Comic Songs 8

Another composer of comedic songs who began writing in the late 1920’s was Noël Coward, an English playwright, composer, director, actor, and singer, known for his wit, flamboyance, and what Time magazine called “a sense of personal style, a combination of cheek and chic, pose and poise”.

Coward attended a dance academy in London as a child, making his professional stage début at the age of eleven. As a teenager he was introduced into the high society in which most of his plays would be set. Coward achieved enduring success as a playwright, publishing more than 50 plays from his teens onwards. Many of his works, such as Hay Fever, Private Lives, Present Laughter and Blithe Spirit, have remained in the regular theatre repertoire. He composed hundreds of songs, in addition to well over a dozen musical theatre works (including the operetta Bitter Sweet and comic revues), screenplays, poetry, several volumes of short stories, the novel Pomp and Circumstance, and a three-volume autobiography. Coward’s stage and film acting and directing career spanned six decades, during which he starred in many of his own works, as well as those of others.

Coward wrote the words and music for eight full-length musicals between 1928 and 1963. By far the most successful was the first, Bitter Sweet (1929), which he termed an operetta. It ran in the West End for 697 performances between 1929 and 1931. Bitter Sweet was set in 19th-century Vienna and London.

Coward’s first contributions to revue were in 1922, writing most of the songs and some of the sketches in André Charlot’s London Calling!. This was before his first major success as a playwright and actor, in The Vortex, written the following year and staged in 1924. The revue contained only one song that features prominently in the Noël Coward Society’s list of his most popular numbers – “Parisian Pierrot”, sung by Gertrude Lawrence. His other early revues, On With the Dance (1925) and This Year of Grace (1928) were liked by the press and public, and contained several songs that have remained well known, including “Dance, Little Lady”, “Poor Little Rich Girl” and “A Room With a View”.Words and Music (1932) and its Broadway successor Set to Music (1939) included “Mad About the Boy”, “Mad Dogs and Englishmen”, “Marvellous Party” and “The Party’s Over Now”

Coward wrote three hundred songs. The Noël Coward Society’s website, drawing on performing statistics from the publishers and the PRS, names “Mad About The Boy” (from Words and Music) as Coward’s most popular song. Coward was no fan of the works of Gilbert & Sullivan, but as a songwriter was nevertheless strongly influenced by them. He recalled: “I was born into a generation that still took light music seriously. The lyrics and melodies of Gilbert and Sullivan were hummed and strummed into my consciousness at an early age. My father sang them, my mother played them … my aunts and uncles, who were legion, sang them singly and in unison at the slightest provocation.” His colleague Terence Rattigan wrote that as a lyricist Coward was “the best of his kind since W.S. Gilbert.”

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