Tom Lehrer, Influential Satirist Whose Topical Songs Poked and Prodded America in the ’50s and ’60s, Dies at 97
He was not on the list.
Tom Lehrer, the sardonic singer-songwriter-pianist who rose to national fame after his dark, tartly funny topical songs were used on the comedic ‘60s TV news show “That Was the Week That Was,” has died at age 97.
Friends said that he was found dead in his home in Cambridge, Mass., on Saturday.
Lehrer, who acquired an underground audience in the early
‘50s with a pair of self-released albums, was by trade a professor who taught
mathematics, first at Harvard and later in his career at UC Santa Cruz. He told
one concert audience, “I don’t like people to get the idea that I have to do
this for a living. I mean, it isn’t as though I had to do this. I could be
making, oh, $3,000 a year just teaching.”
Nonetheless, his musical career took a back seat to academic work for most of his life.
A pioneer of musical black comedy during the optimistic Eisenhower years in America, Lehrer influenced the work that came later from such musical satirists as Randy Newman, “Weird Al” Yankovic and Harry Shearer.
The lean, bespectacled Lehrer essayed such then-taboo subjects as sexuality (“The Masochism Tango”), drug addiction (“The Old Dope Peddler”), homosexuality in the Boy Scouts (“Be Prepared”) and militarism (“It Makes a Fellow Proud to Be a Soldier”) on his early, self-released albums. Lehrer was lofted to fame by the caustic material he wrote for “TW3,” NBC’s U.S. spinoff of a popular British show hosted by the young David Frost.
His 1965 Reprise album “That Was the Year That Was” climbed
to No. 18 on the American charts. Its razor-edged songs skewered prejudice
(“National Brotherhood Week”), nuclear proliferation (“So Long Mom”) the
Catholic Church (“The Vatican Rag”) and, appropriately, education (“The New
Math”).
Born in New York to a Jewish family, Lehrer began studying piano at the age of 7; classically trained, he also had a youthful interest in the American pop songbook. He developed into a facile keyboardist who could essay virtually any style.
A math prodigy, he entered Harvard College at the age of 15 and graduated magna cum laude in 1946; he received his masters degree from the school just a year later, and fitfully worked on a doctorate there for 15 years. (He mocked the school’s stuffiness in his early song “Fight Fiercely, Harvard.”) He taught early on not only at Harvard but also at MIT and Wellesley, but his love of musical theater led him to try his hand at songwriting. In 1951, he wrote material for a Harvard musical revue. In 1953, he recorded a solo album, “Songs of Tom Lehrer,” in a single session at a Boston studio for $40; its cover depicted Lehrer as a devil playing the piano in hell. Initially sold on Boston campuses, it became a cult hit that sold 10,000 copies.
A second LP, “More of Tom Lehrer,” appeared belatedly in 1959, after Lehrer’s stretch in the Army. It included such fixtures of his live repertoire as “The Elements” (a rapid-fire recitation of the periodic table, in the manner of his hero Danny Kaye, set to a melody drawn from Gilbert & Sullivan’s “The Pirates of Penzance”), “The Masochism Tango” and the black-hearted ode to spring “Poisoning Pigeons in the Park.” The album led Time magazine to lump Lehrer with such “sick” comedians of the era as Lenny Bruce and Mort Sahl.
The material from the sophomore album was also recorded live at Harvard as “An Evening Wasted With Tom Lehrer,” and later released by Reprise. “Songs of Tom Lehrer” was re-recorded in its entirety for the label in 1966. His national breakthrough came in 1965 with his solo recital of the satirical topical songs he penned for “TW3.” While still maintaining his academic career, Lehrer was popular enough to tour occasionally as a solo performer before overseas audiences, punctuating his mordant material with a lupine grin.
After writing a handful of songs for the PBS educational series “The Electric Company” and appearing at fundraisers for Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern in 1972, Lehrer returned to academia for the remainder of his life, teaching math and musical theater for many years at the University of California Santa Cruz.
However, his material was recalled fondly. His music became a staple of Dr. Demento’s syndicated radio show. “Tomfoolery,” a revue of his work, was mounted in London in 1980. Rhino Records released a boxed set of his material, “The Remains of Tom Lehrer,” in 2000; Shout! Factory re-released his catalog digitally, and issued a DVD of a 1967 concert in Oslo, Norway.
Lehrer never married and leaves no children.
Actor
Pollution
Short
Bird (voice)
1967
Composer
Alex Sebastian Laibach in Romansinfrabelic Break Fast (2024)
Romansinfrabelic Break Fast
Short
Composer
2024
The Electric Company (1971)
The Electric Company
8.1
TV Series
Composer
1971–1977
Steve Allen, 1965 - Copyright 1968, 2000 MPTV.NET - photo
credit: Gabi Rona
That Was the Week That Was
8.1
TV Series
Composer
1963–1985
Music Department
Alex Sebastian Laibach in Romansinfrabelic Break Fast (2024)
Romansinfrabelic Break Fast
Short
performer
2024
I Hold Your Hand in Mine (2022)
I Hold Your Hand in Mine
Short
music
2022
The Life and Times of Death (2019)
The Life and Times of Death
Short
musician
2019
The Life and Times of Death: Prologue (2018)
The Life and Times of Death: Prologue
Video
musician
2018
Rodney Brooks, Robert Krulwich, Jacob Ward, Neil deGrasse
Tyson, Sherry Turkle, Carla Wohl, Ziya Tong, Kristi Curry Rogers, David Pogue,
Raymond Rogers, Mary Schweitzer, Peter Standring, Manel Esteller, Derek Briggs,
Brian Hare, Jacob Ward, David Spergel, Jim Gillogly, Chad Cohen, James Sanborn,
Jennifer Wittmeyer, Ed Scheidt, Elonka Dunin, Said Musa, Arlie Petters, Bernice
Waight, Jean-Pierre Issa, and Randy Jirtle in Nova ScienceNow (2005)
Nova ScienceNow
8.5
TV Series
music theme
2006
1 episode
Marty Back Together Again
TV Series
composer: songs
1974
3 episodes
Thanks
Marion Cotillard and Adam Driver in Annette (2021)
Annette
6.3
thanks: Leos Carax
2021
Advent Comedy Calendar 2020 by We Are Thomasse (2020)
Advent Comedy Calendar 2020 by We Are Thomasse
TV Series
thanks
2020
1 episode
Soundtrack
Marion Cotillard and Adam Driver in Annette (2021)
Annette
6.3
lyrics: "National Brotherhood Week"music:
"National Brotherhood Week" (uncredited)
2021
We Drive Econo (2020)
We Drive Econo
Short
writer: "Rickety Tickety Tin"
2020
Boys State (2020)
Boys State
7.6
lyrics: "The Elements" (uncredited)
2020
Bob Odenkirk in Better Call Saul (2015)
Better Call Saul
9.0
TV Series
performer: "The Elements"writer: "The
Elements"
2018
1 episode
The Gateway Bug (2017)
The Gateway Bug
7.9
performer: "Pollution"writer:
"Pollution"
2017
Drunk Stoned Brilliant Dead (2015)
Drunk Stoned Brilliant Dead
7.2
performer: "Fight Fiercely, Harvard"writer:
"Fight Fiercely, Harvard"
2015
A Fierce Green Fire: The Battle for A Living Planet (2012)
A Fierce Green Fire: The Battle for A Living Planet
6.9
performer: "Pollution'writer: "Pollution'
2012
Michele Errico, Giuseppe Russo, and Giglia Marra in The Cure
(2011)
The Cure
Short
performer: "Wernher von Braun"writer:
"Wernher von Braun"
2011
Mayim Bialik, Kaley Cuoco, Johnny Galecki, Simon Helberg,
Jim Parsons, Melissa Rauch, and Kunal Nayyar in The Big Bang Theory (2007)
The Big Bang Theory
8.1
TV Series
writer: "The Elements" (uncredited)
2010
1 episode
Ian Fleming and Geoffrey Boothroyd in Timeshift (2002)
Timeshift
7.0
TV Series
performer: "Who's Next?",
"Pollution"writer: "Who's Next?", "Pollution"
2008
1 episode
Porträtt av en motvillig herre (2008)
Porträtt av en motvillig herre
Short
music: "The Old Dope Peddler"performer: "The
Old Dope Peddler"
2008
Flitter, Flutter-Thud
Short
performer: "Poisoning Pigeons in the Park"writer:
"Poisoning Pigeons in the Park"
2007
Wilmer Valderrama, Rocky Carroll, Gary Cole, Katrina Law,
Sean Murray, Brian Dietzen, and Diona Reasonover in NCIS (2003)
NCIS
7.8
TV Series
lyrics: "The Elements"performer: "The
Elements" (uncredited)
2007
1 episode
Lauren Graham in Gilmore Girls (2000)
Gilmore Girls
8.2
TV Series
lyrics: "The Elements" (uncredited)
2006
1 episode
Nacha
TV Movie
writer: "Envenenando palomas en Plaza San Martín
(Poisoning Pigeons in the Park)", "Tango masoquista"
1977
Pollution
Short
performer: "Pollution"writer:
"Pollution" (uncredited)
1967
Rock Hudson and Mary Peach in A Gathering of Eagles (1963)
A Gathering of Eagles
6.1
lyrics: "The Sac Song"music: "The Sac
Song"
1963
Self
The Electric Company's Greatest Hits & Bits (2006)
The Electric Company's Greatest Hits & Bits
7.2
TV Movie
Self (voice)
2006
Hey, Mr. Producer! The Musical World of Cameron Mackintosh
(1998)
Hey, Mr. Producer! The Musical World of Cameron Mackintosh
8.7
TV Special
Self
1998
Dr. Demento 20th Anniversary
TV Movie
Self
1991
How to Prevent a Nuclear War
Short
Self
1987
Michael Parkinson in Parkinson (1971)
Parkinson
7.3
TV Series
Self
1980
1 episode
The Weekend Starts Here
TV Series
Self
1970–1971
Merv Griffin in The Merv Griffin Show (1962)
The Merv Griffin Show
6.6
TV Series
Self
1966–1967
3 episodes
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the White House
TV Movie
Self
1966
The Frost Report (1966)
The Frost Report
7.6
TV Series
Self
1966
13 episodes
Hoda Kotb and Savannah Guthrie in Today (1952)
Today
4.6
TV Series
Self
1966
1 episode
Mike Douglas in The Mike Douglas Show (1961)
The Mike Douglas Show
7.1
TV Series
Self
1966
1 episode
Johnny Carson in The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson
(1962)
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson
8.5
TV Series
Self - Guest
1965
1 episode
BP Super Show (1959)
BP Super Show
TV Series
Self - Comedian
1960
1 episode
Archive Footage
For All Mankind (2019)
For All Mankind
8.1
TV Series
Self - performer 'Wernher von Braun' (archive footage,
uncredited)
2019
1 episode
Make 'Em Laugh: The Funny Business of America (2009)
Make 'Em Laugh: The Funny Business of America
7.4
TV Series
Self (archive footage)
2009
1 episode
Comedy Songs: The Pop Years
6.5
TV Movie
Self (archive footage)
2008
Heroes of Comedy (1992)
Heroes of Comedy
6.8
TV Series
Self (archive footage)
2000
1 episode
Michael Parkinson in Parkinson (1971)
Parkinson
7.3
TV Series
Self (archive footage)
1981
1 episode
Oj - är det redan fredag? (1970)
Oj - är det redan fredag?
TV Series
Self (archive footage)
1970
1 episode

In honor of Mr. Lehrer, a grass roots vinyl reissue of his first album expanded with early recordings as well is now available for pre-order with Kickstarter https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/vinylhumor/songs-by-tom-lehrer-expanded-deluxe-vinyl-edition
ReplyDelete