Jerome Kern

Jerome Kern

music department, writer, composer

Jerome Kern was born on Jan 27, 1885 in USA. Jerome Kern's big-screen debut came with Gloria's Romance directed by Walter Edwin in 1916. Jerome Kern is known for Swing Time directed by George Stevens, Fred Astaire stars as Lucky Garnett and Ginger Rogers as Penny Carroll. Jerome Kern has got 3 awards and 6 nominations so far. The most recent award Jerome Kern achieved is Grammy Awards. The upcoming new movie Jerome Kern plays is The Last Time I Saw Paris which will be released on Apr 03, 1955.

Jerome David Kern was born in 1885. He began his stage career grafting American songs (for which he wrote the music) into imported European operettas. His breakthrough came with the song "They Didn't Believe Me", written (with lyrics by Edward Laska) for a show called "The Girl from Utah". It established him as a major American composer in 1914. Married to a Englishwoman, Kern became an Anglophile, and teamed up with British writers Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse to write the so-called "Princess Theatre musicals"--shows like "Very Good, Eddie" and "Leave It To Jane", which were unusual not so much for their silly storylines but for the fact that the characters were everyday people rather than the exotic characters of operetta, and also for the fact that these shows had few sets and small casts. He later wrote shows like "Sally" and "Sunny", both loaded with song hits, star casts and spectacular sets but silly plots. Finally, looking for an entirely different type of musical, Kern decided to adapt Edna Ferber's novel "Show Boat" to the musical stage. Although Oscar Hammerstein II agreed to do the adaptation and lyrics, nearly everyone (including Ferber) thought Kern and Hammerstein had lost their minds. "Show Boat"'s storyline featured interracial marriage, wife desertion, alcoholism and gambling, and the most realistic characters ever seen in a musical up to then, not to mention the song "Ol' Man River" and an opening chorus of black dockworkers singing about their work. Most of the songs were integrated so well into the story that they could not possibly have been sung in another show or taken out of "Show Boat" without damaging the plot. And "Show Boat" featured a song, "Mis'ry's Comin' Round", which was so utterly tragic that Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. ordered it cut--and it remained cut, existing only as background music, until the 1994 revival. In spite of all this, "Show Boat" became a huge hit and has remained one of the musical theater's greatest classics and most often revived shows--the only musical pre-1943 to be revived over and over. Kern, however, did not experiment any further--his other hit shows, "Music In The Air", "Roberta" and "The Cat and the Fiddle", contain classic songs that are still sung, but the shows are almost never revived. After a heart attack in 1939, Kern wrote songs exclusively for movie musicals. Two of his movie musicals, Sur les ailes de la danse (1936) with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, and La reine de Broadway (1944) with Rita Hayworth and Gene Kelly, have become famous for their songs and dances. Kern died of a stroke at the age of 60, in 1945.

  • Birthday

    Jan 27, 1885
  • Place of Birth

    New York City, New York, USA

Known For

Awards

3 wins & 6 nominations

Grammy Awards
1987
Trustees Award
Winner - Grammy
Academy Awards, USA
1942
Best Music, Original Song
Winner - Oscar
1937
Best Music, Original Song
Winner - Oscar

Movies & TV Shows

All
Movies