''Earl Carroll's Sketchbook of 1929'' (1929) - co-composer and co-lyricist with
Jay Gorney
★ ''Garrick Gaieties'' (1930) - contributing lyricist
★ ''Earl Carroll's Vanities of 1930'' (1930) - contributing songwriter
★ ''The Vanderbilt Revue'' (1930) - contributing lyricist
★ ''
Ziegfeld Follies of 1931'' (1931) - featured lyricist for "Mailu"
★ ''Shoot the Works'' (1931) - contributing composer and lyricist
★ ''Ballyhoo of 1932'' (1932) - lyricist
★ ''Americana'' (1932) - lyricist. The Revue include "Brother Can You Spare a Dime?"
★ ''Walk a Little Faster'' (1932) - lyricist
★ ''
Ziegfeld Follies of 1934'' (1934) - primary lyricist (for about half of the numbers)
★ ''Life Begins at 8:40'' (1934) - co-lyricist with
Ira Gershwin
★ ''The Show is On'' (1936) - featured lyricist
★ ''Blue Holiday'' (1945) - all-Black cast - contributing composer and lyricist
★ ''At Home With
Ethel Waters'' (1953) - featured lyricist for "Happiness is Jes' a Thing Called Joe"
Post-retirement or posthumous credits:
★ ''A Day in Hollywood / A Night in the Ukraine'' (1980) - featured lyricist for "
Over the Rainbow"
★ ''Jerome Kern Goes to Hollywood'' (1986) - featured lyricist to music by
Jerome Kern
★ ''Mostly
Sondheim'' (2002) - featured lyricist
Broadway Musicals
★ ''Hooray For What!'' (1937) - lyricist and originator
★ ''Hold on to Your Hats'' (1940) - lyricist
★ ''Bloomer Girl'' (1944) - lyricist, originator and director for musical numbers
★ ''
Finian's Rainbow'' (1947) - lyricist, originator and co-bookwriter
★
★ Revived in 1955, 1960
★ ''
Flahooley'' (1951) - lyricist, originator and co-bookwriter
★ ''
Jamaica'' (1957) - lyricist, originator and co-bookwriter -
Tony Nomination for
Best Musical
★ ''
The Happiest Girl in the World'' (1961) - originator and lyricist to music by
Jacques Offenbach and originator of the story, based on ''
Lysistrata'' by
Aristophanes
★ ''
Darling of the Day'' (1968) - lyricist
Films
★ ''Moonlight and Pretzels'' - 1933
★ ''The Singing Kid'' - 1936
★ ''Golddiggers of 1937'' - 1936
★ ''
The Wizard of Oz'' - 1939
★ ''At the Circus'' - 1939
★ ''Babes on Broadway'' - 1941
★ ''Ship Ahoy'' - 1942
★ ''
Cabin in the Sky'' - 1943 Yarburg's song "Aint It The Truth" expressing religious skepticism was removed
[5]
★ ''Can't Help Singing'' - 1944
★ ''
Gay Purr-ee'' - 1962
★ ''
Finian's Rainbow''
Books By Harburg
★ ''Rhymes for the Irreverent'' (1965)
.jpg)
''Rhymes for the Irreverent'' cover
★ ''At This Point in Rhyme'' (1976)
Notes
1. Spotlight on E. Y. Harburg
2. Democracy Now article 25, November, 2004
3. Democracy Now article 25, November, 2004
4. Awards for E.Y. Harburg
5.
★ April 29, 2006 - Somewhere Over the Rainbow . . . Rhymes for the Irreverent Freedom From Religion Foundation's Podcast 22:10
References
★ Harburg, Ernie. ''Who Put the Rainbow in the Wizard of Oz: Yip Harburg Lyricist'', University of Michigan Press, (1993). ISBN 0-472-10482-9
★
Biography of Harburg from USPS
★
Extended audio/print interview with Ernie Harburg, Yip's son and biographer
★
★
The Yip Harburg Foundation
★
★
E. Y. Harburg papers (first installment) and
E. Y. Harburg papers (second installment) in the
Billy Rose Theatre Collection of
The New York Public Library for the Peforming Arts.
★
E. Y. Harburg scores (his personal collection) in the
Music Division of
The New York Public Library for the Peforming Arts.
★
★
Celebrated Lyricist Yip Harburg's ''Rhymes For The Irreverent'' Released February 2, 2006 article on The
Freedom From Religion Foundation's website
★
April 29, 2006 - Somewhere Over the Rainbow . . . Rhymes for the Irreverent Freedom From Religion Foundation's
Podcast