Nick Kenny (poet)

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For the rugby player, see Nick Kenny.
A Nick Kenny poem illustrated by Richard Bassford
A Nick Kenny poem illustrated by Richard Bassford

Nicholas Napoleon Kenny (February 3, 1895, Astoria, Queens - December 14, 1975, Sarasota, Florida) was a syndicated newspaper columnist, a song lyricist and a poet who wrote light verse in the Edgar Guest tradition.

Born in Queens, Kenny attended high school for only three months before joining the Navy (1911-18), followed by a tour of duty in the Merchant Marine (1918-20). He continued his education with extensive reading in ships' libraries.

Contents

[edit] Newspapers

While a sportswriter and rewrite man at the Bayonne Times (1920-23), he wrote his first column, "Getting an Earful" (later collected in a 1932 book). After a brief period at the Boston American (1923-24), Kenny moved on to the New York Journal (1924-27) and the New York Daily News (1927-1930). In 1930, for the New York Mirror, he began writing "Nick Kenny Speaking," a column combining verse, jokes and observational humor with his commentary on current radio programs.The popularity of the column kept him at the New York Mirror until that paper shut down in 1963. At that point, he moved to Sarasota, Florida where he wrote a column for the Sarasota Herald Tribune until his death.

[edit] Songs and poems

He is mainly remembered today as the lyricist of the popular song standard, "Love Letters in the Sand," a 1957 gold record hit for Pat Boone. Kenny's first big success, "Gold Mine in the Sky," inspired the Gene Autry movie, Gold Mine in the Sky (1938) and enabled Kenny and his brother Charles to launch their own music firm, Gold Mine in the Sky Publishing Company. His songs included "Scattered Toys," recorded by the Three Suns, which has lyrics somewhat similar to his "Patty Poem." Between 1929 and 1959, Kenny's poems were collected in a half-dozen books, including Day Unto Day.

[edit] Radio and television

During the mid-1930s he was the host of The Nick Kenny Radio Hour which sometimes featured the song-and-dance team of Jacqueline and William Daniels (who grew up to become the Screen Actors Guild President in 1999-2001). Kenny was also a guest on various radio programs between 1939 and 1952, including What's My Name?, Finders Keepers, Music for Millions and The Billion Dollar Show, a 1952 program celebrating the 30th anniversary of broadcasting. He also contributed scripts and poems to Mutual's Family Theatre.

On NBC television, Kenny had his own 15-minute music and talk show, The Nick Kenny Show (1951-52) with cast members Irene Walsh and Don Tippen.

[edit] Revival

The illustrator Richard Bassford has long had an interest in Kenny's work and has illustrated Kenny poems in recent years.

[edit] See also

[edit] Books

  • The Navy in Rhyme (New York, 1929)
  • Getting an Earful (New York, 1932)
  • Favorite Poems (Garden City, New York, 1943)
  • Day Unto Day (Garden City, 1943)
  • How to Write, Save and Sell Popular Songs (New York, 1946)
  • More Poems (Garden City, 1948)
  • Poems to Inspire (Minneapolis, 1959)