Jerome Kern Movies
American composer
Jerome Kern was trained at home by his mother, then went on for formal study at the New York College of Music and at Heidelberg University. Gravitating to the lucrative fields of operetta and popular music, Kern wrote his first hit song in 1905, and seven years later composed his first Broadway score for the now-forgotten The Red Petticoat. Public recognition of Kern's skills accelerated after he contributed several new songs to the pre-packaged British musical The Girl From Utah (1914). With his close friends
Guy Bolton and
P.G. Wodehouse, Kern became a leading light of New York's Princess Theatre, which eschewed the pomp and spectacle of the European operettas in favor of small casts, "intimate" stories, and well-integrated songs. Kern's biggest Broadway success of the 1920's was Show Boat, though when it was first filmed in 1929 the producers threw out most of Kern's songs because they were already "too familiar" to the audience (subsequent filmizations of
Show Boat in 1936 and 1951 not only restored the
Jerome Kern-
Oscar Hammerstein score, but also -- in the case of the 1936 version -- added two new tunes to the manifest). In addition to the film adaptations of Kern's stage shows, including
Sunny (1941) and
Roberta (1935), the composer has written several scores expressly for the screen, beginning with his orchestra accompaniment for the silent 1916 serial
Gloria's Romance. He wrote the songs for the 1936 Astaire-
Rogers musical
Swing Time, including the Oscar-winning "The Way You Look Tonight," and also labored on the solo Astaire vehicle
You Were Never Lovelier. Kern's movie assignments ranged from the celebrated (
Cover Girl (1944),
Centennial Summer ) to the disappointing (
High Wide and Handsome,
One Night in the Tropics). In 1941, he won his second Oscar for "The Last Time I Saw Paris," which was the highlight of the otherwise negligible
Lady Be Good (1941). Though well known for being helpful and solicitous to up-and-coming composers like
George Gershwin, Kern had his darker side -- especially when insisting that radio orchestras play his songs exactly as written or face legal action. Kern had just inherited
Annie Get Your Gun from the too-busy Rodgers and
Hammerstein, and was busy fashioning songs to suit the style of star
Ethel Merman, when he died suddenly at the age of 60 (he was succeeded on
Annie Get Your Gun by
Irving Berlin).
Jerome Kern was portrayed on screen by a grey-templed
Robert Walker in the 1946 biopic Till the Clouds Roll By. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi