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We'll Have Manhattan: The Early Work of Rodgers and Hart

Getting America singing

March 26, 2015 14:21
Alexander Gray and Inez Courtney in Rodgers and Hart’s Spring Is Here

ByDaniel Snowman, Daniel Snowman

2 min read

By Dominic Symonds
Oxford University Press, £22.99

In 1938, Time magazine suggested that "nobody has ever fused words and music more effectively than Rodgers and Hart." Possibly. But there is no doubt that their partnership helped set the standards and style of that much-loved embodiment of popular American culture, the "musical".

Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart first met in spring, 1919; Hart was 23, Rodgers a lad of 16. A few years later, they began a professional collaboration that, until Hart's death in 1943, produced some 30 shows and a basketful of memorable songs such as Manhattan, With a Song in my Heart, Blue Moon, My Funny Valentine, The Lady is a Tramp and Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered.

In his new book (part of OUP's Broadway Legacies series), Dominic Symonds gives a detailed, scholarly account of the work produced by Rodgers and Hart during the first 15 years or so of their partnership.