CBC.ca Arts - Broadway lyricist Betty Comden dead at 89
Penny Ditch  |  by www.cbc.ca. All rights reserved. 17.01 | 13:10

Broadway lyricist Betty Comden, who collaborated with Adolph Green on New York stage hits such as On the Town and Singin' in the Rain, has died.
Comden died Thursday of heart failure at New York-Presbyterian Hospital, said her longtime lawyer and executor Ronald Konecky. She was 89.


"She was, in all respects, a very beautiful and legendary person," Konecky said.
"She was a dynamic figure in the arts, theatre and film."
Comden and Green wrote lyrics and often the book — a term for the script of a musical — for more than a dozen Broadway shows.


They worked with composers Leonard Bernstein, Jule Styne and Cy Coleman and built musicals around stars such as Judy Holliday, Phil Silvers, Carol Burnett and Lauren Bacall.
The couple were never married to each other, but worked together for 60 years. Green died in October 2002 at age 87.


They won five Tony Awards for Wonderful Town, Hallelujah, Baby! and Applause, which took the top Tony for best musical. The duo received the Kennedy Center honours in 1991.


"It's a kind of radar," Comden once said of her partnership with Green.
"We don't divide the work up, taking different scenes. We sit in the same room always.

"
"I used to write things down in shorthand. I now sit at the typewriter ..

. Adolph paces more. A lot of people don't believe this but at the end of the day we usually don't remember who thought up what.

"
Their collaboration spawned the brash, buoyant lyrics of New York, New York — the version that says "New York, New York, it's a helluva town, the Bronx is up and the Battery's down."
They also had several simple, heartfelt pop hits such as Just in Time and Make Someone Happy.
Green, a struggling actor, met Comden in 1938, when she was studying at New York University.


They began writing together after forming a troupe called the Revuers, which performed in the Village Vanguard, a club in Greenwich Village. Among the actors was a young Judy Holliday.
They went to Hollywood in 1947 to write for MGM, penning the screenplay for Good News and for the film version of On the Town, starring Frank Sinatra and Gene Kelly, which went on to be a hit.


In 1952, they wrote the screenplay for Singin' in the Rain and in 1953 had another hit with The Band Wagon.
In 1953, Comden and Green headed back to Broadway to work with Bernstein on Wonderful Town.
They went on to augment the score for the 1954 Broadway version of Peter Pan starring Mary Martin and wrote Bells Are Ringing specifically for Holliday and Do Re Mi for Silvers.


They wrote the book, but not the lyrics for Applause, which starred Bacall.
Their longest-running show, The Will Rogers Follies, opening in 1991, was a Ziegfeld-style retelling of the life of the famous humourist.
In 1998, Comden and Green were still working, contributing to a Broadway revival of On the Town and streamlining the script for Die Fledermaus for the Metropolitan Opera.


Comden told her story in her 1995 memoir, Off Stage.
She was born in Brooklyn, N.Y.

, in 1917, the daughter of a lawyer and a schoolteacher.   
Comden married accessories designer Steven Kyle in 1942 and they had two children. He died in 1979.


She is survived by a daughter, Susanna, but her son, Alan, died in 1990.

In what he calls his first major speech as Liberal leader, Stéphane Dion tells a Toronto business audience Canadians can make enormous profits fighting climate change.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper will deal with the so-called fiscal imbalance in the next budget, the French-language network of the CBC reported Monday.

Calgarians are more stressed, a side-effect of the city's hot economy, say organizations that provide counselling and workplace wellness programs.
Babel, the powerful ensemble drama that weaves together three interconnected storylines across three continents, took one of two top prizes Monday night at the 64th annual Golden Globe Awards.
Trailer Park Boys Ricky, Julian and Bubbles will return as hosts of the East Coast Music Awards next month in Halifax, organizers announced Tuesday.

After a mere two-day delay, the anticipated Rankin Family Reunion tour will get started in Victoria on Tuesday evening, just one day after band and family members attended the funeral of elder sister Geraldine.
A skull found in a cave in Romania includes features of both modern humans and Neanderthals, possibly suggesting that the two may have interbred thousands of years ago.
The entrepreneurs behind the Skype telephone service unveiled their new video venture Tuesday, calling "Joost" the world's first internet TV station to stream shows in crisp, broadcast quality.

An unprecedented funding crunch is putting the future of Canadian health research in peril, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research warned Tuesday.
America's most popular pooch is once again from Canada's eastern-most province.
Animal rights activists dressed as cave people gathered outside a Burberry boutique Tuesday in Hong Kong, protesting the company's use of fur.

The Royal Bank has refused to open American dollar accounts for people of certain nationalities since April 2006, Radio-Canada reported Monday.

Read more on by www.cbc.ca. All rights reserved.
Keywords: New York, Health Research, Betty Comden, Judy Holliday
Related news
Post comments
Name
Place
1 + 1 =
Comments