Jerry Ross wrote the musical scores for two of the most popular and enduring
musicals in Broadway Theater, The Pajama Game and Damn Yankees, two
shows which personify the innocence and exuberance of the Golden Age of
Broadway.
Jerry Ross was born Jerold Rosenberg on March 9, 1926, to Russian immigrant parents, Lena and Jacob Rosenberg, in the East Bronx, New York City. As a
child and young teen, he was the hottest young property on the Jewish
stage, singing and acting professionally and billed as the Boy Star in
Yiddish stage and movie productions. An ongoing bronchial condition,
however, ended his performing career while he was still in high school.
Fortunately, he also began writing songs while in high school, although he
had no formal training in music. Subsequently he studied at New York
University under Rudolph Schramm. A fortuitous introduction to Eddie Fisher
led to further introductions to music publishers at the hub of songwriting
activity, the famed Brill Building. Fisher recorded Ross The Newspaper
Song, which garnered early attention for both of them.
After penning several well-received songs, some in collaboration with Buddy
Kaye and other Brill Building alumni, Ross met Richard Adler in 1950. They
decided to team their talents, writing songs and special material, mainly
for TV and nightclub acts. They had published several songs together when
they attracted the attention of writer/publisher Frank Loesser and became
his protégés. By 1953, their song "Rags to Riches" rocketed to number 1 on
the charts, becoming a long-standing smash hit, recorded by Tony Bennett.
Ross began his career in the Broadway Theater with John Murray Andersons Almanac, a revue for which he and Adler wrote most of the songs (resulting
in recordings of Acorn in the Meadow by Harry Belafonte and Fini by
Polly Bergen). In 1954, after several auditions and Loessers
recommendation, George Abbott contracted this promising young songwriting
duo to write the score for a new musical about union/management relations at
a pajama factory. The Pajama Game opened to rave reviews, winning the
coveted Tony Award for best score, as well as the Donaldson Award and the
Variety Drama Critics Award. Songs from the show included "Hernandos Hideaway" and "Hey There" (a hit for Rosemary Clooney), both of which also
topped the Hit Parade of popular songs, capturing the number one and two
spots on the music charts and setting a precedent in music business
history. Other songs from Pajama Game include the famed Bob Fosse dance
number Steam Heat, as well as Small Talk, and Seven And A Half Cents.
A year later, in May 1955, the musical "Damn Yankees" played to equal
excitement and success. This baseball tale with a Faustian theme once again
won Ross the Tony Award, the Donaldson Award, and the Variety Drama Critics
Award, plus cross-over recording hits for "You've Gotta Have Heart"
(recorded by a more well-established Fisher, among many others) and
"Whatever Lola Wants, Lola Gets." Both shows ran on Broadway for over 1000
performances.
Successful films were made of both musicals, although Ross did not get to
see them realized.
He died from complications related to the lung disease bronchiectisis on
November 11th, 1955. He was 29.
At the time he died, Jerry Ross had written the number one and number two
shows running on Broadway. He had written more than 250 popular American
songs. His untimely death at such a young age cut short a creative force
that was sure to be as popular and enduring as his songs.
Jerry Ross was admitted posthumously to the Songwriters Hall of Fame in
1982. His wife, Judy, and daughter, Janie, accepted the award in his honor.
Recordings of his songs have sold many millions of copies, and his shows are
continually performed and enjoyed, in both first class and first grade
productions!
WHATEVER LOLA WANTS (LOLA GETS)
Richard Adler and Jerry Ross
J & J Ross Co./Lakshmi Puja Music Ltd.
PAJAMA GAME, THE
Richard Adler and Jerry Ross
Frank Music Corp.