It's a Lovely Day Tomorrow
"It's a Lovely Day Tomorrow" is a song written in 1938 by composer Irving Berlin. The song came out of a conversation with British / Hungarian film producer Alexander Korda in a New York taxi cab in 1938. The Munich agreement had just depressed both men. Korda asked Berlin if he had written a war song yet, and a few blocks later Berlin came up with the tune and lyrics.[1][2]
It was first performed in London at the start of the war in 1939 before its American release, which caused a sensation at the time. Berlin used it in his 1940 musical Louisiana Purchase, in which it describes feelings of despair and hope during the American Great Depression, of the 1930s. [3]
It was recorded by British artist Vera Lynn and promoted to lift spirits of British people during the darkest days of World War Two and the Blitz.
Memorable chorus
The song contains the following chorus by which it is popularly known.
- It's a lovely day tomorrow
- Tomorrow is a lovely day
- Come and feast your tear dimmed eyes
- On tomorrow's clear blue skies.
- If today your heart is weary
- If ev'ry little thing looks gray
- Just forget your troubles and learn to say
- Tomorrow is a lovely day.
In culture
The song's title was used as the title of a made-for-TV film of 1975 called It's a Lovely Day Tomorrow, which is a drama documentary examining the Bethnal Green Disaster of 1943 in which 173 people were killed in a panic rush at the entrance to a bomb shelter. [4]
In the 1986 Australian film Death of a Soldier, serial killer Eddie Leonski (portrayed by American actor Reb Brown) sings a portion of the song while being questioned by military police.[5]
"A Lovely Day Tomorrow" was an entirely different song released as a one-off single from band British Sea Power in 2004. The song deals with the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich by two Czechoslovak agents during World War II. To celebrate the entry of Czech Republic into the European Union.
References
- ↑ Lasser, Michael (2014-01-03). America's Songs II: Songs from the 1890s to the Post-War Years. Routledge. ISBN 9781135094515.
- ↑ Jasen, David A. (2004-06-01). Tin Pan Alley: An Encyclopedia of the Golden Age of American Song. Routledge. ISBN 9781135949013.
- ↑ Young, William H.; Young, Nancy K. (2005-01-01). Music of the Great Depression. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9780313332302.
- ↑ Goldschmidt, John; Kennedy, Cheryl; Malcolm, Christopher; Mort, Ray (1975-10-08), It's a Lovely Day Tomorrow, retrieved 2016-12-15
- ↑ The Spoony Experiment: Death of a Soldier, 2012-05-15