The Music of the great Johnny Mercer along with a
distinguished forum to discuss his career.

Forum to dicuss the
career and play the records of Mercer are: Neice of Johnny Mercer Nancy Gerard • Historian and past president of the Savannah, GA based
Friends of Johnny Mercer group David Oppenheim • Archivist of the Georgia State
University popular music collection and Mercer Collection Kevin Fleming • Bob
Colonna, son of famous comedian Jerry Colonna.
Plus the Mercer
records of the great era we all love.
Enjoy
the show!
Excellent Johnny Mercer book:
Johnny Mercer: The Life, Times
and Song Lyrics of Our Huckleberry Friend
Genre: Biography
Authors: Bob Bach and
Ginger Mercer
Best Johnny Mercer sites:
The Official Friends of Johnny Mercer Website
The Johnny Mercer Educational Archives
Georgia State University Mercer
Archives
Biography for Johnny
Mercer
John Herndon "Johnny" Mercer (November 18, 1909 –
June 25, 1976) was an American lyricist, songwriter and singer. He is best known as a
lyricist, but he also composed music. He was also a popular singer who recorded his own songs as well as those
written by others. From the mid-1930s through the mid-1950s, many of the songs Mercer wrote and performed were
among the most popular hits of the time. He wrote the lyrics to more than fifteen hundred songs, including
compositions for movies and Broadway shows. He received nineteen Academy Award nominations, and won four. Mercer
was also a co-founder of Capitol
Records.
Mercer was born
inSavannah,Georgia. His father, George
Anderson Mercer, was a prominent attorney and real estate developer, and his mother, Lillian Elizabeth
(née Ciucevich), George Mercer’s secretary and then second wife, was the
daughter of Croatian-Irish immigrants who came to America in the 1850s. Lillian's father was a merchant
seaman who ran the Union blockade during the U.S. Civil War. Mercer
was George's fourth son, first by Lillian. His great-grandfather was Confederate
General Hugh Weedon
Mercer and he was a direct descendant
of RevolutionaryWar General Hugh
Mercer, a Scottish soldier-physician who died
at the Battle of Princeton. Mercer was also a distant cousin of General George S. Patton. The Mercer
House in Savannah was built by General
Hugh Weedon Mercer in 1860, later the home of Jim Williams, whose trial
for murder was the centerpiece of John
Berendt's book Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, although neither the General nor Johnny ever lived there.
Mercer liked music as a small child and
attributed his musical talent to his mother, who would sing sentimental ballads. Mercer's father also sang, mostly
old Scottish songs. His aunt told him he was humming music when he was six months old and later she took him to see
minstrel and vaudeville shows where he heard “coon songs” and ragtime. The family’s summer home “Vernon View” was
on the tidal waters and Mercer’s long summers there among mossy trees, saltwater marshes, and soft, starry nights
inspired him years later.
Mercer’s exposure to black music was perhaps
unique among the white songwriters of his generation. As a child, Mercer had African-American playmates and
servants, and he listened to the fishermen and vendors about him, who spoke and sang in
the Creole dialect known
as “Geechee”. He was also attracted to black church services. Mercer later stated, “Songs always fascinated
me more than anything”. He never had formal musical training but was singing in a choir by six and at eleven
or twelve he had memorized almost all of the songs he had heard and he had become curious about who had
written them. He once asked his brother who the best songwriter was, and his brother
said Irving
Berlin, among the best
of Tin Pan
Alley.
Despite his early exposure to music, Mercer’s
talent was clearly in creating the words and singing, not playing music, though early on he hoped to become a
composer. In addition to the lyrics Mercer memorized, he was an avid reader and wrote adventure stories. His
attempts to play the trumpet and piano were not successful, however, and he never could read musical scores with
any facility, relying instead on his own notational system.
As a teenager in the Jazz Era, he was a
”product of his age”. He hunted for records in the black section of Savannah and played such early black jazz
greats as Ma
Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Louis
Armstrong. His father owned the first car in
town, and Mercer’s teenage social life was enhanced by his driving privilege, which sometimes verged on
recklessness. The family would motor to the mountains near Asheville, North Carolinato escape the Savannah heat and there Mercer learned to dance
(from Arthur
Murray himself) and to flirt with
Southern belles, his natural sense of rhythm helping him on both accounts.
Mercer attended
exclusive Woodberry Forest boys prep
schoolin Virginia until 1927. Though not a top
student, he was active in literary and poetry societies and as a humor writer for the school’s publications. In
addition, his exposure to classic literature augmented his already rich store of vocabulary and phraseology. He
began to scribble ingenious, sometimes strained rhymed phrases for later use. Mercer was also the class clown and a
prankster, and member of the “hop” committee that booked musical entertainment on campus.
Already somewhat of an authority on jazz,
Mercer's yearbook stated, “No orchestra or new production can be authoritatively termed ‘good’ until Johnny’s stamp
of approval has been placed upon it. His ability to ‘get hot’ under all conditions and at all times is uncanny”.
Mercer began to write songs, an early effort being ‘’Sister Susie, Strut Your Stuff.” and quickly learned the
powerful effect songs had on girls.
Given his family’s proud history and
association with Princeton, New
Jersey, and Princeton University, Mercer was destined for school there until his father’s financial setbacks in the late 1920’s
changed those plans. He went to work in his father’s recovering business, collecting rent and running errands, but
soon grew bored with the routine and with Savannah, and looked to escape.
Starting out
Mercer moved to New York in 1928, when he was
19. The music he loved, jazz and blues, was booming in Harlem and
Broadway was bursting with musicals and revues from George Gershwin, Cole
Porter, and Irving Berlin. Vaudeville, though beginning to
fade, was still a strong musical presence. Mercer’s first few jobs were as a bit actor (billed as John Mercer).
Holed up in a Greenwich Village apartment with plenty of time on his hands and a beat-up piano to play, Mercer soon
returned to singing and lyric writing.He secured a day job at a brokerage house and sang at night. Pooling his
meager income with that of his roommates, Mercer managed to keep going, sometimes on little more than oatmeal. One
night he dropped in on Eddie
Cantor backstage to offer a comic song, but
although Cantor didn’t use the song, he began encouraging Mercer’s career. Mercer's first lyric, for the song "Out
of Breath (and Scared to Death of You)", composed by friend Everett Miller, appeared in a musical
revue The Garrick Gaieties in 1930. Mercer met his future wife at the show, chorus girl Ginger Meehan. Meehan had
earlier been one of the many chorus girls pursued by the young crooner Bing Crosby.
Through Miller’s father, an executive at the famous publisher T. B. Harms, Mercer's first song was published. It
was recorded by Joe
Venuti and his New Yorkers.
The 20-year-old Mercer began to hang out with
other songwriters and to learn the trade. He traveled to California to undertake a lyric writing assignment for the
musical Paris in the Spring and met his idols Bing
Crosby and Louis
Armstrong. Mercer found the experience
sobering and realized that he much preferred free-standing lyric writing to writing on demand for musicals.
Upon his return, he got a job as staff lyricist for Miller Music for a $25 dollar-a-week draw which give him
a base income and enough prospects to win over and marry Ginger in 1931.The new Mrs. Mercer quit the chorus
line and became a seamstress, and to save money the newlyweds moved in with Ginger’s mother in Brooklyn.
Johnny did not inform his own parents of his marriage until after the fact, perhaps in part because he knew
that Ginger being Jewish would not sit comfortably with some members of his family, and he worried they would
try to talk him out of marrying her.
In 1932, Mercer won a contest to sing with
the Paul
Whiteman orchestra, but it did not help his
situation significantly. He made his recording debut, singing with Frank Trumbauer's Orchestra, on April 5 of that
year. Mercer then apprenticed with Yip
Harburg on the score
for Americana, a
Depression-flavored revue famous for "Brother, Can
You Spare a Dime?" (not a Mercer composition),
which gave Mercer invaluable training. After several songs which didn’t catch fire, during his time with Whiteman,
he wrote and sang "Pardon My Southern Accent". Mercer’s fortunes improved dramatically with a chance pairing with
Indiana-born Hoagy
Carmichael, already famous for the standard
"Stardust", who was intrigued by the “young, bouncy butterball of a man from
Georgia”.The two spent a year laboring over "Lazybones", which became a hit
one week after its first radio broadcast, and each received a large royalty check of $1250. A regional song in
pseudo-black dialect, it captured the mood of the times, especially in rural America. Mercer became a member
of ASCAP and a recognized “brother” in the Tin Pan Alleyfraternity, receiving congratulations from Irving Berlin,
George Gershwin, and Cole Porter among
others. Paul Whiteman lured Mercer back to his orchestra (to sing, write comic skits and compose songs),
temporarily breaking up the working team with Carmichael.
During the golden age of sophisticated popular
song of the late Twenties and early Thirties, songs were put into revues with minimal regard for plot integration.
During the 1930s, there was a shift from revues to stage and movie musicals using song to further the plot. Demand
diminished accordingly for the pure stand-alone songs that Mercer preferred. Thus, although he had established
himself in the New York music world, when Mercer was offered a job in Hollywood to compose songs and perform in
low-budget musicals for RKO, he accepted and followed
idol Bing
Crosby west.
Hollywood years
It was only when Mercer moved
to Hollywood in 1935 that
his career was assured. Writing songs for movies offered two distinct advantages. The use of sensitive
microphones for recording and of the lip-synching of pre-recorded songs liberated songwriters from dependence
on the long vowel endings and long sustained notes required for live performance. Performers such
as Fred
Astaire and Ginger
Rogers could now sing more
conversationally and more nonchalantly. Mercer, as a singer, was attuned to this shift and his style fit the
need perfectly.
Mercer’s first Hollywood assignment was not
the Astaire-Rogers vehicle of which he had dreamed but a B-movie college musical, Old Man Rhythm, to which he contributed two
undistinguished songs and even worse acting. His next project, To Beat
the Band, was another flop, but it did lead to a meeting and a
collaboration with Fred
Astaire on the moderately successful Astaire
song "I’m Building Up to an Awful Let-Down".
Though all but overwhelmed by the glitter of
Hollywood, Mercer found his beloved jazz and nightlife lacking. As he wrote, “Hollywood was never much of a night
town. Everybody had to get up too early... the movie people were in bed with the chickens (or each other).” Mercer
was now in Bing Crosby’s hard-drinking circle and enjoyed Crosby’s company and hipster talk. Unfortunately, Mercer
also began to drink more at parties and was prone to vicious outbursts when under the influence of alcohol,
contrasting sharply with his ordinarily genial and gentlemanly behavior.
Mercer’s first big Hollywood song
"I'm an Old Cowhand from the Rio
Grande" was inspired by a road trip through Texas
(he wrote both the music and the lyric). It was performed by Crosby in the film Rhythm on the Range in 1936, and from thereon the
demand for Mercer as a lyricist took off. His second hit that year was "Goody Goody".
In 1937, Mercer began employment with the Warner Brothers studio, working with the veteran
composer Richard
Whiting (Ain't We Got
Fun?), soon producing his standard, "Too Marvelous for Words",
followed by "Hooray for
Hollywood". After Whiting’s sudden death from a
heart attack, Mercer joined forces with Harry
Warren and created
"Jeepers Creepers", which earned Mercer his first Oscar nomination for Best Song. It was
given a memorable recording by Louis
Armstrong. Another hit with Warren in 1938
was "You Must Have Been a Beautiful
Baby". The pair also created "Hooray For
Spinach", a comic song produced for the film Naughty But
Nice in 1939.
During a lull at Warners, Mercer revived his
singing career. He joined Bing Crosby’s informal minstrel shows put on by the “Westwood Marching and Chowder Club”,
which included many Hollywood luminaries and brought together Crosby and Bob Hope. A
duet "Mr. Crosby and Mr. Mercer" was recorded and became a hit in 1938.
In 1939, Mercer wrote the lyrics to a melody
by Ziggy Elman, a trumpet player with Benny Goodman. The song was "And the
Angels Sing" and, although recorded
by Bing
Crosby and Count
Basie, it was the Goodman version with vocal
by Martha
Tilton and memorable trumpet solo by
Elman that became the Number One hit. Years later, the title was inscribed on Mercer's
tombstone.
Mercer was invited
to the Camel Caravan radio show
in New York to sing his hits and create satirical songs with the Benny Goodman orchestra, then becoming the emcee of the nationally broadcast show for several months. Two
more hits followed shortly, "Day In, Day
Out" and "Fools Rush In," and Mercer in short order had five of the top ten songs on the
popular radio show Your Hit
Parade. Mercer also started a short-lived publishing company during his stay in New York. On a lucky
streak, Mercer undertook a musical with Hoagy Carmichael,
but Walk With Music (originally called Three After
Three) was a bomb, with story quality not matching that of the
score. Another disappointment for Mercer was the selection of Johnny Burke as the long-term songwriter for the Hope-Crosby “Road” pictures. In 1940, the Mercers
adopted a daughter, Amanda. Mercer was thirty and his life and career were riding high.
In 1941, shortly after the death of his
father, Mercer began an intense affair with nineteen-year-old Judy Garland while she was engaged to composer David Rose. Garland married
Rose to temporarily stop the affair, but the effect on Mercer lingered, adding to the emotional depth of his
lyrics. Their affair revived later. Mercer stated that his song "I Remember You" was the most direct expression of his feelings for Garland.
Shortly thereafter, Mercer met an ideal
musical collaborator in the form of Harold Arlen whose jazz and blues-influenced compositions
provided Mercer's sophisticated, idiomatic lyrics a perfect musical vehicle. Now
Mercer's lyrics began to
display the combination of sophisticated wit and southern regional vernacular that characterize some of his
best songs. Their first hit was "Blues in the
Night" (1941),
which Arthur Schwartz claimed was “probably the greatest blues song ever written.”
They went on to compose
"One for My Baby (and One More for the
Road)" (1941), "That Old Black Magic" (1942), and "Come Rain Or Come
Shine" (1946) among others.
Frank Sinatra was particularly successful with
the first two and Bing Crosby with the third. "Come Rain" was Mercer’s only Broadway hit, composed for the
show St. Louis Woman with Pearl
Bailey. "On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe" was a big smash for Judy Garland in the 1946
film The Harvey
Girls, and earned Mercer the first of his four Academy Awards for Best Song, after eight unsuccessful nominations.
Mercer re-united with Hoagy Carmichael with
"Skylark" (1941), and the Oscar-winning "In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the
Evening" (1951).
With Jerome
Kern, Mercer
created You Were Never
Lovelier for Fred Astaire and Rita
Hayworth in the movie of the same name,
as well as "I'm Old
Fashioned". Mercer
co-founded Capitol
Records (originally “Liberty Records”)
in Hollywood in 1942, along with producer
Buddy DeSylva and record store owner Glen Wallichs. He also
co-founded Cowboy
Records.
Mercer by the mid-1940's enjoyed a reputation
as being among the premier Hollywood lyricists. He was adaptable, listening carefully and absorbing a tune and then
transforming it into his own style. Like Irving Berlin, he was a close
follower of cultural fashion and changing language, which in part accounted for the long tenure of his success.
Mercer preferred to have the music first, taking it home and working on it. He claimed composers had no problem
with this method provided that he returned with the lyrics. Only with Arlen and Whiting did Mercer occasionally
work side-by-side.
Mercer was often asked to write new lyrics to
already popular tunes. The lyrics to "Laura", "Midnight Sun", and
"Satin Doll" were all written after the melodies had become hits. He was also asked to
compose English lyrics to foreign songs, the most famous example being "Autumn Leaves", based on the French "Les Feuilles Mortes".
In the 1950’s, the advent of rock and roll and
the transition of jazz into "bebop" cut deeply into Mercer’s natural audience, and dramatically reduced venues for
his songs. His continual string of hits came to an end but many great songs were still to come. Mercer wrote for
some MGM films, including Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954)
and Merry
Andrew (1958). He collaborated on three Broadway
musicals in the 1950s - Top Banana (1951), L’il
Abner (1956), and Saratoga (1959) - and the West End
production The Good
Companions in 1974. His more successful songs of the
1950s include "The
Glow-Worm" (sung by
the Mills
Brothers) and "Something’s Gotta Give". In 1961, he wrote the lyrics to "Moon River" for Audrey
Hepburn in Breakfast at
Tiffany's and for Days of Wine and Roses,
both with music by Henry Mancini, and Mercer received his third and fourth Oscars for Best Song. The
back-to-back Oscars were the first time a songwriting team had achieved that feat. Mercer, also with Mancini,
wrote Charade in 1964, for the
Cary Grant-Audrey
Hepburn romantic thriller.
The Tony
Bennett classic
"I Wanna Be Around" was written by Mercer in 1962 and the Sinatra hit
"Summer Wind" in 1965.
An indication of the high esteem in which
Mercer was held can be observed in that in 1964 he became the only lyricist to have his work recorded as a volume
of Ella
Fitzgerald's
celebrated 'Songbook' albums for
the Verve label. Yet
Mercer always remained humble about his work, attributing much to luck and timing. He was fond of telling the
story of how he was offered the job of doing the lyrics for Johnny Mandel's music on The
Sandpiper, only to have the producer turn his lyrics down. The
producer offered the commission to Paul
Francis Webster and the result
was The Shadow of Your
Smile which became a huge hit, winning
the 1965
Oscar for Best Original
Song.
In 1969, Mercer helped publishers Abe Olman
and Howie Richmond found the National Academy
of Popular Music's Songwriters Hall of Fame. In
1971, Mercer presented a retrospective of his career for the "Lyrics and Lyricists Series" in New York, including
an omnibus of his "greatest hits" and a performance by Margaret Whiting. It was recorded
live as An Evening with Johnny Mercer. In 1974, Mercer recorded two albums worth of his songs in London, with the Pete Moore
Orchestra, and with the Harry Roche Constellation, later compiled into a single album and released
as "...My Huckleberry Friend: Johnny Mercer Sings
the Songs of Johnny Mercer". In 1975, Paul McCartney approached Mercer for a collaboration but Mercer was ill, and an inoperable brain tumor was
diagnosed. He died on June 25, 1976 in Bel
Air, California.
Mercer was buried in Savannah's historical Bonaventure Cemetery.
Singing style
Well regarded also as
a singer, with a folksy quality, Mercer was a natural for his own songs such
as Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The
Positive, On the Atchiso, Topeka
and the Santa Fe, One
for My Baby (and One More for the
Road), and Lazybones. He was considered a first-rate
performer of his own work.
It has been said that he
penned One for My Baby (and One More for the
Road)—one of the great torch laments of all times—on a napkin while sitting at the bar at P. J. Clarke's when Tommy Joyce was the bartender. The next day Mercer called Joyce to apologize for the line
"So, set 'em up, Joe," "I couldn't get your name to rhyme." Mercer, like Cole Porter before him, was more
interested in the words than the emotion in lyric. This may be why One for My Baby (and One More for the Road) was
sung more effectively by him than other singers who often turned it into a tear-jerker.
ATCO Records
issued Two of a Kind in 1961, a duet album by Bobby Darin and Johnny
Mercer with Billy
May and his Orchestra, produced
by Ahmet
Ertegün.
Posthumous success
In his last year, Mercer became fond of pop
singer Barry
Manilow, in part because Manilow's first hit
record was of a song titled Mandy, which was also the name of Mercer's
daughter Amanda. After Mercer's death in 1976 from a brain tumor, his widow, Ginger Mehan Mercer, arranged to
give some unfinished lyrics he had written to Manilow to possibly develop into complete songs. Among these
was a piece titled "When October
Goes", a melancholy remembrance of lost love.
Manilow applied his own melody to the lyric and issued it as a single in 1984, when it became a top 10 Adult
Contemporary hit in the United States. The song has since become a jazz standard, with notable recordings
by Rosemary
Clooney, Nancy Wilson, and Megon
McDonough, among other
performers.
He was honored by
the United States Postal
Service with his portrait placed on
a stamp in 1996. Mercer's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1628 Vine Street is a block away from the Capitol Records building
at 1750 Vine Street.
Mercer was given tribute
in John
Berendt's book Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. The Hoagy Carmichael/Johnny Mercer song "Skylark", sung by K.D. Lang, features
prominently in the movie and the movie soundtrack is a tribute album to Johnny Mercer, containing 14 Mercer
songs performed by a variety of jazz and pop recording artists.
The Johnny Mercer Collections, including his
papers and memorabilia, are preserved in the library of Georgia State University in
Atlanta. GSU occasionally holds events showcasing Mercer's works.
In November 2009, a statue of Mercer was
unveiled in Ellis Square in Savannah,
Georgia, his hometown and
birthplace.
The Complete Lyrics of Johnny
Mercer was scheduled to be published by
Knopf in the fall of
2009.The Complete Lyrics contains the texts to nearly 1,500 of his lyrics, several hundred of them appearing in
print for the first time.
Academy Awards
Mercer won four Academy Award for Best Original Song:
Songs
He wrote many other songs, that have also entered
the Great American
Songbook:
Lyrics by Mercer, unless noted.
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