- Adolph Green
Adolph Green (
December 2 ,1914 ndashOctober 23 ,2002 ) was an Americanlyricist andplaywright who, with long-time collaboratorBetty Comden , penned thescreenplays and songs for some of the most beloved movie musicals, particularly as part of Arthur Freed's production unit at MGM, during the genre's heyday. Many people thought the pair were married; they were not, but they shared a unique comic genius and sophisticated wit that enabled them to forge a six-decade-long partnership that produced some ofHollywood and Broadway's greatest hits.Early life and career
Green was born in the Bronx to Hungarian-
Jewish immigrants Daniel and Helen Weiss Green. After high school, he worked as a runner onWall Street while he tried to make it as an actor. He met Comden through mutual friends in 1938 while she was studying drama atNew York University . They formed a troupe called the Revuers, which performed at theVillage Vanguard , a club inGreenwich Village . Among the members of the company was a young comedian named Judy Tuvim, who later changed her name toJudy Holliday , and Green's good friend, a young musician namedLeonard Bernstein , frequently accompanied them on the piano. The act's success earned them a movie offer and the Revuers traveled west in hopes of finding fame in "Greenwich Village", a 1944 movie starringCarmen Miranda andDon Ameche , but their roles were so small they barely were noticed, and they quickly returned to New York.Their first Broadway effort joined them with Bernstein for "On the Town", a musical romp about three sailors on leave in New York City that was an expansion of a
ballet entitled "Fancy Free" on which Bernstein had been working withchoreographer Jerome Robbins . Comden and Green wrote the lyrics and book, which included sizeable parts for themselves. Their next two musicals, "Billion Dollar Baby" (1945) and "Bonanza Bound" (1947) were not successful, and once again they headed to California, where they immediately found work at MGM.They wrote the screenplay for "Good News", starring
June Allyson andPeter Lawford , "The Barkleys of Broadway " forGinger Rogers andFred Astaire , and then adapted "On the Town" forFrank Sinatra andGene Kelly , scrapping Bernstein's music at the request ofArthur Freed , who did not care for the Bernstein score.They reunited with Kelly for their most successful project, the classic "Singin' in the Rain", about Hollywood in the final days of the silent film era. Considered by many film historians to be the best movie musical of all time, it ranked #10 on the list of the 100 Best American Movies of the 20th Century, compiled by the
American Film Institute in 1998. They followed this with another hit, "The Band Wagon ", in which the characters of Lester and Lily, a husband-and-wife team that writes the screenplay for the show-within-a-show, were patterned after themselves. They were Oscar-nominated twice, for their screenplays for "The Band Wagon" and "It's Always Fair Weather ", both of which earned them a Screen Writers Guild Award, as did "On the Town". Their stage work during the next few years included the revue "Two on the Aisle ", starringBert Lahr andDolores Gray , "Wonderful Town ", an adaptation of the comedy hit "My Sister Eileen ", withRosalind Russell andEdie Adams as two sisters from Ohio trying to make it in theBig Apple , and "Bells Are Ringing", which reunited them with Judy Holliday as an operator at a telephone answering service. The score, including the standards "Just in Time," "Long Before I Knew You," and "The Party’s Over," proved to be one of their richest.In 1958, they appeared on Broadway in "
A Party with Betty Comden and Adolph Green ", a revue that included some of their early sketches. It was a critical and commercial success, and they brought an updated version back to Broadway in 1977. Among their other credits are theMary Martin version of "Peter Pan" for both Broadway and television, a streamlined "Die Fledermaus " for theMetropolitan Opera , and stage musicals forCarol Burnett ,Leslie Uggams , andLauren Bacall , among others. Their many collaborators includedGarson Kanin ,Cy Coleman ,Jule Styne , andAndré Previn .The team was not without its failures. In 1982, "
A Doll's Life ", a misguided attempt to figure out what Nora did after she abandoned her husband inHenrik Ibsen 's "A Doll's House ", ran for only five performances, although they receivedTony Award nominations for its book and score.Comden and Green received
Kennedy Center Honors in 1991.Green's third wife was actress
Phyllis Newman , who had understudied Holliday in "Bells Are Ringing". They had two children, Adam and Amanda.His Broadway memorial, with such luminaries as
Lauren Bacall ,Kevin Kline ,Joel Grey ,Kristin Chenoweth ,Arthur Laurents ,Peter Stone , and, of course,Betty Comden in attendance was held at the Shubert Theater onDecember 4 ,2002 .Additional Broadway credits
*"
The Will Rogers Follies " (1991)
*"Singin' in the Rain" (1985)
*"On the Twentieth Century " (1978)
*"Lorelei" (1974)
*"Applause" (1970)
*"Hallelujah, Baby! " (1967)
*"Fade Out - Fade In " (1964)
*"Subways Are For Sleeping " (1961)
*"Do Re Mi" (1960)
*"Say, Darling " (1958)Theatre awards and nominations
*1991 Tony Award for Best Original Score ("The Will Rogers Follies", winner)
*1986 Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical ("Singin' in the Rain", nominee)
*1983 Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical ("A Doll's Life", nominee)
*1983 Tony Award for Best Original Score ("A Doll's Life", nominee)
*1978 Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical ("On the Twentieth Century", winner)
*1978 Tony Award for Best Original Score ("On the Twentieth Century", winner)
*1970 Tony Award for Best Musical ("Applause", winner)
*1968 Tony Award for Best Composer and Lyricist ("Hallelujah, Baby!", winner)
*1968 Tony Award for Best Musical ("Hallelujah, Baby!", winner)
*1961 Tony Award for Best Musical ("Do Re Mi", nominee)
*1957 Tony Award for Best Musical ("Bells Are Ringing", nominee)
*1953 Tony Award for Best Musical ("Wonderful Town", winner)External links
* [http://www.ibdb.com/person.asp?ID=3911/ Adolph Green at IBDb]
* [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0337582/ Adolph Green at IMDb]References
"Off Stage", a memoir by Betty Comden published in 1995
External links
* [http://www.nypl.org/research/manuscripts/the/theagree.xml Adolph Green Papers, 1944-2002 - The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts]
* [http://www.nypl.org/research/manuscripts/the/thecomgr.xml Comden and Green Papers, 1933-2003 - The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts]
* [http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/25/obituaries/25GREE.html Adolph Green, Playwright and Lyricist Who Teamed With Comden, Dies at 87] , "The New York Times", October 25, 2002
* [http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/04/arts/theater/04MEMO.html A Broadway Memorial? That's Entertainment] , "The New York Times", December 4, 2002
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