Posted on 09/20/2005 6:28:10 PM PDT by SamAdams76
Bob Merrill wrote one of the most recognizable, most parodied, and (for non-Streisand fans) most irritating lyrics of all time:
People
People who need people
Are the luckiest people in the world.
I don't know whether Merrill was a person who needed people and, if he did, whether he considered himself lucky for so doing. But the other week he went out to the driveway of his Los Angeles home and shot himself. He was 76. When the elderly kill themselves, we gloss over that fact: It isn't really a tragedy, not like a teen-ager's suicide, or a young mother's. But, for the record, aside from self-destructing rockers such as Kurt Cobain, I can't think of another hit songwriter who's taken his life. I only had a very slight acquaintance with Merrill, but it seems a sad end for someone who wrote more determinedly happy songs than anyone in history.
(Excerpt) Read more at slate.msn.com ...
Maybe our Markie will post here and explain?
Maybe just the thought of her singing it running through his head was too much to take. I might have done the same thing.
Perhaps he had his own song as an earbug and ended it cause he could'nt take it anymore. I know I would.
I'm embarrased to say I actually know this song.
Probably shot himself for voting for Franklyn Roosevelt; delayed reaction...
steyn bump
I was never a pop music fan, but I couldn't help hearing all these songs during the fifties while I was growing up. "How much is that doggie in the Window?" was certainly a classic of those times, right up there with "Ghost Riders in the Sky."
Well, suicide is a pretty prominent cause of death among the elderly. That being the case, there may be no need to look for some special reasons pertaining to his craft or his politics.
Throw in Frankie Laine's "Mule Train" to continue the animal genre.
I'd completely forgotten all those old songs until the names were mentioned, and now I hear them ringing in my head. I haven't thought about "Mule Train" for half a century, and now I can hear it just like yesterday . . . .
http://songwritershalloffame.org/inductee_ceremony_detail.asp?ceremonyId=16&inducteeCeremonyId=120
Bob Merrill
While Bob Merrill's songwriting credits speak for themselves, his talents are diverse including successful endeavors in screenplay writing, acting and teaching.
Born in Atlantic City in the city's pre-casino period, he did most of his growing up in the nearby Philadelphia area, graduating from high school there. Following his discharge from the Army at the end of World War II, Merrill took a job as a dialog director with Columbia Pictures in Hollywood where he stayed for seven years. During this time, he was also on the CBS-TV inaugurate team.
While working on a film for the company he met a woman named Dorothy Shay, a popular performer and singer known as the "Park Avenue Hillbilly," for whom he wrote several songs at her invitation. These later proved a popular part of her million-seller albums and the success encouraged Merrill to expand his songwriting activity.
The result was a highly successful career as a writer of both individual popular songs as well as Broadway show scores. One of his earliest songs was the novelty song If Id Known You Were Comin, Id Ve Baked a Cake, which was recorded by Ilene Barton. This success was followed by other successes including Honeycomb, recorded by Jimmie Rodgers; How Much Is That Doggie In the Window, recorded by Patti Page; Love Makes the World Go Round, Dont Rain on My Parade, Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, Mambo Italiano and Make Yourself Comfortable.
1961 produced the Merrill-Styne score for the smash Broadway hit Funny Girl. The show included one of the great stage standards People (Who Need People).
Merrill enjoyed a number of other Broadway successes as well. These included Take Me Along, with Jackie Gleason and Walter Pidgeon; Carnival with Anna Marie Alberghetti; New Girl in Town with Gwen Verdon and Thelma Ritter; and Sugar with Cyril Ritchard and Bobby Morse.
In his work with screenplays, Merrill authored the Diana Ross Paramount film, Mahogany, WC Fields and Me, a Universal release with Rod Steiger; Chu Chu and the Philly Flash starring Carol Burnett and Alan Arkin; and Portrait of a Showgirl a CBS movie of the week, starring Rita Moreno, Leslie Ann Warren and Tony Curtis.
Merrill also created for television several Christmas specials including The Wonderful Christmas of Red Riding Hood, with Liza Minnelli and Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol, with an all-star cast.
As an actor, during an earlier phase of his career, Merrill appeared in The Story of GI Joe and in his own words, "a dozen B films and westerns."
After a series of health problems, *****Bob Merrill took his own life on February 17, 1988****** in Hollywood, California.
http://www.ibdb.com/person.asp?ID=12139
Bob Merrill
( b. May 17, 1921 Atlantic City, NJ, USA - ****d. Feb 17, 1998*** Beverly Hills, CA, USA ) Male
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