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  1. Irving Berlin (born Israel Beilin; Yiddish: ישראל ביילין; May 11, 1888 – September 22, 1989) was an American songwriter. His music forms a large part of the Great American Songbook . Berlin received numerous honors including an Academy Award , a Grammy Award , and a Tony Award .

    • For The Record…
    • Birth of Tin Pan Alley
    • Played in only One Key
    • Attained U.S. Citizenship
    • World War II
    • Last Years Spent Privately
    • Selected Discography
    • Sources

    Born Israel Baline, May 11, 1888, in Tyumen, Russia; immigrated to United States, 1893, naturalized citizen, 1918; died September 22, 1989, in New York, NY; son of Moses (a cantor and shochet [meat/poultry certifier]) and Lena (Lipkin) Baline; married Dorothy Goertz, February, 1913 (died July 17, 1913); married Ellin Mackay, January 4, 1926 (died J...

    During the early years of the twentieth century, many publishing firms established their offices by the theater district, on West 28th Street between Fifth Avenue and Broadway. In 1909 journalist and songwriter Monroe Rosenfeld wrote a series of articles on the music publishing industry. Walking through that district, he was amazed by the clamor th...

    He developed at this time the work habits he would retain all of his life. After dinner Berlin would sit down at the piano and write songs until dawn. Since he had no formal musical training, he could only play the piano in one key. To be able to take full advantage of all the harmonies the piano had to offer, he used a special transposing keyboard...

    When World War I broke out, Berlin decided it was time to become an American in fact as well as in spirit. After several years of paperwork and delays, he took his oath on February 6, 1918, and became a citizen of the United States. Several months later he was drafted into the army. The hardest adjustment at Camp Upton in Yaphank, Long Island, for ...

    When the Second World War broke out in Europe, Berlin needed to make a musical statement. “I’d like to write a great peace song, but it’s hard to do, because you have trouble dramatizing peace,” he said in an interview with the New York Journal American. “Yet music is so important. It changes thinking, it influences everybody, whether they know it ...

    Resigning from songwriting, Berlin also withdrew from public life. He spent the last decades of his life privately in his New York City town house, or in retreat at his estate in the Catskill Mountains. He made no public appearances. In 1972, when the cast of This Is the Army held a reunion party, he did not attend. But the public did not forget hi...

    Annie Get Your Gun(selections), RCA Victor, 1966, reissued, 1988. Call Me Madam(selections), MCA, 1973. The Vintage Berlin, New World Records, 1977. Say It All with Music, Monmouth Evergree, 1978. The Girl on the Magazine Cover, RCA Victor, 1979, reissued, 1988. Blue Skies, Nonesuch, 1985. Rosemary Clooney Sings the Music of Irving Berlin, King Rec...

    Books

    Bergreen, Laurence, As Thousands Cheer: The Life of Irving Berlin, Viking, 1990. Freedland, Michael, Irving Berlin, W. H. Allen, 1974. Whitcomb, Ian, Irving Berlin and Ragtime America, Century, 1987. Woollcott, Alexander, The Story of Irving Berlin, Putnam, 1925.

    Periodicals

    American History Illustrated, May 1988. American Magazine, December 1920. Commentary, October 1990. Esquire, January 1990. New York Journal American, September 4, 1938. Newsweek, October 2, 1989. Opera News, December 9, 1989. People, October 9, 1989. Stereo Review, February 1988. Time, May 16, 1988; October 2, 1989. U.S. News and World Report, May 9, 1988. —Robin Armstrong

  2. Irving Berlin was born Israel Beilin on May 11, 1888. One of eight children, his exact place of birth is unknown, although his family had been living in Tolochin, Byelorussia, when they immigrated to New York in 1893. When his father died, Berlin, just turned 13, took to the streets in various odd jobs, working as a busker singing for pennies ...

  3. Jul 25, 2006 · Irving Berlin. Irving Berlin was perhaps America's most beloved composers. Israel Beilin was born on May 11, 1888, in the western Siberian town of Tyumen, Russia. Called Izzy, he was the youngest of eight children of Moses Beilin, an itinerant cantor, and his wife, Leah. It was a dangerous time for Jews in his homeland.

  4. Irving Berlin. American musical theater composer Irving Berlin was born Israel Baline, in eastern Russia on May 11, 1888, the youngest of six children of Jewish cantor, Moses Baline, who brought his family to New York in 1893. When his father died a few years later, Israel left school and helped support the family as a busker, entertaining with ...

  5. Irving Berlin in 1948. Irving Berlin (May 11, 1888 – September 22, 1989), born Israel Isidore Beilin (Baline) in Tyumen, Russia (or possibly Mogilev, now Belarus), was a Jewish American composer and lyricist, known as one of the most prodigious and enduring songwriters in U.S. history. Escaping a climate of religious persecution, Berlin's ...

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  7. Irving Berlin was born Israel Beilin on May 11, 1888. One of eight children, his exact place of birth is unknown, although his family had been living in Tolochin, Byelorussia, when they immigrated to New York in 1893. When his father died, Berlin, just turned 13, took to the streets in various odd jobs, working as a busker singing for pennies ...

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