(1924-04-30)April 30, 1924 Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Died
June 23, 2023(2023-06-23) (aged 99) New York City, New York, U.S.
Genres
Musical theater
Occupation
Lyricist
Years active
1949–2023
Spouses
Mary Boatner
(m. 1950; ann. 1957)
Elaine May
(m. 1962; div. 1963)
Margery Gray
(m. 1965)
Musical artist
Sheldon Mayer Harnick (April 30, 1924 – June 23, 2023) was an American lyricist and songwriter best known for his collaborations with composer Jerry Bock on musicals such as Fiorello!, She Loves Me, and Fiddler on the Roof.
Early life
[edit]
Sheldon Mayer Harnick was born to American Jewish parents Esther (Kanter) and Harry M. Harnick, a dentist, in Chicago on April 30, 1924.[1][2] He grew up in the Chicago neighborhood of Portage Park.[3] He took an interest in music from an early age, playing the violin as a child. He began writing music while a student at Carl Schurz High School.[4]
Musical career
[edit]
After serving in the U.S. Army, Harnick graduated from the Northwestern University School of Music (1946–1949) with a Bachelor of Music degree, and worked with various orchestras in the Chicago area. He then moved to New York City and wrote for many musicals and revues.[5] He was friends with Charlotte Rae from college, and he went to see her one night at the Village Vanguard where she was singing a revue. Yip Harburg, who was one of Harnick's idols, heard she was singing a song of his and decided to come. He told Harnick that he enjoyed his writing, and urged him to continue. Harburg advised Harnick to work with a large number of composers. He also counseled him to write character and comic songs, not ballads, for Broadway. Harnick’s composition "The Merry Minuet" was popularized by The Kingston Trio.[6]
Around 1956, Harnick met Jerry Bock, forming "what is arguably the most important musical partnership of the '60s."[7] Their first musical was The Body Beautiful, running for only 60 performances in 1958, but Fiorello! (1959) ran for 795 performances and won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama as well as the Tony Award for Best Musical. Fiddler on the Roof (1964) "became one of the most cherished of all Broadway musicals."[7] Other Broadway successes for Harnick included She Loves Me (1963), The Apple Tree (1966) and The Rothschilds (1970).[1]
Harnick wrote the libretto for the opera Coyote Tales, with music by Henry Mollicone, which received its world premiere at the Lyric Opera of Kansas City in March 1998.[8] He wrote the book, music and lyrics to the musical Dragons, which was performed in 2003 at the Luna Stage in Montclair, New Jersey.[9] He wrote the lyrics and co-wrote the book with Norton Juster for the musical The Phantom Tollbooth, based on the book by Juster. The musical premiered at the Kennedy Center in 2007.[10]
Harnick released the album Sheldon Harnick: Hidden Treasures (1949–2013) in 2014, which includes recordings of song demos and pieces cut from Broadway shows from his private collection.[11] In 2020, Harnick worked on a musical adaptation of the Soviet play The Dragon by Evgeny Schwartz.[12]
Personal life
[edit]
Harnick was married three times. His 1950 marriage to Mary Boatner was annulled in 1957. His marriage to Elaine May lasted only a year, from 1962 until their divorce in 1963.[1] In 1965, he married Margery Grey. They had two children and lived in an apartment at The Beresford, a building on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.[4][13] Harnick died there on June 23, 2023, aged 99.[1]
In 1960, Harnick, Bock and Jerome Weidman (book) won the Pulitzer Prize in Drama for Fiorello!.[20]
Harnick has won three Tony Awards. In 1960, he, Bock and Weidman tied with Rodgers and Hammerstein for best musical; that year, both Fiorello! and The Sound of Music won. And in 1965, Bock and Harnick's Fiddler on the Roof won for both Best Musical and Best Composer and Lyricist.[21]
In honor of Harnick's vast influence on American music, on May 19, 1984, he was awarded the University of Pennsylvania Glee Club Award of Merit. Beginning in 1964, this award "established to bring a declaration of appreciation to an individual each year that has made a significant contribution to the world of music and helped to create a climate in which our talents may find valid expression."[22]
Harnick was honored at the Twenty-Sixth Annual William Inge Theatre Festival located in Independence, Kansas, in 2007.[23][24]
Harnick and Jerry Bock were presented with the 18th Annual York Theatre Company's prestigious Oscar Hammerstein Award for Lifetime Achievement in Theatre in 2009.[25]
Harnick received the 2016 Drama League Award for Distinguished Achievement in Musical Theatre, as well as the 2016 Special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Theatre.[26]
Harnick received an honorary doctorate from Northwestern University in 2018.[27]
Harnick was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1972 and received its highest honor, the Johnny Mercer Award, in 1990.[28]
^Pincus-Roth, Zachary (April 25, 2007). "Inge Festival Honoring Fiddler Writers Bock, Harnick and Stein Kicks Off April 25". Playbill. Retrieved June 26, 2023. Jerry Bock, Sheldon Harnick and Joseph Stein, the writing team behind Fiddler on the Roof, will be honored at the 26th annual William Inge Theatre Festival in Independence, KS, which kicks off April 25.
George S. Kaufman, Morrie Ryskind and Ira Gershwin (1932)
Maxwell Anderson (1933)
Sidney Kingsley (1934)
Zoe Akins (1935)
Robert E. Sherwood (1936)
Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman (1937)
Thornton Wilder (1938)
Robert E. Sherwood (1939)
William Saroyan (1940)
Robert E. Sherwood (1941)
Thornton Wilder (1943)
Mary Chase (1945)
Russel Crouse and Howard Lindsay (1946)
Tennessee Williams (1948)
Arthur Miller (1949)
Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II and Joshua Logan (1950)
Joseph Kramm (1952)
William Inge (1953)
John Patrick (1954)
Tennessee Williams (1955)
Albert Hackett and Frances Goodrich (1956)
Eugene O'Neill (1957)
Ketti Frings (1958)
Archibald MacLeish (1959)
Jerome Weidman, George Abbott, Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick (1960)
Tad Mosel (1961)
Frank Loesser and Abe Burrows (1962)
Frank D. Gilroy (1965)
Edward Albee (1967)
Howard Sackler (1969)
Charles Gordone (1970)
Paul Zindel (1971)
Jason Miller (1973)
Edward Albee (1975)
Michael Bennett, Nicholas Dante, James Kirkwood Jr., Marvin Hamlisch and Edward Kleban (1976)
Michael Cristofer (1977)
D. L. Coburn (1978)
Sam Shepard (1979)
Lanford Wilson (1980)
Beth Henley (1981)
Charles Fuller (1982)
Marsha Norman (1983)
David Mamet (1984)
James Lapine and Stephen Sondheim (1985)
August Wilson (1987)
Alfred Uhry (1988)
Wendy Wasserstein (1989)
August Wilson (1990)
Neil Simon (1991)
Robert Schenkkan (1992)
Tony Kushner (1993)
Edward Albee (1994)
Horton Foote (1995)
Jonathan Larson (1996)
Paula Vogel (1998)
Margaret Edson (1999)
Donald Margulies (2000)
David Auburn (2001)
Suzan-Lori Parks (2002)
Nilo Cruz (2003)
Doug Wright (2004)
John Patrick Shanley (2005)
David Lindsay-Abaire (2007)
Tracy Letts (2008)
Lynn Nottage (2009)
Tom Kitt and Brian Yorkey (2010)
Bruce Norris (2011)
Quiara Alegría Hudes (2012)
Ayad Akhtar (2013)
Annie Baker (2014)
Stephen Adly Guirgis (2015)
Lin-Manuel Miranda (2016)
Lynn Nottage (2017)
Martyna Majok (2018)
Jackie Sibblies Drury (2019)
Michael R. Jackson (2020)
Katori Hall (2021)
James Ijames (2022)
Sanaz Toossi (2023)
Eboni Booth (2024)
Branden Jacobs-Jenkins (2025)
v
t
e
Special Tony Award
1947–1975
Dora Chamberlain / Ira and Rita Katzenberg / Jules Leventhal / Burns Mantle / P. A. MacDonald / Vincent Sardi Sr. (1947)
Vera Allen / Paul Beisman / Joe E. Brown / Cast of The Importance of Being Earnest / Robert W. Dowling / Experimental Theatre Inc. / Rosalind Gilder / June Lockhart / Mary Martin / George Pierce / James Whitmore (1948)
No Award (1949)
Maurice Evans / Philip Faversham / Brock Pemberton (1950)
Ruth Green (1951)
Charles Boyer / Judy Garland / Edward Kook (1952)
Danny Kaye / Beatrice Lillie (1953)
No Award (1954)
Proscenium Productions (1955)
Fourth Street Chekov Theatre / City Center / The New York Public Library Theatre Collection / The Shakespearewrights / The Threepenny Opera (1956)
American Shakespeare Festival / Jean-Louis Barrault / Robert Russell Bennett / William Hammerstein / Joseph Harbuck / Paul Shyre (1957)
Mrs. Martin Beck / New York Shakespeare Festival (1958)
Russel Crouse and Howard Lindsay / John Gielgud / Cast of La Plume de Ma Tante (1959)
Burgess Meredith and James Thurber / John D. Rockefeller III (1960)
David Merrick / The Theatre Guild (1961)
Brooks Atkinson / Richard Rodgers / Franco Zeffirelli (1962)
Alan Bennett, Peter Cook, Jonathan Miller and Dudley Moore / Irving Berlin / W. McNeil Lowry (1963)
Eva Le Gallienne (1964)
Gilbert Miller / Oliver Smith (1965)
Helen Menken (1966)
No Award (1967)
APA-Phoenix Theatre / Pearl Bailey / Carol Channing / Maurice Chevalier / Marlene Dietrich / Audrey Hepburn / David Merrick (1968)
Leonard Bernstein / Carol Burnett / Rex Harrison / The National Theatre Company of Great Britain / The Negro Ensemble Company (1969)
Noël Coward / Lynn Fontanne and Alfred Lunt / New York Shakespeare Festival / Barbra Streisand (1970)
Ingram Ash / Elliot Norton / Playbill / Roger L. Stevens (1971)
Fiddler on the Roof / Ethel Merman / Richard Rodgers / The Theatre Guild-American Theatre Society (1972)
The Actors Fund of America / John Lindsay / Shubert Organization (1973)
Actors' Equity Association / A Moon for the Misbegotten / Candide / Peter Cook and Dudley Moore / Harold Friedlander / Bette Midler / Liza Minnelli / Theatre Development Fund / John F. Wharton (1974)
Al Hirschfeld (1975)
1976–2000
George Abbott / Richard Burton / Circle in the Square Theatre / Thomas H. Fitzgerald / Mathilde Pincus (1976)
Cheryl Crawford / Equity Liberty Theatre / Barry Manilow / National Theatre of the Deaf / Diana Ross / Lily Tomlin (1977)
Irving Berlin / Stan Dragoti and Charles Moss (1978)
Walter F. Diehl / Eugene O'Neill Memorial Theater Center / Henry Fonda / Richard Rodgers (1979)
Richard Fitzgerald / Helen Hayes / Mary Tyler Moore / Hobe Morrison (1980)
Lena Horne (1981)
Radio City Music Hall / The Actors Fund of America / Warner Communications (1982)
No Award (1983)
A Chorus Line / Peter Feller / La Tragedie de Carmen (1984)
Yul Brynner / New York State Council on the Arts (1985)
No award (1986)
George Abbott / Jackie Mason (1987)
Brooklyn Academy of Music (1988)
No Award (1989)
No Award (1990–1992)
Oklahoma! (1993)
Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy (1994)
Carol Channing / National Endowment for the Arts / Harvey Sabinson (1995)
No Award (1996)
Bernard B. Jacobs (1997)
Edward E. Colton / Ben Edwards (1998)
Uta Hagen / Arthur Miller / Isabelle Stevenson (1999)
Dame Edna: The Royal Tour / T. Edward Hambleton (2000)
2001–present
Paul Gemignani (2001)
Julie Harris / Robert Whitehead (2002)
Cy Feuer / Russell Simmons' Def Poetry Jam on Broadway (2003)
James M. Nederlander (2004)
Edward Albee (2005)
Sarah Jones / Harold Prince (2006)
No Award (2007)
Robert Russell Bennett / Stephen Sondheim (2008)
Jerry Herman (2009)
Alan Ayckbourn / Marian Seldes (2010)
Athol Fugard / Philip J. Smith (2011)
Actors' Equity Association / Hugh Jackman (2012)
Bernard Gersten / Ming Cho Lee / Paul Libin (2013)
Jane Greenwood (2014)
John Cameron Mitchell / Tommy Tune (2015)
Sheldon Harnick / Marshall W. Mason / National Endowment for the Arts / Miles Wilkin (2016)
James Earl Jones (2017)
John Leguizamo / Andrew Lloyd Webber / Chita Rivera / Bruce Springsteen (2018)
Rosemary Harris / Marin Mazzie / Terrence McNally / Sonny Tilders and Creature Technology Company / Jason Michael Webb / Harold Wheeler (2019)
The Broadway Advocacy Coalition / David Byrne's American Utopia / Freestyle Love Supreme / Graciela Daniele (2020/21)
Angela Lansbury / James C. Nicola (2022)
Joel Grey / John Kander (2023)
Jack O'Brien / George C. Wolfe / Alex Edelman / Abe Jacob / Nikiya Mathis (2024)
Marco Paguia, David Oquendo, Renesito Avich, Gustavo Schartz, Javier Días, Román Diaz, Mauricio Herrera, Jesus Ricardo, Eddie Venegas, Hery Paz, and Leonardo Reyna / Jamie Harrison, Chris Fisher, Gary Beestone, and Edward Pierce (2025)
v
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Tony Award for Best Original Score
1947–1975
Street Scene by Kurt Weill (1947)
Kiss Me, Kate by Cole Porter (1949)
South Pacific by Richard Rodgers (1950)
Call Me Madam by Irving Berlin (1951)
No Strings by Richard Rodgers (1962)
Oliver! by Lionel Bart (1963)
Hello, Dolly! by Jerry Herman (1964)
Fiddler on the Roof by Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick (1965)
Man of La Mancha by Mitch Leigh and Joe Darion (1966)
Cabaret by John Kander and Fred Ebb (1967)
Hallelujah, Baby! by Jule Styne, Betty Comden, and Adolph Green (1968)
Company by Stephen Sondheim (1971)
Follies by Stephen Sondheim (1972)
A Little Night Music by Stephen Sondheim (1973)
Gigi by Frederick Loewe and Alan Jay Lerner (1974)
The Wiz by Charlie Smalls (1975)
1976–2000
A Chorus Line by Marvin Hamlisch and Edward Kleban (1976)
Annie by Charles Strouse and Martin Charnin (1977)
On the Twentieth Century by Cy Coleman, Betty Comden, and Adolph Green (1978)
Sweeney Todd by Stephen Sondheim (1979)
Evita by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice (1980)
Woman of the Year by John Kander and Fred Ebb (1981)
Nine by Maury Yeston (1982)
Cats by Andrew Lloyd Webber and T. S. Eliot (1983)
La Cage aux Folles by Jerry Herman (1984)
Big River by Roger Miller (1985)
The Mystery of Edwin Drood by Rupert Holmes (1986)
Les Misérables by Claude-Michel Schönberg, Herbert Kretzmer, and Alain Boublil (1987)
Into the Woods by Stephen Sondheim (1988)
No Award (1989)
City of Angels by Cy Coleman and David Zippel (1990)
The Will Rogers Follies by Cy Coleman, Betty Comden, and Adolph Green (1991)
Falsettos by William Finn (1992)
Kiss of the Spider Woman by John Kander and Fred Ebb / The Who's Tommy by Pete Townshend (1993)
Passion by Stephen Sondheim (1994)
Sunset Boulevard by Andrew Lloyd Webber, Don Black, and Christopher Hampton (1995)
Rent by Jonathan Larson (1996)
Titanic by Maury Yeston (1997)
Ragtime by Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Ahrens (1998)
Parade by Jason Robert Brown (1999)
Aida by Elton John and Tim Rice (2000)
2001–present
The Producers by Mel Brooks (2001)
Urinetown by Mark Hollmann and Greg Kotis (2002)
Hairspray by Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman (2003)
Avenue Q by Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx (2004)
The Light in the Piazza by Adam Guettel (2005)
The Drowsy Chaperone by Lisa Lambert and Greg Morrison (2006)
Spring Awakening by Duncan Sheik and Steven Sater (2007)
In the Heights by Lin-Manuel Miranda (2008)
Next to Normal by Tom Kitt and Brian Yorkey (2009)
Memphis by David Bryan and Joe DiPietro (2010)
The Book of Mormon by Trey Parker, Robert Lopez and Matt Stone (2011)
Newsies by Alan Menken and Jack Feldman (2012)
Kinky Boots by Cyndi Lauper (2013)
The Bridges of Madison County by Jason Robert Brown (2014)
Fun Home by Jeanine Tesori and Lisa Kron (2015)
Hamilton by Lin-Manuel Miranda (2016)
Dear Evan Hansen by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul (2017)
The Band's Visit by David Yazbek (2018)
Hadestown by Anaïs Mitchell (2019)
A Christmas Carol by Christopher Nightingale (2020/21)
Six by Toby Marlow and Lucy Moss (2022)
Kimberly Akimbo by Jeanine Tesori and David Lindsay-Abaire (2023)
Suffs by Shaina Taub (2024)
Maybe Happy Ending by Will Aronson and Hue Park (2025)