J.O. Cole was the richest man in Indiana. His father had been a shoemaker, but J.O.--the initials stood for James Omar--went out to California during the Gold Rush and came back a wealthy man to Indiana, where he multiplied his wealth by way of timber and coal and other enterprises. J.O. married Rachel Henton, and when their daughter, Kate Cole, was born in 1862, nothing could be too good for J.O.'s girl. J.O. gave Kate expensive clothes, expensive tastes, and an expensive education that included music and dance.
J.O. naturally expected his Kate to choose a husband from the ambitious world of
high-powered businessmen, someone who could take over his financial empire if and
when J.O. ever chose to let go of the reins. But Kate Cole had a mind of her own, and
the husband she selected was Sam Porter, said to be a weak and ineffectual, although
modestly successful, pharmacist from her hometown of Peru, Indiana. One can only
speculate, but one can at least suspect that Kate was too much like her father to want to
marry a man of her father's stamp, and instead deliberately chose a husband that she
could rule.
J.O. fumed and grumbled, but in the end Kate got her way, and J.O. paid first for the
wedding and then for the expensive lifestyle of the wedded couple. And then, on June
9, 1891, in Peru, Indiana, Kate's son, J.O.'s grandson, was born, and they named him
Cole Albert Porter.
From the age of six, the little boy studied first violin and then, at age eight, piano, and
soon he showed real talent for both. When he decided that he didn't like the violin, he
devoted all his energies to the piano, practicing two hours every day. Frequently, his
mother Kate would join him at the piano, and together they would make up wicked
parodies of the popular songs of the day.
Kate knew that her son had talent, and did everything she could to pave the way for
musical fame. Early on, she subsidized the student orchestra at the local music school,
making sure that her son, dressed in velvet and lace, was the featured violin soloist.
There were rumors that she also took steps to ensure that the local papers gave her son
the right reviews. When Cole was ten years old, he began composing music, and his
mother paid to have his compositions published and sent copies to family and friends.
And when, at age 14, she sent Cole off to the exclusive Worcester Academy in
Massachusetts, she decided that people would be more impressed with her son's
accomplishments if her son were only twelve instead of fourteen. And so, she made
Cole twelve, officially at least, by arranging some small changes in his school records.
When Cole was sent east to boarding school, J.O. was furious. J.O.'s plan was that his
grandson would stay in Indiana, learning about the family business empire and
preparing to eventually take it over. J.O. was so angry, in fact, that for two years he
refused to speak to Kate. But, as always, Kate got her way.
Cole's stay at the Worcester Academy was a successful one. In later years, he
remembered one of his instructors there, Dr. Abercrombie, as an important influence.
Cole said that Abercrombie taught him about language and meter, and that, in a song,
"Words and music must be so inseparably wedded to each other that they are like one."
When he graduated from the Academy in 1909, Cole was the class valedictorian.
Next came Yale, and Cole's undergraduate years at Yale were one of the richest periods
of his life. He was a huge social success, famous on campus for the songs he was
constantly writing and singing. He sang solos with the Yale Glee Club. He wrote
football fight songs, some of which continued to be sung long after he left Yale,
especially "Bingo Eli Yale" and the "Yale Bulldog Song". And he wrote songs for six full
scale musical comedies, produced by the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity and by the
Yale Dramatic Association. Some of these shows went on tour around the country, and
Cole toured with them, reveling in the parties and good fellowship that went with the
tours. In all, Cole wrote around 300 songs while he was at Yale. And when he
graduated in 1913, his classmates voted him the "most entertaining" member of his
class. In his Yale years, Cole made many connections that would be professionally and
personally important to him for the rest of his life.
At J.O.'s insistence, Cole then enrolled in Harvard Law School, where he roomed with a
young man named Dean Acheson--yes, the Dean Acheson who would become
Secretary of State from 1949 to 1953. But Cole had no interest in becoming a lawyer,
and his activities continued to be mostly musical. Many of Cole Porter's stories about
himself were inventions, but, according to Cole, the Dean of the Law School, Ezra
Ripley Thayer, took him aside one day, during Cole's second year at the Law School,
and told him, "Don't waste your time--get busy and study music." Whether the advice
really came from Thayer or not, Cole took it, and transferred to Harvard's School of
Arts and Sciences in 1915, where he studied for a graduate degree in Music. Cole told
his mother Kate about the change in career plans, but both of them allowed J.O. to
believe that Cole was still earnestly pursuing his Law School degree.
Cole left graduate school in 1916 and moved to New York City, where he lived at the
Yale Club. His first show, See America First (1916), lasted for only 15 performances, but
the audience was full of prominent socialites, and Cole himself quickly became a
familiar figure in social circles in New York.
In July 1917, Cole moved to Paris. The First World War was raging, and Cole invented
stories about joining the French Foreign Legion and performing numerous heroic
exploits that were duly reported in the press back home and that remained part of
Cole's official biography throughout his life. Not a word was true. In fact, Cole was
enjoying Paris's fabulous social life, an endless stream of extravagant parties full of
international celebrities, members of the minor nobility, cross dressers, artists, and
eccentrics, accompanied by alcohol and other drugs, and featuring an assortment of gay
and bisexual activity.
Linda Lee Thomas from Louisville, Kentucky, was another prominent socialite in Paris.
Divorced from an abusive husband, wealthy, and considered one of the most beautiful
women in the world, Linda soon became one of Cole's closest friends. She was older
than Cole, and was quite aware of his homosexual preferences and activities.
Nevertheless, on December 19, 1919, Cole and Linda were married. Although sex was
never a part of their relationship, they truly liked each other, and Linda was deeply
dedicated to Cole's career, so, in its own way, their marriage proved a close, successful,
and mostly happy one.
Cole and Linda led a glittering social life in Paris, Venice, and the Riviera. Their Paris
home had platinum wallpaper and zebra skin chairs. For one extravagant party in
Venice they hired 50 gondoliers and a troupe of circus acrobats. For another party, they
hired an entire ballet company.
But while his social life was dazzling, Cole's career was moving frustratingly slowly.
He studied briefly with the noted French composer Vincent d'Indy. He had a few small
successes, contributing songs to such shows as Hitchy-Koo 1919 and the Greenwich
Village Follies of 1924. And in 1923 he had a success in Paris with a short ballet called
Within the Quota. But Broadway producers had little interest in his work. However, in
1928, Irving Berlin recommended Cole to the producers of a "musicomedy" called Paris,
starring Irene Bordoni. Cole wrote five songs for the show, and one of those songs
"Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love)", became Cole's first big success.
Finally, the Broadway career that had so long escaped him began to be a reality. He
followed up on Paris with another "French" show, and a full musical this time, Fifty
Million Frenchmen (1929). The show, with a book by Herbert Fields, ran for 257
performances, and included "You've Got That Thing", and "You Do Something To Me".
And then, for a London show called Wake Up and Dream (1929), Cole wrote "What Is
This Thing Called Love?"
Now living in New York, Cole entered an extraordinarily productive period in which
show followed show on Broadway, and hit song followed hit song. The New Yorkers
(1930) introduced "Love For Sale". His 1932 musical Gay Divorce starred Fred Astaire,
in Astaire's last Broadway role and Astaire's only Broadway appearance without his
sister and longtime dancing partner Adele. The show ran for 248 performances, and
included "Night And Day" and "After You, Who?"
In 1934, Cole wrote one of his greatest scores for a show with a book by Guy Bolton,
P.G. Wodehouse, Howard Lindsey, and Russel Crouse, Anything Goes. The show
starred Ethel Merman, William Gaxton, Bettina Hall, and Victor Moore and included
"Anything Goes", "I Get A Kick Out Of You", "All Through The Night", "Blow, Gabriel,
Blow", and "You're The Top".
Cole wrote the songs for 1935's Jubilee while on a round the world cruise with Moss
Hart, who wrote the show's book. This show had a big hit in "Just One Of Those
Things" and also introduced a song that became a hit some years later, "Begin The
Beguine", said, at 108 measures, to be the longest successful popular song melody ever
written.
Around this time, Cole and Linda began to spend much of their time in Hollywood,
where Cole's flamboyant lifestyle became, if anything, even more so, with all-male
parties by the swimming pool and an assortment of long and short-term gay love
affairs.
Meanwhile, in 1936, Cole had another Broadway musical, Red, Hot and Blue!, which
starred Ethel Merman, Bob Hope, and Jimmy Durante, and included "It's D'Lovely".
Also in 1936, the movie musical Born to Dance featured "I've Got You Under My Skin"
and Jimmy Stewart singing "Easy To Love". And a 1937 film, Rosalie, introduced "In
The Still Of The Night".
Things could not have been going better for Cole, but tragedy struck. In the summer of
1937, Cole was riding on a bridle path at Long Island's Piping Rock Club. Suddenly his
horse slipped. Cole was thrown, and his horse fell on top of him, crushing both his legs
and damaging his nervous system. The doctors wanted to amputate both legs, but his
mother Kate and his wife Linda refused to allow this, convinced that the loss of his legs
would kill him. However, Cole would never recover the full use of his legs, and for the
rest of his life he would be in serious pain, suffering chronic osteomyelitis and
undergoing more than thirty operations over the next twenty years.
Cole escaped from his physical agony in work. Cole composed the score of his
Broadway musical, Leave It to Me!, soon after the accident, ordering his piano raised on
blocks so that he could roll up to it in his wheelchair during the brief intervals when he
was able to leave his bed. Leave It to Me! had a book by Bella and Sam Spewack, and
starred Sophie Tucker, Victor Moore, and William Gaxton. But it is best remembered
as the show that made Mary Martin a star, stopping the show with a mock strip tease
performed on top of a cabin trunk while singing "My Heart Belongs To Daddy". The
show opened on November 9, 1938, and ran for 291 performances. Earlier in 1938 an
unsuccessful show called You Never Know had introduced "At Long Last Love".
Cole resumed an astonishingly productive pace. 1939 brought DuBarry Was a Lady,
which had a book by B.G. ("Buddy") De Sylva and Herbert Fields, and which starred
Bert Lahr and Ethel Merman. The show ran for 408 performances and introduced
"Friendship" and the delicious "But In The Morning, No!"
Nevertheless, perhaps because of the excruciating physical and emotional pain he was
experiencing, the hit songs and standards began to be rarer in his output. Still, he was
back on Broadway again in 1940 with Panama Hattie. Again, De Sylva and Herbert
Fields wrote the book, and Merman starred. The show ran for 501 performances. Also
in 1940 came the film, Broadway Melody of 1940, for which Cole wrote "I Concentrate
On You".
In 1941, he had a Broadway hit with Let's Face It!, with a book by Herbert and Dorothy
Fields, and a cast that included Danny Kaye, Eve Arden, and Nanette Fabray. The
show ran 547 performances. Ethel Merman starred again in 1943's Something For The
Boys, and for the film Something to Shout About, also in 1943, Cole wrote "You'd Be So
Nice To Come Home To".
Bobby Clark starred in 1944's unsuccessful Mexican Hayride. He did have a hit with
"Don't Fence Me In" in the 1944 film Hollywood Canteen, but the song had actually been
written years earlier. For another 1944 show, Seven Lively Arts, Cole wrote "Ev'ry Time
We Say Goodbye".
In 1946, Hollywood released a "biography" of Cole Porter, Night and Day, starring Cary
Grant, Alexis Smith, and many others. The film was pure fiction, even by the standards
of the biopics of the period, and Cole is said to have been quite content to have it that
way. 1946 was also the year of another Broadway musical, Around the World in Eighty
Days. Orson Welles wrote the book, directed, and starred in the show, which ran for
only 75 performances.
One feels a little awkward describing these years as less than successful. Certainly, most songwriters would have been proud to have Cole's achievements of those years, but for Cole Porter it must have been a frustrating period.
But then he teamed up again with writers Bella and Sam Spewack to create a new musical. It was called Kiss Me Kate. The show was Cole Porter's masterpiece and triumphantly re-established him as one of the greatest of American songwriters. It opened on December 30, 1948, starring Alfred Drake, Patricia Morison, Lisa Kirk, and Harold Lang, and ran on Broadway for 1,077 performances. The amazing score, written while Cole was recovering from his 21st operation after his accident, includes, "Another Op'nin', Another Show", "Why Can't You Behave", "Wunderbar", "So In Love", "We Open In Venice", "Tom, Dick, Or Harry", "I've Come To Wive It Wealthily In Padua", "Were Thine That Special Face", "Too Darn Hot", "Where Is The Life That Late I Led?", "Always True To You (In My Fashion)", "Bianca", and "Brush Up Your Shakespeare". Kiss Me, Kate is constantly, and rightfully, being revived all over the world, and is currently running again on Broadway in a hit revival.
In 1950, he was on Broadway again with Out of This World, which ran for less than six months, although it included "From This Moment On" and the delightful "Nobody's Chasing Me". Then, in 1953, he had a hit with Can-Can. The show had a book by Abe Burrows and introduced "I Love Paris" and "It's All Right With Me". Can-Can ran for 892 performances, and was a career breakthrough for Gwen Verdon, who went on to become a major Broadway star.
1955 brought Silk Stockings, which ran for more than a year. Cole then wrote the songs for the 1956 film High Society, which starred Bing Crosby, Grace Kelly, and Frank Sinatra. He also wrote the songs for the 1957 George Cukor film Les Girls, starring Gene Kelley and Mitzi Gaynor.
However, through all this, both his health had been steadily deteriorating. In 1958, Cole's right leg was amputated. To make things worse, this came at a time when he could not have been more emotionally vulnerable, following the deaths of both his mother Kate and, in 1954, his wife Linda. For the remaining years of his life, Cole, who had always been the center of a glamorous social whirl, was depressed and a recluse. He traveled between his nine-room suite in New York's Waldorf Towers and his 350 acre estate in the Berkshires and his California home. He no longer wrote songs, and rarely saw anyone except his very closest friends. When ASCAP presented a "Salute to Cole Porter" at the Metropolitan Opera House, Cole was one of the few important songwriters or celebrities who was not present. Although a lavish party was thrown for his 70th birthday, he did not attend it.
Cole Porter died on October 15, 1964 in Santa Monica, California after kidney surgery. Cole Porter produced a rich and fascinating body of work, characterized by wit and sophistication, with an underlying strain of restless melancholy and loneliness.
LET’S DO IT (LET’S FALL IN LOVE)
Cole Porter
Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
I GET A KICK OUT OF YOU
Cole Porter
Warner Chappell Music, Inc.