I'm Just Wild About Harry

Cover page for "I'm Just Wild About Harry", 1921

"I'm Just Wild About Harry" is a song written in 1921 with lyrics by Noble Sissle and music by Eubie Blake for the Broadway show Shuffle Along. "I'm Just Wild About Harry" was the most popular number of the production, which was the first financially successful Broadway play to have African-American writers and an all African-American cast.[1] The song broke what had been a taboo against musical and stage depictions of romantic love between African-Americans.

Originally written as a waltz, Blake rewrote the number as a foxtrot at the singer's request. The result was a simple, direct, joyous, and infectious tune enhanced onstage by improvisational dancing. In 1948 Harry S. Truman selected "I'm Just Wild About Harry" as his campaign song for the United States presidential election of 1948.[2] Its success in politics led to a popular revival.[3]

Background

Both "I'm Just Wild About Harry" and the show Shuffle Along broke racial taboos.[4] During the early 20th century African-Americans were excluded from most mainstream theater in the United States: white Vaudeville refused to book more than one African-American act on a bill and for over a decade no Broadway show used African-American performers at all.[4] Blake and Sissle met F. E. Miller and Aubrey Lyles for the first time at a fundraising benefit for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in 1920.[4] Vaudeville's exclusionary practices limited bills to one African-American act per night, so as a result the two leading African-American acting teams knew of each other only by reputation.[4] The four performers agreed that the only feasible way for African-Americans to return to Broadway with dignity would be musical comedy.[4] Miller proposed they collaborate.[4]

The resulting show adapted plot and characters from Miller and Aubrey's Vaudeville comic sketches with music by Blake and Sissle.[4] Although the music of Shuffle Along was new to the public, only three compositions were actually written for the production: "I'm Just Wild About Harry", "Bandana Days", and "Love Will Find A Way". The other songs used in the show were material that Blake and Sissle had tried unsuccessfully to sell to Tin Pan Alley.[5] "I'm Just Wild About Harry" and "Love Will Find a Way" in particular were politically risky for the era.[4]

"If anything approaching a love duet was introduced in a musical comedy, it had to be broadly burlesqued," recalled black poet and lyricist James Weldon Johnson. "The reason...lay in the belief that a love scene between two Negroes could not strike a white audience except as ridiculous."[4]
Philip Furia and Michael Lasser, America's Songs: The Stories Behind the Songs of Broadway, Hollywood, and Tin Pan Alley

The title and chorus of the musical's most famous number challenge that taboo: I'm just wild about Harry and he's just wild about me is a clear statement of mutual romantic interest.[4] Sissle and Blake risked the public's rejection by shedding most of the racial stereotypes that had been the norm for theatrical performances.[6]

Creation

"I'm Just Wild About Harry" underwent a complete rewrite during rehearsals and was nearly cut from the show.[4] Blake's original version of the song was a Viennese waltz, but according to the authors of America's Songs, performer Lottie Gee encouraged rewriting the number as an up-tempo one-step.[4] Blake disliked the suggestion and feared it would ruin his waltz but capitulated after Sissle agreed with Gee.[4]

Audiences did not respond well to the revised version during early performances.[4] Blake was on the verge of dropping the number from the show when a dancer took ill and had to be replaced.[4] The understudy was a singer who did not know the steps, so when he was unable to follow the routine he ignored it and improvised.[4] America's Songs quotes Sissle's recollection of how the performance saved the song: "He dropped out of line and with a jive smile and a high-stepping routine of his own, he stopped the show cold."[4]

Structure

Wikisource has full lyrics and sheet music:
"I'm Just Wild About Harry"
Instrumental version of "I'm Just Wild About Harry" recorded 17 May 1922. Duration 3:54.

Problems playing this file? See media help.

Alec Wilder and James T. Maher call "I'm Just Wild About Harry" a "strong, direct, simple song, the principal device of which is a strong fourth beat tied to the down beat".[7] The song moves in short melodic bursts characteristic of the era: lighthearted but rhythmic.[4]

"It's of the genre of Hallelujah, Fine and Dandy and all those cut-time theater rhythm songs. It uses a lot of step-wise writing and only one note out of its C-major scale, a d sharp. For a theater song it is not rangy, being only an octave and a third."[7]

The tightly rhymed lyrics comprise a straightforward set of comparisons that border on comic exaggeration.[4]

The heavenly blisses
Of his kisses
Fill me with ecstasy.
He's sweet just like chocolate candy
And just like honey from the bee.[8][9]

Yet Furia and Lasser describe the song's overall impact as an infectious delight.[4]

Within the context of the play, the number occurs early in the second act when the leading lady declares her love for the leading man.[5] Her father is the wealthiest man in town, which poses obstacles to the match.[4] The overall plot concerns a mayoral race in all-black Jimtown where two dishonest grocery store owners vie for political office. One of the corrupt grocers wins the race shortly afterward and appoints the other chief of police. Harry leads the community protest that returns the two grocers to their store, and wins the girl.[5]

Reception

Shuffle Along was a significant theatrical success that "ended more than a decade of systematic exclusion of blacks from the Broadway stage".[4] The show opened in New York City at Daly's 63rd Street Music Hall on May 23, 1921 and ran 504 performances.[6][10] The venue was actually a converted lecture hall that lacked a proper stage or orchestra pit.[4][10] The show overcame financial straits and a poor location to become "the first all-black musical to enjoy a long run and be treated as more than an oddity."[6]

"On the New York opening night, the audience loved the show. Influential critics like Alan Dale, George Jean Nathan, and Heywood Broun were highly enthusiastic. Gradually Shuffle Along built up a cult status. So big were the crowds that the police had trouble controlling the traffic. Eventually they had to make Sixty-third a one-way street. A black show was back on Broadway, even if 63rd Street, a long way uptown, was barely Broadway! In Eubie Blake's words, 'It wasn't Broadway but we made it Broadway.'[10]"

"I'm Just Wild About Harry" was the most popular number of the show.[6] Blake conducted the show's orchestra and recorded the song for the Victor label.[6][11] Noble Sissle's 1937 recording for the Victory label altered the original tone considerably in order to showcase the talents of clarinetist Sidney Bechet.[12] Other early recordings include those by Benny Krueger, Louis Mitchell and Paul Whiteman.[11]

In 2016, it returned to Broadway in a revival of Shuffle Along.

Use in other media

Judy Garland sang the piece as one of several songs in a minstrel show in the M-G-M musical Babes in Arms (1939).[13]

Alice Faye sang it with Louis Prima's band in the 1939 film Rose of Washington Square.[11] It was signature tune of Hi Gang!, a popular BBC Radio comedy show of the early WWii years, starring the American actors Bebe Daniels and her husband Ben Lyon, who had settled in London, and the British comedian Vic Oliver. In 1946, Daffy Duck sang a chorus of it in Daffy Doodles.

In 1948 "I'm Just Wild About Harry" underwent a revival when Harry S. Truman selected it as his campaign song for the presidency of the United States.[14][11] Republicans and some Democrats that year joked, "I'm just mild about Harry." The next year Al Jolson performed it in the film Jolson Sings Again and the song became a jazz standard.[6][11] This return to popularity briefly reunited Blake and Sissle for the first time since 1933.[11] In 1955, the song again appeared in the Warner Brothers cartoon short One Froggy Evening as one of the songs sung by Michigan J. Frog during his dance routine. Writing about American popular songs in 1972, Wilder and Maher call "I'm Just Wild About Harry" the only enduringly popular song from Shuffle Along.[7] On The Muppet Show, Jean Stapleton performed the song with the mad bomber and pyrotechnician Muppet character, Crazy Harry, who accompanies her singing on his explodaphone, which consisted partly of a line of plunger blasting machines wired to set off numerous explosive charges in time with the lyrics.

Other versions

Kathy Linden released a version of the song on her 1958 album, That Certain Boy.[15]

References

  1. Clinton Cox, Jim Haskins, Eleanora E. Tate, and Brenda Wilkinson, "The First Black Hit Musical Show," Black Stars of the Harlem Renaissance (Wiley_Default, 2002), 31.
  2. Southern, Eileen. The Music of Black Americans. W. W. Norton & Company (1997). Pg 436. ISBN 978-0-393-03843-9.
  3. Wintz, Cary D. & Finkelman, Paul. Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance. Taylor & Francis (2004). Pg 153. ISBN 978-1-57958-457-3.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Philip Furia, Michael Lasser (2006). America's Songs: The Stories Behind the Songs of Broadway, Hollywood, and Tin Pan Alley. CRC Press. pp. 29–31. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  5. 1 2 3 Ken Bloom and Frank Lastnik (2004). Broadway Musicals: The 101 Greatest Shows of All Time. Black Dog & Leventhal. pp. 294–295.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Ken Bloom (2004). Broadway: Its History, People, and Places : An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. pp. 496–498. Retrieved 2008-09-28.
  7. 1 2 3 Alec Wilder, James T. Maher (1972). American Popular Song: The Great Innovators, 1900–1950. Oxford University Press US. pp. 454–455. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  8. "I'm Just Wild About Harry (sheet music p.4)". M. Witmark & Sons. Retrieved 2008-09-28.
  9. "I'm Just Wild About Harry (sheet music p.5)". M. Witmark & Sons. Retrieved 2008-09-28.
  10. 1 2 3 Bill Egan (2004). Florence Mills: Harlem Jazz Queen. Scarecrow Press. pp. 55–56. Retrieved 2008-09-28.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 David A. Jasen (2002). A Century of American Popular Music: 2000 Best-loved and Remembered Songs (1899–1999). Taylor & Francis. pp. 98–99. Retrieved 2008-09-28.
  12. Tim Brooks, Richard Keith Spottswood (2004). Lost Sounds: Blacks and the Birth of the Recording Industry, 1890–1919. University of Illinois Press. p. 389. Retrieved 2008-09-28.
  13. Soundtrack listing for Babes in Arms at Internet Movie Database
  14. Sullivan, John Jeremiah (March 24, 2016). "‘Shuffle Along’ and the Lost History of Black Performance in America". The New York Times Magazine. Retrieved March 27, 2016.
  15. Kathy Linden, That Certain Boy Retrieved January 24, 2016.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, May 07, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.