Just Leave Everything To Me
Jerry Herman, Barbra Streisand, Lionel Newman, Lennie Hayton
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Jerry Herman, Barbra Streisand, Lionel Newman, Lennie Hayton
Jerry Herman, Angela Lansbury, Frankie Michaels, Jane Connell, Sab Shimono, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Angela Lansbury, Beatrice Arthur, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Angela Lansbury, Mame Ensemble, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Angela Lansbury, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Angela Lansbury, Frankie Michaels, Mame Ensemble, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Angela Lansbury, Donald Pippin, Dear World Orchestra
Jerry Herman, Angela Lansbury, Mame Ensemble, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Beatrice Arthur, Angela Lansbury, Mame Ensemble, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Frankie Michaels, Angela Lansbury, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Jane Connell, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Angela Lansbury, Mame Ensemble, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Frankie Michaels, Jerry Lanning, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Jane Connell, Frankie Michaels, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Jerry Lanning, Donald Pippin
Jerry Herman, Angela Lansbury, Donald Pippin, Dear World Orchestra
Jerry Herman, Angela Lansbury, Donald Pippin, Dear World Orchestra
Jerry Herman, Alice Borden
Jerry Herman, George Hearn, Stephen Hill Singers
Mack & Mabel: In Concert (Live at the Theatre Royal) [1988 London Cast Recording]
Jerry Herman, Orchestra
1995 · albüm
1994 · derleme
1994 · albüm
1992 · albüm
1991 · mini albüm
1984 · albüm
1974 · derleme
2002 · derleme
1969 · albüm
1966 · albüm
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Composer and lyricist Jerry Herman was to some degree, the anti-Sondheim, he represented tried-and-true Broadway values: direct tunes, conventional forms, light-hearted optimism. His detractors branded his work formulaic, and Herman by no means met with unblemished success, yet he was responsible for two enduring shows, Hello Dolly! and La Cage aux Folles, with the intermittently popular Mame probably belonging to that list as well. Herman was born in New York on July 10, 1931. He came up through the business playing piano only by ear and only later studying theory and harmony as well as drama at the University of Miami. He toiled in nightclubs and composed music for 1950s television. Herman began writing his own off-Broadway revues in the mid-'50. His first full-fledged musical, Milk and Honey, came in 1961, and netted Herman a Tony Award, as well as a hit song in "Shalom." His next effort, Madame Aphrodite, flopped, but Herman finally secured himself a spot at the top in 1964 with the tremendously popular Hello Dolly! The show garnered more awards than could be carried home in a hatbox. Mame, in 1966, brought him further success, with its cheery pastiche of old-fashioned styles, but soon Herman was looking like a two-hit wonder. Dear World, in 1969, proved too dark and adventuresome for audiences, and Herman retreated to more tourist-friendly material. That strategy failed, though; of his shows in the 1970s, only Mack and Mabel (1974) developed a following, and that was solely through its original-cast album. Herman made a remarkable comeback in 1983 with La Cage aux Folles, based on a farcical French film that hinged on gay stereotypes while presenting its effeminate characters as sympathetic figures. This was something of a retro show, alternating sentimental songs with big production numbers and featuring one sure hit, "I Am What I Am," which quickly became not only a disco standard but the unofficial gay national anthem. Herman wasn't able to duplicate his success in later shows, though. Since 1985, the only Herman efforts that held the public's imagination were revivals of Hello Dolly!, Mame, and La Cage, plus a touring revue called Jerry's Girls, an anthology of numbers featuring his strongest female characters. Herman's weakness was that although his lyrics were spare enough to put across their point strongly on first hearing, and his music held immediate surface appeal, he was rarely a memorable melodist. His work remains a prime example of mid-20th century Broadway-style, even though critics question its substance. Herman passed away in Miami on December 26, 2019.