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Eric Maschwitz

 
Artist: Eric Maschwitz
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Arranger, Lyricist, Adaptation

Biography

Eric Maschwitz is not (outside of his native England, at least) a universally renowned songwriter in the manner of George Gershwin, Cole Porter, or the teams of Rodgers & Hart or Lerner & Loewe, but he did write one song, "These Foolish Things," that is nearly as well known in the first decade of the 21st century -- thanks to recordings of it by the likes of Sam Cooke and Bryan Ferry -- as it was in the 1930s. Born in England near Birmingham in 1901 to a Lithuanian immigrant family, Maschwitz attended Caius College, Cambridge, and began writing plays and songs while in his teens. He enjoyed several modest successes as a composer and writer for the stage and also for the BBC (which he joined in the 1920s), principally in collaboration with George Posford and occasionally with Jack Strachey, in addition to publishing several novels and authoring radio scripts, often using the pseudonym Holt Marvell. His 1936 musical The Gay Hussar, later retitled Balalaika, was transported from the London stage to Hollywood at the end of the decade, and Maschwitz also earned an Oscar nomination for his co-authoring of the script for Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939). In 1936, he and Strachey and Harry Link co-wrote "These Foolish Things" for a revue entitled Spread It Abroad, where it became established as a hit and from which it went on to become one of the most recorded songs of the decade, enduring decade after decade, interpreted by three generations of singers and also incorporated into several major movies, among other appearances. Maschwitz also later co-wrote "A Nightingale Sang in Barkeley Square," which became deeply evocative of wartime England and the early '40s, and has enjoyed a considerable life of its own as a pop standard in the hands of virtually every major singer of the mid-20th century. His stage successes continued into the 1950s, with one of them -- Zip Goes a Million, written as a vehicle for George Formby -- receiving a revival in the new century. He wrote radio and television scripts into the 1960s, and passed away in 1969. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Writer: Eric Maschwitz
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  • Born: Jun 10, 1901 in Edgbaston, Birmingham, England
  • Died: Oct 27, 1969 in Ascot, Berkshire, England
  • Occupation: Writer
  • Active: '30s-'50s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Musical
  • Career Highlights: Goodbye, Mr. Chips, King Solomon's Mines, Empire of the Sun
  • First Major Screen Credit: His Lordship (1932)

Biography

Eric Maschwitz was a quadruple-threat writer -- of plays, operettas, songs, and film scripts -- garnering an Oscar nomination in the latter category, despite an active screenwriting career that ran only intermittently across ten years, from the mid-'30s into the 1940s. Born in Edgbaston near Birmingham, England, in 1901 to a Lithuanian immigrant family, he attended the Repton School, Gonville, where he began writing full-length plays in his early teens, and later studied at Caius College, Cambridge. He embarked on a writing career in the early '20s, authoring short fiction, and he worked as a ghost writer, redoing the work of less competent authors. Maschwitz also published several novels, including The Passionate Clowns: The Story of a Modern Witch, often using the less ethnic-sounding pseudonym of Holt Marvell. He joined the BBC as an executive in 1926 and also began writing operettas, usually in association with composer George Posford for radio broadcast. One of these, "Good Night Vienna," became a film vehicle for Anna Neagle and Jack Buchanan in 1932, and made the further leap to a full-blown theatrical production in 1946.

Maschwitz's first major stage success was The Gay Hussar (1933), which went to London's West End under the title Balalaika in 1936, and which, in turn, became an MGM musical under director Reinhold Schünzel in 1939, starring Nelson Eddy and Ilona Massey. Meanwhile, in 1936, Maschwitz collaborated with composers Jack Strachey and Harry Link on what became one of the most successful songs of his career, "These Foolish Things," which debuted as part of the show Spread It Abroad. Maschwitz received an OBE from the king that same year. Maschwitz had dabbled in screenwriting since 1932, and wrote his first screenplay (in collaboration with Val Gielgud) for the 1937 espionage story and romance Cafe Colette. Writing as Holt Marvell, he also collaborated with Gielgud on mystery novels, among them Death at Broadcasting House, which was adapted into a film in 1934.

In 1939, he received the most impressive screenwriting credit of his career when he collaborated with R.C. Sherriff and Claudine West on the screenplay for Goodbye, Mr. Chips, one of the most prestigious films of the year, which earned its authors an Academy Award nomination. Due to the outbreak of WWII, it was another six years before he wrote another film script. Maschwitz served in intelligence but was able to keep authorizing songs and plays. Indeed, in 1940, he wrote one of the two most famous songs of his career, "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square," in collaboration with Strachey and Manning Sherwin, which became one of the songs that defined the sentimental side of the war years for generations of listeners on both sides of the Atlantic. In 1941, he debuted the Chopin pastiche Waltz Without End, which wasn't a huge success in London but kept Maschwitz busy collecting royalties from regional theater performances for decades to come. In 1946 he finally returned to screenwriting, co-authoring the melodrama Carnival, though the results were less impressive than his work on Mr. Chips.

Maschwitz endured a string of flops until 1948 when Carissima, co-authored with Hans May, ran for 466 performances in London and was later brought to British television twice. He also enjoyed modest success the following year with Belinda Fair, a pleasant comedy about a woman who joins the army disguised as a man. His biggest stage success, however, was Zip Goes a Million, a vehicle written specifically for entertainer George Formby, which enjoyed a run of over 500 performances in London from 1951-1953. After 1948, his main contribution to movies was as a songwriter, along with authoring the original BBC serial story that became the thriller Little Red Monkey (1955). In 1956, his musical pastiche Summer Song, based on the life of Antonin Dvorak, was a critical success, but that production marked the tail end of Maschwitz's involvement with the theater. In 1963, he produced the BBC television series Our Man at St. Mark's. He passed away in 1969, but his songs -- especially "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square" and "These Foolish Things" -- have continued to receive new recordings. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Eric Maschwitz
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Albert Eric Maschwitz OBE (10 June 190127 October 1969), known as Eric Maschwitz and sometimes credited as Holt Marvell, was an English entertainer, writer, broadcaster and broadcasting executive.

Life and work

Born in Edgbaston, Birmingham, the descendant of Silesian immigrants, Maschwitz was educated at Arden House preparatory school, Henley in Arden, Repton School and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.[1]

As a lyricist, Maschwitz wrote the screenplays of several successful films in the 1930s and 1940s, but he is perhaps best remembered today for his lyrics to 1940s popular songs such as "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square" (music by Manning Sherwin and Jack Strachey) and "These Foolish Things" (music by Jack Strachey). Maschwitz was romantically linked to the Chinese-American actress Anna May Wong while working in Hollywood, and the lyrics of "These Foolish Things" are evocative of his longing for her after they parted and he returned to England.

Maschwitz started his stage acting career in the early 1920s, playing Vittoria in the first successful modern production of Webster's The White Devil (Marlowe Society, Cambridge ADC Theatre, 1920). He joined the BBC in 1926. His first radio show was In Town Tonight. Under contract to MGM in Hollywood from 1937,[2] he co-wrote the adaptation of Goodbye, Mr. Chips, made by MGM-British, for which he shared an Academy Award nomination).

From August 1939, he was a postal censor in Liverpool. From November 1939, he served with the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS)/MI-6 D Section (sabotage). In 1940, he briefly worked to establish a resistance organization in Beverley, Yorkshire, and for Army Welfare in London; and then was assigned to the Special Operations Executive (SOE). In 1940 he was commissioned into the Intelligence Corps. He was then sent to New York City to work for the British Security Coordination (BSC). In 1942, he returned to London. In 1942, he briefly supervised radio programs for the troops. He then transferred to the Political Warfare Executive (PWE). He ended the war as chief broadcasting officer with the 21st Army Group. He left the army as a Lieutenant-Colonel.

In 1958, near the start of the BBC/ITV ratings wars, he rejoined the BBC as Head of Television Light Entertainment. About the job he said, "I don't think the BBC is a cultural organisation. We've got to please the people. The job of a man putting on a show is to get an audience." Maschwitz left to join the rival ITV in 1963.

During the course of his varied entertainment career, Maschwitz also adapted French comedies such as Thirteen For Dinner; wrote the book and lyrics for numerous musicals, amongst them Balalaika, Summer Song, which used the music of Dvorak, Happy Holiday (based on Arnold Ridley's play The Ghost Train), and Zip Goes a Million, which was written specially for George Formby; and he was the creator of the radio series Café Collette. He also edited the Radio Times, and even turned his hand to the detective novel: Death at Broadcasting House, co-written with Val Gielgud and published in 1931, revolves around a radio play disrupted by the murder of one of the cast.

Maschwitz was married twice: firstly to Hermione Gingold, who was granted a divorce in 1945, and then immediately to Phyllis Gordon who remained his wife until his death.

His autobiography, No Chip On My Shoulder, was published by Herbert Jenkins in 1957. [3]

He was created an Officer of the British Empire (OBE) in 1936.

References

  1. ^ Barry Took, ‘Maschwitz, (Albert) Eric (1901–1969)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 19 Aug 2009
  2. ^ BFI database page on Eric Maschwitz
  3. ^ British Musical Theatre, http://www.musical-theatre.net/html/composers/ericmaschwitz.html, retrieved 19 August 2009 

External links


 
 
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