Ann Ronell

Ann Ronell

Ann Ronell
Background information
Birth name Ann Rosenblatt
Born (1906-12-28)December 28, 1906
Origin Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.
Died December 25, 1993(1993-12-25) (aged 86)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Occupation(s) Lyricist, composer

Ann Rosenblatt, known as Ann Ronell (December 28, 1906 or 1908—December 25, 1993) was an American composer and lyricist best known for the jazz standard "Willow Weep for Me" (1932).

Life and career

Ronell was born in Omaha, Nebraska, studied music with Walter Piston. She graduated from Radcliffe College.[1]

Ronell was, along with Dorothy Fields, Dana Suesse, and Kay Swift, one of the first successful Hollywood and Tin Pan Alley female composers or librettists. She cowrote Disney's first hit song, "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?" with Frank Churchill for the cartoon Three Little Pigs (1933).

She wrote the lyrics and music for the Broadway musical Count Me In (1942) She wrote songs for movies including Champagne Waltz (1937) and Blockade (1938) and wrote the scores for movies including the Cowan produced The Story of G. I. Joe (1945), the film adaptation of the Weill/Nash musical One Touch of Venus (1948), and the Marx Brothers' Love Happy (1949). She served as musical director for Main Street to Broadway (1953). She was nominated for Best Song, "Linda," and with co-composer Louis Applebaum for Best Score, for her work on The Story of G. I. Joe.

Ronell was romantically involved with George Gershwin at the time she wrote her most famous song, "Willow Weep for Me", and speculation in the New York City composer community is that Gershwin actually wrote the song and gave her the copyright as a gift. However, this has never been proven and is still, at this point, based on the striking similarities in the song to the blues-inflected style of Gershwin.

Family

She married producer Lester Cowan. The couple had no children.

Significant songs

Work on Broadway

References

External links



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