John Herndon "Johnny"
Mercer (November 18, 1909 – June 25, 1976) is regarded as one of
America's greatest songwriters.
Childhood
Born in Savannah, Georgia, Mercer liked music as a small child. His aunt
told him he was humming music when he was six-months old. He never had
formal musical training but he listened to all the music he could and
by the time he was 11 or 12 he had memorized almost all of the songs he
had heard.
He once asked his brother who the best songwriters were,
and his brother said Irving Berlin, among the best of Tin Pan Alley.
Career
Mercer moved to New York in 1928. His first few jobs were as an actor
but he soon gravitated toward singing and lyric writing. He was eventually
hired as a singer and lyricist for Paul Whiteman's Band. His first lyric
appeared in a musical revue in 1930 and after than he met many writers
and composers, including Hoagy Carmichael. Later he quit working altogether
to concentrate on writing songs exclusively. He met Siggie Nordstrom who
was recently widowed and forming a sister act with her sister Dagmar and
the pair used several of his songs in their routine in 1939 at the Ritz
in London. But he felt confined by the Tin Pan Alley formula which had
long relegated authentic southern vernacular to comedy songs. Mercer was
a naturally casual lyricist, preferring to use regional colloquialisms.
This was the golden age of the sophisticated popular song, like those
of Cole Porter. Songs were put into revues without much regard for integrating
the song into the plot.
Mercer was generally a lyricist; to him the song was
the thing. During the 1930s there was a shift in musical theatre from
musical revues to musicals that used the song to further the plot. There
was less of a demand for the pure stand-alone song. After the success
of Oklahoma!, Broadway began to shut out lyricists like Mercer who thought
in terms of the song rather than its integration into the show.
When Mercer was offered a job in Hollywood to write songs
and act in low-budget musicals for RKO, he took it.
Hollywood years
It was only when Mercer moved to Hollywood in 1935 that his lyrics began
to display the combination of sophisticated wit and southern regional
venacular that characterize some of his best songs. His first big song
"I'm an Old Cow Hand" was used by Bing Crosby in a film and
from there his career as a lyicist took off. He found himself writing
more and performing less.
In Hollywood he was able to collaborate with a remarkable
number of composers, including Richard Whiting, Harry Warren, Jerome Kern,
Harold Arlen, Jimmy Van Heusen, Henry Mancini, Dorothy Fields, and Hoagy
Carmichael. He was adaptable in his style, listening carefully and absorbing
a tune and then transforming it into his own style. He said he preferred
to have the music first, taking it home and working on it. He claimed
composers had no problem with this method as long as he came back with
the lyrics.
After the death of his friend and collaborator, Paul
Whiting, he began working with Harry Warren, one of the best composers
in the film business. He also had an immensely productive collaborative
relationship with Harold Arlen on and off starting in the late 1930s.
Mercer was often asked to write new lyrics to already
popular tunes. The lyrics to "Laura," "Midnight Sun,"
and "Satin Doll" were all written after the melodies had become
hits. He was also asked to write English lyrics to foreign songs, the
most famous example being "Autumn Leaves," based on the French
"Les Feuilles Mortes."
Occasionally, Mercer wrote both music and lyrics. "Something's
Gotta Give" is probably the best-known song in this category.
Mercer wrote for some MGM films, which include Seven
Brides for Seven Brothers (1954) and Merry Andrew (1958). He wrote the
lyrics to "Moon River" for Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany's.
(Henry Mancini wrote the music.) In 1969, Mercer helped publishers Abe
Olman and Howie Richmond found the National Academy of Popular Music's
Songwriters Hall of Fame.
A good indication of Mercer's high esteem is the fact
that, in 1964, he became the only lyricist to have his work recorded as
a volume of Ella Fitzgerald's celebrated 'Songbook' albums for the Verve
label. But he always remained humble about his work, attributing much
to luck and timing. He was fond of telling the story of how he was offered
the job of doing the lyrics for The Sandpiper on which he worked, only
to have the producer turn his lyrics down. The producer got another lyricist
and the result was "The Shadow of Your Smile" which became a
huge hit.
Southern roots
Born in the South, Mercer grew up listening to records of Tin Pan Alley
songs but also to so-called "race" records, marketed to blacks.
His later songs merged his southern roots with his urban knowledge of
sophisticated songwriters. It was his southern roots that enable him to
be one of the few lyicists able to skillfully write lyrics set to the
jazz melodies of composers such as Hoagy Carmichael. For years Mercer
had to ignore those roots to fit the requirements of Tin Pan Alley standard
terms.
"Moon River", with its remarkable phrase "my
huckleberry friend" would never have passed muster in the Tin Pan
Alley years.
Singing style
Well-regarded also as a singer, with a folksy singing quality, he was
a natural for his own songs such as "Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive",
"On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe", "One for My
Baby (and One More for the Road)", and "Lazybones." He
was considered a first-rate performer of his own work.
It has been said that he penned "One for My Baby
(and One More for the Road)", one of the great torch laments of all
times, on a napkin while sitting at the bar at P. J. Clarke's when Tommy
Joyce was the bartender. The next day he called Tommy to apologize for
the line "So, set 'em up, Joe," "I couldn't get your name
to rhyme." Mercer, like Cole Porter before him, was more interested
in the words than the emotion in lyric. This may be why "One for
My Baby" was sung more effectively by him than other singers who
often turned it into a tear-jerker.
Capitol Records
The war years saw Mercer's beginnings as an entertainment tycoon. In the
1940s Mercer was introduced by the Nordstrom Sisters to backers and in
1942, he was part of the founding trio of Capitol Records which became
an industry giant. While running Capitol, Mercer's skills as a talent
scout attracted Nat Cole, Stan Kenton, Jo Stafford, Peggy Lee and Margaret
Whiting and others to the label. Of course, he released many of his hits
on his own label.
Posthumous success
In his last year, Mercer became extremely fond of pop singer Barry Manilow,
in part because Manilow's first hit record was of a song titled "Mandy,"
which was also the name of Mercer's daughter. After Mercer's death, his
widow, Ginger Mehan Mercer, arranged to give some unfinished lyrics he
had written to Manilow to possibly develop into complete songs. Among
these was a piece titled "When October Goes," a melancholy remembrance
of lost love. Manilow applied his own melody to the lyric and issued it
as a single in 1984, when it became a top 10 Adult Contemporary hit in
the United States. The song has since become a jazz standard, with notable
recordings by Rosemary Clooney, Nancy Wilson and Megon McDonough, among
other performers.
Academy Awards
Mercer won four Academy Awards for Best Song:
- "On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe"
(1946) (music by Harry Warren) for The Harvey Girls
- "In The Cool, Cool, Cool Of The Evening"
(1951) (music by Hoagy Carmichael) for Here Comes The Groom
- "Moon River" (1961) (music by Henry Mancini)
for Breakfast at Tiffany's
- "Days of Wine and Roses" (1962) (music by
Henry Mancini) for Days of Wine and Roses
Songs
Lyrics by Mercer, unless noted.
He wrote many other songs, some of which have entered
the Great American Songbook:
- "Lazybones" (1933) (music by Hoagy Carmichael)
- "P.S. I Love You" (1934) (music by Gordon
Jenkins)
- "Goody Goody" (1936) (music by Matty Maineck)
- "I'm an Old Cowhand from the Rio Grande"
(1936)
- "Hooray for Hollywood" (1937) (music by
Richard A. Whiting)
- "Too Marvelous for Words" (1937) (music
by Richard Whiting)
- "You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby" (1938)
(music by Harry Warren)
- "Jeepers Creepers" (1938) (music by Harry
Warren)
- "And The Angels Sing" (1939) (music by
Ziggy Elman)
- "Day In - Day Out" (1939) (music by Rube
Bloom)
- "Fools Rush In" (1940) (music by Rube Bloom)
- "Blues In The Night" (1941) (music by Harold
Arlen)
- "I Remember You" (1941) (music by Victor
Schertzinger)
- "This Time The Dream's On Me" (1941) (music
by Harold Arlen)
- "Hit The Road To Dreamland" (1942) (music
by Harold Arlen)
- "That Old Black Magic" (1942) (music by
Harold Arlen)
- "Skylark" (1942) (music by Hoagy Carmichael)
- "Dearly Beloved" (1942) (music by Jerome
Kern)
- "I'm Old Fashioned" (1943) (music by Jerome
Kern)
- "One for My Baby (and One More for the Road)"
(1943) (music by Harold Arlen)
- "Dream" (1943) (words and music by Johnny
Mercer)
- "Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive" (1944) (music
by Harold Arlen)
- "Out of This World" (1945) (music by Harold
Arlen)
- "Laura" (1945) (music by David Raksin)
- "Trav'lin' Light" (1946) (music by Jimmy
Mundy and James Osborne)
- "Trummy" (Young)
- "Any Place I Hang My Hat Is Home" (1946)
(music by Harold Arlen)
- "Come Rain Or Come Shine" (1946) (music
by Harold Arlen)
- "Autumn Leaves" (1947) (music by Joseph
Kosma)
- "Glow Worm" (1952) (music Paul Linche)
- "Satin Doll" (1953) (music by Duke Ellington)
- "Charade" (1953) (music by Henry Mancini)
- "Something's Gotta Give" (1954)
- "Moon River" (1961) (music by Henry Mancini)
- "Midnight Sun" (music by Lionel Hampton
and Sonny Burke)
- "Summer Wind" (1965) (music by Henry Mayer)
- "Drinking Again" (with Doris Tauber)
- "P.S. I Love You" (music by Gordon Jenkins)
- "When October Goes" (music by Barry Manilow)
Other facts
Mercer was a direct descendant of Revolutionary War General Hugh Mercer,
and through him was also a distant cousin of General George S. Patton.
Another Mercer's ancestors was General Hugh W. Mercer
in the American Civil War.
He was honored by the United States Postal Service with
his portrait placed on a stamp in 1996. His star on the Hollywood Walk
of Fame at 1628 Vine Street is outside the Capitol Records building.
He died in Bel Air, California.
There is a theatre named after him in Savannah's Civic
Center.
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