Everything about Jack Norworth totally explained
Jack Norworth (
5 January,
1879 -
1 September,
1959) was a
U.S. songwriter, singer and vaudeville performer.
Born in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Norworth is credited as co-writer of a number of
Tin Pan Alley hits. He wrote the lyrics of the song "
Take Me Out to the Ball Game" in 1908, his most long lasting hit. But it wasn't until 1940 that he actually witnessed a baseball game. His "
Shine On, Harvest Moon" was an even bigger hit at the time. There is some disagreement about Norworth's involvement in the latter. Broadway historian John Kenrick credits
Edward Madden and
Gus Edwards, while the family of Follies songwriter Dave Stamper claims he wrote the song while working as pianist for
Nora Bayes, the credited co-writer.
Other popular songs credited to Norworth include "Back to My Old Home Town"; "Come Along, My Mandy"; "Dear Dolly"; "Good Evening, Caroline"; "Holding Hands"; "Honey Boy"; "I'm Glad I'm a Boy/I'm Glad I'm a Girl"; "I'm Glad I'm Married"; "Kitty"; "Meet Me in Apple Blossom Time"; "Over on the Jersey Side"; "Since My Mother Was a Girl"; "Sing an Irish Song" and "Smarty." "Turn out Your Light, Mr. Moon Man" is a sequel to "Shine on, Harvest Moon."
In 1908 he married Nora Bayes, with whom he performed in vaudeville. Following the
Ziegfeld Follies (1909), Norworth appeared in a number of
Broadway theater productions and was heard on early radio, such as his March 1928 guest appearance on
Acousticon Hour.
After Bayes, he was married to actress
Louise Dresser. He appeared in early sound films with his third wife, Dorothy Adelphi. An inductee in the
Songwriters Hall of Fame, Norworth died of a
heart attack in
Laguna Beach, California. He was portrayed by
Dennis Morgan in the musical film
Shine on, Harvest Moon (1944).
Further Information
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