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Arguably the most successful musical humorist in pop history,
song parodist Allan Sherman was born Allan Copelon in Chicago on
November 30, 1924. After entering show business as writer for the
likes of Jackie
Gleason and Joe
E. Lewis, Sherman attempted to mount his own career as a
performer, but initially found little success; "A Satchel and a
Seck," a 1951 duet with comedienne Sylvia
Froos satirizing Frank
Loesser's "A Bushel and a Peck," went nowhere, and an
ambitious attempt to release a full-length Jewish parody of the
musical My
Fair Lady met with legal resistance from the estate of
composers Lerner
and Loewe.
Sherman consequently turned to television, creating and producing
the long-running quiz show I've
Got a Secret. A tenure as the writer-producer of The
Steve Allen Show followed, but when the series ended in 1961,
Sherman found himself on the unemployment line. After signing a
contract with Warner Bros., he released the parody collection My
Son, the Folk Singer in 1962. To the shock of the recording
industry, radio quickly picked up on the album despite Sherman's
obscurity as a performer; according to legend, even President John
F. Kennedy was spotted in a hotel lobby singing the cut "Sarah
Jackman" (a parody of "Frere Jacques"), further
boosting the record's popularity.
Ultimately, My
Son, the Folk Singer topped the charts, and spawned a
cottage industry of copycat releases. Nonetheless, Sherman remained
the unquestioned king of the parody hit, and in late 1962 he
returned with a follow-up, My
Son, the Celebrity, which, like its predecessor, reached the
number one spot. 1963's My
Son, the Nut was even more successful, topping the charts
for eight consecutive weeks on the strength of the Top Five novelty
hit "Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh," a summer camp-themed
take on Ponchielli's
1876 composition "Dance of the Hours."
If, as legend dictates, President Kennedy helped establish Sherman
as a star, he also inadvertently contributed to the comedian's
drop-off in popularity: following Kennedy's assassination in
November, 1963, the nation became serious and solemn, with little
interest in the breezy fun offered by song parodies. Released in
early 1964, Sherman's fourth album Allan
in Wonderland reached only number 25 on the pop charts; issued
later that year at the height of Beatlemania, the concurrent For
Swingin' Livers Only! and Peter
and the Commissar (recorded with Arthur
Fiedler and the Boston
Pops) fared even more poorly, with the latter record failing
even to crack the Top 40.
1965's My
Name Is Allan was his last chart effort, reaching only
number 88. Still, Sherman soldiered on, recording Live
in front of a Las Vegas audience. After 1966's Togetherness,
he was dropped by Warner Bros., effectively ending his career as a
performer. After publishing an autobiography, A
Gift of Laughter, Sherman died in California on November 21,
1973. He was just 48 years old.
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