Ira Gershwin
A Life in Words
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4.5 • 4 Ratings
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- $33.99
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- $33.99
Publisher Description
Broadway World • "Theater Books for Your Winter 2025 Reading List"
New York Times Book Review • "5 New Books We Recommend This Week"
The man behind some of the most memorable lyrics in the Great American Songbook steps from behind his brother’s shadow.
The first lyricist to win the Pulitzer Prize, Ira Gershwin (1896–1983) has been hailed as one of the masters of the Great American Songbook, a period which covers songs written largely for Broadway and Hollywood from the 1920s to the 1950s. Now, in the first full-length biography devoted to his life, Michael Owen brings Ira out at last from the long shadow cast by his younger and more famous brother George. Drawing on extensive archival sources and often using Ira’s own words, Owen has crafted a rich portrait of the modest man who penned the words to many of America’s best-loved songs, like “Fascinating Rhythm,” “Embraceable You,” and “They Can’t Take That Away from Me.”
These fruits of Ira’s lyric genius sprang from the simplest of seeds: a hand-drawn weekly created for a cousin, an amateur newspaper co-written with friend and future lyricist Yip Harburg, columns in the school papers at Townsend Harris High School and, later, City College of New York. The details of his early literary efforts demonstrate both his developing ambition and the early signs of his talent. But while the road to becoming a successful lyricist was neither short nor smooth, it did lead Ira to the greatest creative partnership of his life.
George and Ira Gershwin collaborated on a string of hit Broadway shows in the 1920s and 1930s that resulted in popular and financial success and spawned a long string of songs that have become classics. Owen offers fascinating glimpses of their creative process, drawing on Ira’s diaries and other contemporary sources, as well as the close relationship between the two brothers. Hollywood soon beckons and the brothers head west to California to work in the movie business. Greater fame and fortune seem right around the corner.
George Gershwin died in a Los Angeles hospital in July 1937. He was only 38 years old. His death marked a stark dividing line in Ira’s life, and from that point on much of his time and energy was devoted to the management of his brother’s estate and the care of his legacy. Accustomed to living in his brother’s shadow, it now threatened to overwhelm him. He worked to balance all the administrative tasks with a new series of collaborations with composers like Kurt Weill, Jerome Kern, Harry Warren, and Harold Arlen. Ira’s last Broadway work was in 1946, and several films and a book project—a collection of his lyrics with the stories behind them—occupied his later years along with the ongoing management of George’s affairs.
Ira Gershwin’s work with George left an enduring mark on American culture, as recognized by the Library of Congress in 2007 when it established the Gershwin Prize for Popular Song, which has been awarded to artists like Paul Simon, Carole King, Tony Bennett, Paul McCartney, and Elton John. In Ira Gershwin: A Life in Words, Michael Owen brings the publicity shy lyricist into the spotlight he deserves.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Lyricist Ira Gershwin (1896–1983) gets the due long afforded to his brother George in this meticulous account. Music historian Owen (Go Slow) recaps Gershwin's upbringing in turn of the 20th-century New York City, where he read voraciously and paid close attention to street slang, fueling his love for language. After a slow start as a lyricist in his early 20s, he began collaborating with his composer brother, adding lyrics to George's jazzy tunes in 1924's Lady, Be Good. The brothers later garnered praise for such Broadway and TV productions as Porgy and Bess and Shall We Dance? George's early death in 1937 devastated Gershwin and diverted him from songwriting as he dealt with an "endless minutiae of contracts and royalties," before having a creative revival with 1940's Lady in the Dark. Owens provides a solid if occasionally dry recounting of Gershwin's career, though readers will be most captivated by the glimpses of a sensitive, complex artist that peek through the cracks. Especially memorable are the depictions of Gershwin as a "floating soul" in his early 20s who "struggled to find his own voice" as "endless melodies... flowed from George's fingertips," and as an artist who found his voice again after the "inertia" that set in following his brother's death. It's a fitting tribute to a vital influence on 20th-century American music.