Harry Ruby


Harry Rubenstein, known professionally as Harry Ruby, was an American composer and screenwriter, who was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970. He was married to silent film actress Eileen Percy.

Biography

Ruby was born in New York City, United States. After failing at his early ambition to become a professional baseball player, he toured the vaudeville circuit as a pianist with the Bootblack Trio and the Messenger Boys Trio, until meeting the man who would become his longtime partner, lyricist Bert Kalmar. Kalmar and Ruby were a successful songwriting team for nearly three decades until Kalmar's death in 1947, a partnership portrayed in the 1950 MGM musical Three Little Words, starring Fred Astaire as Kalmar and Red Skelton as Ruby.
A good friend of Groucho Marx, Ruby appeared several times on his television program, You Bet Your Life. In his 1972 concert at Carnegie Hall, Marx gave the following introduction before performing a song of Ruby's: "I have a friend in Hollywood... I think I do, I'm not so sure. His name is Harry Ruby and he wrote a lot of songs that I've sung over the years..."
In The Dick Cavett Show, recorded June 13, 1969, Marx also sang a second stanza, and introduced it with, "Isn't that a beautiful melody? And a beautiful sentiment:... Today, father, is father's day.... 16 men in that orchestra: nine of them are illegitimate children . Nine and a half including the director."
Selected film scores
Selected screenplays
  • The Kid from Spain
  • Horse Feathers
  • Duck Soup
  • Bright Lights
  • Walking on Air
  • The Life of the Party
  • Lovely to Look At
Selected Broadway scores
  • Ziegfeld Follies of 1918 - revue - featured songwriter
  • Helen of Troy, New York - musical - co-composer and co-lyricist
  • No Other Girl - musical - co-composer and co-lyricist
  • Holka Polka - musical - co-book-editor
  • The Ramblers - musical - co-composer, co-lyricist and co-bookwriter
  • Lucky - musical - co-bookwriter
  • The Five O'Clock Girl - musical - composer
  • She's My Baby - musical - co-bookwriter
  • Good Boy - musical - co-composer and co-lyricist
  • Animal Crackers - musical - co-composer and co-lyricist
  • Top Speed - musical - co-producer and co-bookwriter
  • High Kickers - musical - co-composer, co-lyricist and co-bookwriter
  • Fosse - revue - featured songwriter for "Who's Sorry Now?" from All That Jazz 1979
Notable songs
Selected bibliography'
Robert Benchley, Moss Hart, Irving Berlin, Marc Connelly, James Kevin McGuinness, Franklin P. Adams and Nunnally Johnson.
Ruby died on February 23, 1974 in Woodland Hills, California, and was interred at the Chapel of the Pines in Los Angeles.