Arthur Schwartz studied law, and gained his law degree, but his spare time was given over to writing popular songs. Lorenz Hart was one of those who encouraged him to give up the law for music.
In 1928 he teamed up with Howard Dietz and started contributing songs
such as I Guess I'll Have to Change My Plan
to revues. They had a major success with the musical The
Bandwagon in 1931, which introduced one of their best-known
songs, Dancing in the Dark. Other hits
in the 1930s were Alone Together, You
and the Night and the Music, Love is
a Dancing Thing. However he ran into a bad streak in terms
of the commercial success of the shows for which these songs were
written.
One of these disappointments was the 1939 collaboration with Dorothy
Fields, Stars in Your Eyes. Schwartz concentrated
his efforts on Hollywood, not only writing music, but also producing
films such as Cover Girl and Night
and Day.
He returned to Broadway with the revue Inside
USA and in 1951 was reunited with Dorothy Fields with a more
successful effort, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.
Fields described the experience of working with Schwartz as pure
delight. The pair also wrote several songs for a now obscure
film: Excuse My Dust in 1951. Several further
songs were written for a film called The Big
Song and Dance which was never produced, and they were back
on Broadway in 1953 with By the Beautiful Sea
in 1953. Schwartz's gift for melody was again displayed in the beautiful
score for The Gay Life in 1961, written
with his old partner, Howard Dietz.
For more information on Arthur Schwartz, see the Tunesmiths Database : Arthur Schwartz
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