Hooray for Hollywood
"Hooray for Hollywood" is a song first featured in the 1937 movie Hollywood Hotel, and which has since become (together with "That's Entertainment" and "Another Op'nin', Another Show") the staple soundtrack element of any Academy Awards ceremony. It is even frequently played during non-American movie ceremonies, e.g. the French César Awards. The popularity of the song is notably due to the lyrics by Johnny Mercer, which reference the American movie industry and satirize the illusory desire of many people to become famous as actors.
Composition
The music was composed by Richard A. Whiting. In the original movie it was sung by Johnnie Davis and Frances Langford, accompanied by Benny Goodman and his orchestra.
Lyrics can be difficult to fully understand today, as they refer to people (e.g. Aimee Semple) or cultural elements (e.g. rotos) which have since been forgotten. They have evolved over the years. Notably the where any shopgirl can be a top girl, if she pleases the tired businessman vanished quite quickly — absent from the 1958 Doris Day version — replaced with and any barmaid can be a star made if she dances with or without a fan — the latter part referring to Sally Rand and her fan dance. Today the song is performed mostly as a melody.
Usage
- The melody was used on the Jack Benny radio show as the final theme song. The song appears in the opening and final shot of Robert Altman's film The Long Goodbye (1973) starring Elliott Gould as Philip Marlowe.
- In 1977, the song was performed twice during an episode of The Brady Bunch Variety Hour. Some lyrics were altered to reference then-current pop-culture ("If you find things get rough, you could get Pufnstuf...;" "...where any person like Laverne or Shirley or Jo Anne Worley is equally understood"[1]).
- The song is also used as the opening and exit to Disney's Hollywood Studios' The Great Movie Ride attraction.
- Jay Leno on the Tonight Show used to do take-offs of a Rodney Dangerfield schtick, telling bandleader Kevin Eubanks; "Kevin, the economy is so bad that....." After the punchline, The Tonight Show Band played a fast melody of "Hooray for Hollywood".
- In The Simpsons episode "Mayored to the Mob", the cast members of a production of Guys and Dolls sing a song with the musical's title to the tune of "Hooray for Hollywood", which as the show's star Mark Hamill points out isn't one of the show's musical numbers.[2]
- A cha-cha instrumental version of the song was used as bumper music for David Feeney's short-lived "Hollywood Minute" segment on the popular podcast Daves of Thunder.
- A simplified score of the melody decorates the banisters in the Hollywood/Vine Red Line Station in Los Angeles leading down to the platform.
- Rock band Hollywood Undead sample the Doris Day version of this sing in their live pre-set introduction.
References
- ↑ "You Tube: Brady Bunch Variety Hour: Hooray for Hollywood". Retrieved June 6, 2014.
- ↑ "Mayored to the Mob". The Simpsons Archive. 26 May 2002. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
See also
External links
- Hollywood Hotel at the Internet Movie Database
- Film clip at tcm.com
- Lyrics at johnnymercer.com