Harry Ruby(1895-1974)
- Music Department
- Writer
- Actor
As
'Harry Ruby', Harry Rubenstein was a 'song plugger' for Gus Edwards
and for George Gershwin at Jerome H.
Remick's, the Detroit music publishing firm. He had unfulfilled
ambitions to become a professional baseball player and had previously
worked the vaudeville circuit as a pianist with The Bootblack Trio and
The Messenger Boys Trio. Ruby's luck was to change after meeting the
lyricist Bert Kalmar at a Tin Pan Alley
publishing house. By 1918, the duo had formed a songwriting partnership
which was to endure for almost three decades, resulting in numerous
popular hits for Broadway shows and movies. Some of their best-known
numbers included "I Wanna Be Loved by You", "Who's Sorry Now?", "Three
Little Words", "Give Me the Simple Life", "A Kiss to Build a Dream On"
and many more. A fictionalised biopic of Kalmar & Ruby,
Three Little Words (1950) (in
which Ruby was played by Red Skelton), was
released by MGM three years after Kalmar's death. Ruby lived on until
1974, but managed just one hit song on his own, the 1949 chart topper
"Maybe It's Because".