Richard Rodgers

{{short description|American composer of songs and Broadway musicals (1902–1979)}}

{{other people}}

{{Distinguish|Richard Rogers|Dick Rogers}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2024}}

{{Use American English|date=December 2022}}

{{Infobox musical artist

| name = Richard Rodgers

| image = Rodgers.jpg

| caption = Rodgers at the St. James Theatre in 1948

| background = non_performing_personnel

| birth_name = Richard Charles Rodgers

| birth_date = {{birth date|mf=y|1902|06|28}}

| birth_place = New York City, U.S.

| death_date = {{death date and age|mf=y|1979|12|30|1902|06|28}}

| death_place = New York City, U.S.

| genre = Musical theater

| occupation = {{hlist|Composer|songwriter|playwright}}

| years_active = 1919–1979

| module = {{Infobox person

| embed = yes

| education = Columbia University (BA)
Juilliard School}}

}}

Richard Charles Rodgers (June 28, 1902 – December 30, 1979) was an American composer who worked primarily in musical theater. With 43 Broadway musicals and over 900 songs to his credit, Rodgers was one of the best-known American composers of the 20th century, and his compositions had a significant influence on popular music.

Rodgers is known for his songwriting partnerships, first with lyricist Lorenz Hart and then with Oscar Hammerstein II. With Hart he wrote musicals throughout the 1920s and 1930s, including Pal Joey, A Connecticut Yankee, On Your Toes and Babes in Arms. With Hammerstein he wrote musicals through the 1940s and 1950s, such as Oklahoma!, Flower Drum Song, Carousel, South Pacific, The King and I, and The Sound of Music. His collaborations with Hammerstein, in particular, are celebrated for bringing the Broadway musical to a new maturity by telling stories that were focused on characters and drama rather than the earlier light-hearted entertainment of the genre.

Rodgers was the first person to win all four of the top American entertainment awards in theater, film, recording, and television{{snd}}an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar, and a Tony{{snd}}now known collectively as an EGOT.{{cite web|url=https://www.billboard.com/articles/news/awards/8511880/richard-rodgers-egot-winner-first-flashback|title= In 1962, Richard Rodgers Became the First EGOT (Before That Was Even a Thing)|website= billboard.com|date= May 19, 2019|access-date= April 25, 2020}} In addition, he was awarded a Pulitzer Prize, making him the first ever to receive all five awards (later joined by Marvin Hamlisch).{{cite web|url=https://www.pulitzer.org/winners/richard-rodgers-and-oscar-hammerstein-ii|title= Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II|website= pulitzer.org|access-date= April 25, 2020}} In 1978, Rodgers was in the inaugural group of Kennedy Center Honorees for lifetime achievement in the arts.{{cite web|url= https://www.paleycenter.org/collection/item/?q=cbs&p=761&item=100561|title= KENNEDY CENTER HONORS 1978|website= paleycenter.org|access-date= April 25, 2020}}

Early life

File:Fly_With_Me_poster.jpg, the 1920 Columbia University Varsity Show. The music was co-written by Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, and also included songs by Oscar Hammerstein II, making the show one of the first collaborations between the two men.{{Cite web|title=Sing a Song of Morningside|url=https://www.thevarsityshow.com/about-sing-a-song-of-morningside|access-date=August 28, 2021|website=The Varsity Show|language=en-US}}]]

Rodgers was born into a Jewish family in Queens, New York, the son of Dr. William Abrahams Rodgers, a prominent physician who had changed the family name from Rogazinsky, and his wife Mamie ({{née}} Levy). Rodgers began playing the piano at the age of six. He attended P.S. 166, Townsend Harris Hall and DeWitt Clinton High School. Rodgers spent his early teenage summers in Camp Wigwam (Waterford, Maine) where he composed some of his first songs.[https://www.nytimes.com/books/first/h/hyland-rodgers.html Hyland, William G: Richard Rodgers] The New York Times, Chapter 1. Yale University Press, 1998, {{ISBN|0-300-07115-9}}

Rodgers, Lorenz Hart, and later collaborator Oscar Hammerstein II all attended Columbia University. At Columbia, Rodgers joined the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity. In 1921, Rodgers shifted his studies to the Institute of Musical Art (now the Juilliard School).Richard Rodgers, Musical Stages: An Autobiography (2002 Reissue), pp. 12,20–21,44, DaCapo Press, {{ISBN|0-306-81134-0}} Rodgers was influenced by composers such as Victor Herbert and Jerome Kern, as well as by the operettas his parents took him to see on Broadway when he was a child.

Career

=Rodgers and Hart=

{{Main|Rodgers and Hart}}

File:Rodgers and Hart NYWTS.jpg in 1936]]

In 1919, Richard met Lorenz Hart, thanks to Phillip Levitt, a friend of Richard's older brother. Rodgers and Hart struggled for years in the field of musical comedy, writing several amateur shows. They made their professional debut with the song "Any Old Place With You", featured in the 1919 Broadway musical comedy A Lonely Romeo. Their first professional production was the 1920 Poor Little Ritz Girl, which also had music by Sigmund Romberg. Their next professional show, The Melody Man, did not premiere until 1924.

When he was just out of college Rodgers worked as musical director for Lew Fields. Among the stars he accompanied were Nora Bayes and Fred Allen.[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VVpeiKxbHk Rodgers & Hammerstein as mystery guests on What's My Line?], February 19, 1956, video on YouTube Rodgers was considering quitting show business altogether to sell children's underwear, when he and Hart finally broke through in 1925. They wrote the songs for a benefit show presented by the prestigious Theatre Guild, called The Garrick Gaieties, and the critics found the show fresh and delightful. Although it was meant to run only one day, the Guild knew they had a success and allowed it to re-open later. The show's biggest hit—the song that Rodgers believed "made" Rodgers and Hart—was "Manhattan". The two were now a Broadway songwriting force.

Throughout the rest of the decade, the duo wrote several hit shows for both Broadway and London, including Dearest Enemy (1925), The Girl Friend (1926), Peggy-Ann (1926), A Connecticut Yankee (1927), and Present Arms (1928). Their 1920s shows produced standards such as "Here in My Arms", "Mountain Greenery", "Blue Room", "My Heart Stood Still" and "You Took Advantage of Me".

With the Depression in full swing during the first half of the 1930s, the team sought greener pastures in Hollywood. The hardworking Rodgers later regretted these relatively fallow years, but he and Hart did write some classic songs and film scores while out west, including Love Me Tonight (1932) (directed by Rouben Mamoulian, who would later direct Rodgers's Oklahoma! on Broadway), which introduced three standards: "Lover", "Mimi", and "Isn't It Romantic?". Rodgers also wrote a melody for which Hart wrote three consecutive lyrics which were either cut, not recorded or not a hit. The fourth lyric resulted in one of their most famous songs, "Blue Moon". Other film work includes the scores to The Phantom President (1932), starring George M. Cohan, Hallelujah, I'm a Bum (1933), starring Al Jolson, and, in a quick return after having left Hollywood, Mississippi (1935), starring Bing Crosby and W. C. Fields.

In 1935, they returned to Broadway and wrote an almost unbroken string of hit shows that ended shortly before Hart's death in 1943. Among the most notable are Jumbo (1935), On Your Toes (1936, which included the ballet "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue", choreographed by George Balanchine), Babes in Arms (1937), I Married an Angel (1938), The Boys from Syracuse (1938), Pal Joey (1940), and their last original work, By Jupiter (1942). Rodgers also contributed to the book on several of these shows.

Many of the songs from these shows are still sung and remembered, including "The Most Beautiful Girl in the World", "My Romance", "Little Girl Blue", "I'll Tell the Man in the Street", "There's a Small Hotel", "Where or When", "My Funny Valentine", "The Lady Is a Tramp", "Falling in Love with Love", "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered", and "Wait till You See Her".

In 1939, Rodgers wrote the ballet Ghost Town for the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, with choreography by Marc Platoff.Anna Kisselgoff, [https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C03E1D9173CF930A15753C1A9649C8B63 "DANCE REVIEW; Rodgers As Ideal Dance Partner"], The New York Times, October 23, 2002.

=Rodgers and Hammerstein=

{{Main|Rodgers and Hammerstein}}

File:Rodgers and Hammerstein at piano-original.jpg

Rodgers' partnership with Hart began having problems because of the lyricist's unreliability and declining health from alcoholism. Rodgers began working with Oscar Hammerstein II, with whom he had previously written songs (before ever working with Lorenz Hart). Their first musical, the groundbreaking hit Oklahoma! (1943), is a notable example of a "book musical", a musical play in which the songs and dances are fully integrated into the plot. What was once a collection of songs, dances and comic turns held together by a tenuous plot became a fully integrated narrative. Even though Show Boat is considered to be the earliest example of a book musical, Oklahoma! epitomized the innovations for which Show Boat had laid the groundwork and is considered the first production in American history to be intentionally marketed as a fully integrated musical.O'Leary, J. (2014). Oklahoma!, "lousy publicity," and the politics of formal integration in the American Musical Theater. Journal of Musicology, 31(1), 139–182. https://doi.org/10.1525/jm.2014.31.1.139

In 1943, Richard Rodgers became the ninth president of the Dramatists Guild of America. In November that year he and Hart mounted a revival of A Connecticut Yankee; Hart died from alcoholism and pneumonia just days after its opening.

Rodgers and Hammerstein went on to create four more hits that are among the most popular in musical history. Each was made into a successful film: Carousel (1945), South Pacific (1949, winner of the 1950 Pulitzer Prize for Drama), The King and I (1951), and The Sound of Music (1959). Other shows include the minor hit Flower Drum Song (1958), as well as relative failures Allegro (1947), Me and Juliet (1953), and Pipe Dream (1955). They also wrote the score to the film State Fair (1945) (which was remade in 1962 with Pat Boone) and a special TV musical of Cinderella (1957).

Their collaboration produced many well-known songs, including "Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin'", "People Will Say We're in Love", "Oklahoma" (which also became the state song of Oklahoma), "It's A Grand Night For Singing", "If I Loved You", "You'll Never Walk Alone", "It Might as Well Be Spring", "Some Enchanted Evening", "Younger Than Springtime", "Bali Hai", "Getting to Know You", "My Favorite Things", "The Sound of Music", "Sixteen Going on Seventeen", "Climb Ev'ry Mountain", "Do-Re-Mi", and "Edelweiss", Hammerstein's last song.

File:Richard Rodgers Ed Sullivan 1952.JPG's Toast of the Town television show in 1952]]

Much of Rodgers' work with both Hart and Hammerstein was orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett. Rodgers composed twelve themes, which Bennett used in preparing the orchestra score for the 26-episode World War II television documentary Victory at Sea (1952–53). This NBC production pioneered the "compilation documentary"—programming based on pre-existing footage—and was eventually broadcast in dozens of countries. The melody of the popular song "No Other Love" was later taken from the Victory at Sea theme entitled "Beneath the Southern Cross". Rodgers won an Emmy for the music for the ABC documentary Winston Churchill: The Valiant Years, scored by Eddie Sauter, Hershy Kay, and Robert Emmett Dolan. Rodgers composed the theme music, "March of the Clowns", for the 1963–64 television series The Greatest Show on Earth, which ran for 30 episodes. He also contributed the main title theme for the 1963–64 historical anthology television series The Great Adventure.

In 1950, Rodgers and Hammerstein received The Hundred Year Association of New York's Gold Medal Award "in recognition of outstanding contributions to the City of New York." Rodgers, Hammerstein, and Joshua Logan won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama for South Pacific.[http://www.pulitzer.org/bycat/Drama "Drama"]. The Pulitzer Prizes. Retrieved December 3, 2013. Rodgers and Hammerstein had won a special Pulitzer Prize in 1944 for Oklahoma!.[http://www.pulitzer.org/bycat/Special-Awards-and-Citations "Special Awards and Citations"]. The Pulitzer Prizes. Retrieved December 3, 2013.

In 1954, Rodgers conducted the New York Philharmonic Orchestra in excerpts from Victory at Sea, Slaughter on Tenth Avenue and the Carousel Waltz for a special LP released by Columbia Records.

Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals earned a total of 37 Tony Awards, 15 Academy Awards, two Pulitzer Prizes, two Grammy Awards, and two Emmy Awards.

=After Hammerstein=

Rodgers composed five new musicals between Hammerstein's death in 1960 and his own in 1979. In chronological order, they are: No Strings (1962), Do I Hear a Waltz? (1965), Two by Two (1970), Rex (1976), and I Remember Mama (1979).{{Cite book |last=Block |first=Geoffrey |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt1npq43 |title=Richard Rodgers |date=2003 |publisher=Yale University Press |isbn=978-0-300-09747-4 |pages= |chapter=After Hammerstein|jstor=j.ctt1npq43 }}

Rodgers wrote both words and music for his first new Broadway project No Strings, which earned two Tony Awards and played 580 shows. The show was a minor hit and featured the song, "The Sweetest Sounds".

Rodgers also wrote both the words and music for two new songs used in the film version of The Sound of Music. (Other songs in that film were from Rodgers and Hammerstein.)

Each of his final Broadway musicals faced a declining level of success as Rodgers was overshadowed by up-and-coming composers and lyricists. This was evident by the steady drop in run times and critic reviews. Do I Hear a Waltz? ran 220 performances; Two by Two, 343 performances; Rex only 49 performances; and I Remember Mama, 108 performances.

While Rodgers went on to work with lyricists: Stephen Sondheim (Do I Hear a Waltz?), who was a protégé of Hammerstein, Martin Charnin (Two by Two, I Remember Mama) and Sheldon Harnick (Rex), he never found another permanent partner. These partnerships proved to be unsuccessful as a result of issues of collaboration. Sondheim's reluctance to participate in Do I Hear a Waltz? led to tension between the two. In addition, Charnin and Rodgers were met with opposing ideas when creating Two by Two.

Nevertheless, his overall successful lifetime career did not go unrecognized. At its 1978 commencement ceremonies, Barnard College awarded Rodgers its highest honor, the Barnard Medal of Distinction.

Rodgers was an honoree at the first Kennedy Center Honors in 1978. At the 1979 Tony Awards ceremony—six months before his death—Rodgers was presented the Lawrence Langner Memorial Award for Distinguished Lifetime Achievement in the American Theatre.

One of Rodger's final works was a revival of Fly With Me for the 1980 Varsity Show, to which he added several new songs. He died less than four months before its premiere in April 1980.

Personal life

In 1930, Rodgers married Dorothy Belle Feiner (1909–92).{{Cite web|url=http://www.rnh.com/bio/46/Rodgers-Dorothy|title=Dorothy Rodgers|website=Rodgers and Hammerstein|access-date=April 15, 2017}} Their daughter, Mary (1931–2014), was the composer of Once Upon a Mattress and an author of children's books.{{cite news| url=http://www.playbill.com/article/mary-rodgers-composer-of-once-upon-a-mattress-and-daughter-of-broadway-royalty-dies-at-83-com-322981| title=Mary Rodgers, Composer of Once Upon a Mattress and Daughter of Broadway Royalty, Dies at 83| journal=Playbill|author-link1=Robert Simonson| last=Simonson| first=Robert| date=June 26, 2014| access-date=August 23, 2018}} The Rodgers later lost a daughter at birth. Another daughter, Linda (1935–2015), also had a brief career as a songwriter. Mary's son and Richard Rodgers's grandson, Adam Guettel (b. 1964), also a musical theater composer, won Tony Awards for Best Score and Best Orchestrations for The Light in the Piazza in 2005. Peter Melnick (b. 1958), Linda Rodgers's son, is the composer of Adrift In Macao, which debuted at the Philadelphia Theatre Company in 2005 and was produced Off-Broadway in 2007. Mary Rodgers' book Shy: The Alarmingly Outspoken Memoirs of Mary Rodgers was published posthumously in 2022, and included her frank revelations and assessments of her father, family and herself.Rodgers, Mary & Green, Jesse,Shy: The Alarmingly Outspoken Memoirs of Mary Rodgers (2022). Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0374298623

Rodgers was an atheist.Rodgers' biographer William G Hyland states: "That Richard Rodgers would recall, at the very beginning of his memoirs, his great-grandmother's death and its religious significance for his family suggests his need to justify his own religious alienation. Richard became an atheist, and as a parent, he resisted religious instruction for his children. According to his wife, Dorothy, he felt that religion was based on "fear" and contributed to "feelings of guilt." " Richard Rodgers, Yale University Press 1998, {{ISBN|0-300-07115-9}}. [https://www.nytimes.com/books/first/h/hyland-rodgers.html Chapter 1] at The New York Times Books (accessed April 30, 2008). He was prone to depression and alcohol abuse and was at one time hospitalized.

Rodgers was portrayed by Tom Drake in the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film Words and Music, a semi-fictionalized depiction of the partnership of Rodgers and Hart. In Richard Linklater's 2025 film Blue Moon, he is played by Andrew Scott, who won the Silver Bear for Best Supporting Performance at the 75th Berlin International Film Festival.

Death

Rodgers died in 1979, aged 77, after surviving cancer of the jaw, a heart attack, and a laryngectomy. He was cremated, and his ashes were scattered at sea.{{Citation needed|date=May 2025}}

Legacy

In 1990, the 46th Street Theatre was renamed the Richard Rodgers Theatre in his memory. In 1999, Rodgers and Hart were each commemorated on United States postage stamps. In 2002, the centennial year of Rodgers' birth was celebrated worldwide with books, retrospectives, performances, new recordings of his music, and a Broadway revival of Oklahoma!. The BBC Proms that year devoted an entire evening to Rodgers' music, including a concert performance of Oklahoma! The Boston Pops Orchestra released a new CD that year in tribute to Rodgers, entitled My Favorite Things: A Richard Rodgers Celebration.

Alec Wilder wrote the following about Rodgers:

{{blockquote|Of all the writers whose songs are considered and examined in this book, those of Rodgers show the highest degree of consistent excellence, inventiveness, and sophistication ... [A]fter spending weeks playing his songs, I am more than impressed and respectful: I am astonished.Wilder, Alec, 1973. American Popular Song: The Great Innovators, 1900–1950, Oxford University Press: 163. {{ISBN|0-19-501445-6}}.}}

Rodgers is a member of the American Theater Hall of Fame.{{cite web|url=http://www.theaterhalloffame.org/members.html|title=Theater Hall of Fame members|access-date=February 9, 2014}}

Along with the Academy of Arts and Letters, Rodgers also started and endowed an award for non-established musical theater composers to produce new productions either by way of full productions or staged readings. It is the only award for which the Academy of Arts and Letters accepts applications and is presented every year. Below are the previous winners of the award:{{cite web| title=Awards| url=https://artsandletters.org/awards/#| website=American Academy of Arts and Letters}}

class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
Year

!Show

!Awardee

rowspan=6|2018{{cite press release| url=https://artsandletters.org/pressrelease/two-musicals-win-richard-rodgers-awards/| title=Two Musicals Win Richard Rodgers Awards| date=March 23, 2018| publisher=American Academy of Arts and Letters| access-date=August 23, 2018}}

|rowspan=2|Gun and Powder

|Ross Baum

Angelica Chéri
rowspan=4|KPOP

|Jason Kim

Helen Park
Max Vernon
Woodshed Collective
rowspan=2|2017

|rowspan=2|What I Learned from People

|Will Aronson

Hue Park
rowspan=4|2016

|rowspan=2|We Live in Cairo

|Patrick Lazour

Daniel Lazour
Costs of Living

|Timothy Huang

Hadestown

|Anaïs Mitchell

rowspan=2|2015

|rowspan=2|String

|Adam Gwon

Sarah Hammond
rowspan=2|2014

|rowspan=2|Witness Uganda

|Matthew Gould

Griffin Matthews
rowspan=3|2013

|Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812

|Dave Malloy

rowspan=2|The Kid Who Would Be Pope

|Tom Megan

Jack Megan
rowspan=2|2012

|rowspan=2|Witness Uganda

|Matthew Gould

Griffin Matthews
rowspan=4|2011

|rowspan=3|Dogfight

|Peter Duchan

Benj Pasek
Justin Paul
Gloryana

|Andrew Gerle

rowspan=6|2010

|rowspan=3|Buddy's Tavern

|Raymond De Felitta

Alison Louise Hubbard
Kim Oler
rowspan=3|Rocket Science

|Patricia Cotter

Jason Rhyne
Stephen Weiner
rowspan=4|2009

|rowspan=2|Cheer Wars

|Karlan Judd

Gordon Leary
rowspan=2|Rosa Parks

|Scott Ethier

Jeff Hughes
rowspan=6|2008

|rowspan=2|Alive at Ten

|Kirsten A. Guenther

Ryan Scott Oliver
rowspan=2|Kingdom

|Aaron Jafferis

Ian Williams
rowspan=2|See Rock City and Other Destinations

|Brad Alexander

Adam Mathias
rowspan=3|2007

|Calvin Berger

|Barry Wyner

rowspan=2|Main-Travelled Roads

|Dave Hudson

Paul Libman
rowspan=8|2006

|rowspan=3|Grey Gardens

|Scott Frankel

Michael Korie
Doug Wright
rowspan=3|True Fans

|Chris Miller

Bill Rosenfield
Nathan Tysen
rowspan=2|Yellow Wood

|Michelle Elliott

Danny Larsen
rowspan=6|2005

|rowspan=2|Broadcast

|Nathan Christensen

Scott Murphy
rowspan=2|Dust & Dreams: Celebrating Sandburg

|David Hudson

Paul Libman
rowspan=2|Red

|Brian Lowdermilk

Marcus Stevens
rowspan=6|2004

|rowspan=2|To Paint the Earth

|Daniel Frederick Levin

Jonathan Portera
rowspan=2|The Tutor

|Andrew Gerle

Maryrose Wood
rowspan=2|Unlocked

|Sam Carner

Derek Gregor
rowspan=6|2003

|rowspan=2|The Devil in the Flesh

|Jeffrey Lunden

Arthur Perlman
rowspan=2|Once Upon a Time in New Jersey

|Susan DiLallo

Stephen A. Weiner
rowspan=2|The Tutor

|Andrew Gerle

Maryrose Wood
rowspan=4|2002

|rowspan=2|The Fabulist

|David Spencer

Stephen Witkin
rowspan=2|The Tutor

|Andrew Gerle

Maryrose Wood
rowspan=4|2001

|rowspan=2|Heading East

|Leon Ko

Robert Lee
rowspan=2|The Spitfire Grill

|Fred Alley

James Valcq
rowspan=6|2000

|rowspan=3|Bat Boy

|Kaythe Farley

Brian Flemming
Laurence O'Keefe
The Bubbly Black Girl Sheds Her Chameleon Skin

|Kirsten Childs

rowspan=2|Suburb

|Robert S. Cohen

David Javerbaum
rowspan=9|1999

|rowspan=3|Bat Boy

|Kaythe Farley

Brian Flemming
Laurence O'Keefe
Blood on the Dining Room Floor

|Jonathan Sheffer

The Bubbly Black Girl Sheds Her Chameleon Skin

|Kirsten Childs

rowspan=2|Dream True: My Life with Vernon Dexter

|Ricky Ian Gordon

Tina Landau
rowspan=2|The Singing

|Lenora Champagne

Daniel Levy
rowspan=5|1998

|rowspan=3|Little Women

|Alison Hubbard

Allan Knee
Kim Oler
rowspan=2|Summer

|Erik Haagensen

Paul Schwartz
rowspan=6|1997

|rowspan=2|The Ballad of Little Jo

|Mike Reid

Sarah Schlesinger
rowspan=2|Barrio Babies

|Fernand Rivas

Luis Santeiro
rowspan=2|Violet

|Brian Crawley

Jeanine Tesori
rowspan=6|1996

|rowspan=2|Bobos

|James McBride

Ed Shockley
rowspan=2|The Hidden Sky

|Kate Chisholm

Peter Foley
rowspan=2|The Princess & the Blac

|Andy Chuckerman

Karole Foreman
rowspan=3|1995

|rowspan=3|Spendora

|Mark Campbell

Stephen Hoffman
Peter Webb
rowspan=7|1994

|rowspan=2|Doll (not produced)

|Scott Frankel

Michael Korie
The Gig

|Douglas Cohen

Rent

|Jonathan Larson

rowspan=3|The Sweet Revenge of ...

|Mark Campbell

Burton Cohen
Stephen Hoffman
rowspan=8|1993

|rowspan=3|Allos Makar

|Scott Frankel

Michael Korie
Valeria Vasilevsky
rowspan=2|Avenue X

|John Jiler

Ray Leslee
Christina Alberta's

|Polly Pen

rowspan=2|They Shoot Horses ...

|Nagle Jackson

Robert Sprayberry
rowspan=4|1992

|rowspan=2|Avenue X

|John Jiler

Ray Leslee
rowspan=2|The Molly Maquires

|Sid Cherry

William Strempek
rowspan=3|1991

|Opal

|Robert N. Lindsey

rowspan=2|The Times

|Joe Keenan

Brad Ross
rowspan=7|1990

|Down the Stream

|Michael Goldenberg

rowspan=3|Swamp Gas and Shallow Feelings

|Randy Buck

Shirlee Strother
Jack E. Williams
rowspan=3|Whatnot

|Howard Crabtree

Dick Gallagher
Mark Waldrop
rowspan=2|1989

|rowspan=2|Juan Darien

|Elliot Goldenthal

Julie Taymor
rowspan=5|1988

|rowspan=2|Lucky Stiff

|Lynn Ahrens

Stephen Flaherty
rowspan=2|Sheila Levine is Dead ...

|Michael Devon

Todd Graff
Superbia

|Jonathan Larson

rowspan=4|1987

|Henry and Ellen

|Michael John LaChiusa

rowspan=2|Lucky Stiff

|Lynn Ahrens

Stephen Flaherty
No Way to Treat A Lady

|Douglas J. Cohen

rowspan=3|1986

|Break/Agnes/Eulogy

|Michael John LaChiusa

rowspan=2|Juba

|Wendy Lamb

Russell Walden
rowspan=4|1984

|rowspan=3|Brownstone

|Andrew Cadiff

Peter Larson
Josh Rubens
Papushko

|Andrew Teirstein

rowspan=3|1982

|rowspan=3|Portrait of Jennie

|Enid Futterman

Howard Marren
Dennis Rosa
1981

|Child of the Sun

|Damien Leake

rowspan=2|1980

|rowspan=2|Nine (not produced)

|Maro Fratti

Maury Yeston

=Relationship with performers=

File:Rodgers and Hammerstein and Berlin and Tamiris NYWTS.jpg, Oscar Hammerstein II, and Helen Tamiris watching hopefuls who are being auditioned on stage of the St. James Theatre.]]

Rosemary Clooney recorded a version of "Falling in Love with Love" by Rodgers, using a swing style. After the recording session Richard Rodgers told her pointedly that it should be sung as a waltz.{{cite book |title=A Fine Romance|last=Lehman |first=David |year=2009|publisher=Random House |location=New York |isbn=978-0-8052-4250-8|page=140,249 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-nYWq-8qjHMC&q=A+Fine+Romance}} After Doris Day recorded "I Have Dreamed" in 1961, he wrote to her and her arranger, Jim Harbert, that theirs was the most beautiful rendition of his song he had ever heard.

After Peggy Lee recorded her version of "Lover", a Rodgers song, with a dramatically different arrangement from that originally conceived by him, Rodgers said, "I don't know why Peggy picked on me, she could have fucked up Silent Night".Lehman, p. 140. Mary Martin said that Richard Rodgers composed songs for her for South Pacific, knowing she had a small vocal range, and the songs generally made her look her best. She also said that Rodgers and Hammerstein listened to all her suggestions and she worked extremely well with them.Lehman, p. 142–43. Both Rodgers and Hammerstein wanted Doris Day for the lead in the film version of South Pacific and she reportedly wanted the part. They discussed it with her, but after her manager/husband Martin Melcher would not budge on his demand for a high salary for her, the role went to Mitzi Gaynor.

Awards and nominations

Rodgers is the first entertainer to have won the EGOT (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony).

class="wikitable"
Year

! Award

! Category

! Nominated work

! Results

! Ref.

1945

| Academy Awards

| Best Song

| "It Might as Well Be Spring" {{small|(from State Fair)}}

| {{won}}

| align="center"| {{Cite web |url=http://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1946 |title=The 18th Academy Awards (1946) Nominees and Winners |publisher=Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences |access-date=August 16, 2011}}

rowspan="3"| 1958

| rowspan="10"| Grammy Awards

| rowspan="2"| Best Original Cast Album (Broadway or TV)

| Flower Drum Song

| {{nom}}

| align="center" rowspan="9"| {{cite web |url=https://www.grammy.com/artists/richard-rodgers/17311 |title=Richard Rodgers |publisher=Grammy Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

rowspan="2"| Victory at Sea: Vol II

| {{nom}}

Best Musical Composition First Recorded and Released in 1958 (Over 5 Minutes Duration)

| {{nom}}

1960

| Best Show Album (Original Cast)

| The Sound of Music

| {{won}}

rowspan="2"| 1962

| Song of the Year

| "The Sweetest Sounds"

| {{nom}}

Best Original Cast Show Album

| No Strings

| {{won}}

1965

| rowspan="2"| Best Score from an Original Cast Show Album

| Do I Hear a Waltz?

| {{nom}}

1971

| Two by Two

| {{nom}}

1976

| Best Cast Show Album

| Rex

| {{nom}}

1989

| Trustees Award

| {{n/a}}

| {{won}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.grammy.com/awards/trustee-awards |title=Trustees Award |publisher=Grammy Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

1978

| Kennedy Center Honors

| {{n/a}}

| {{n/a}}

| {{won|Honored}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.kennedy-center.org/artists/r/ro-rz/richard-rodgers/ |title=Richard Rodgers |publisher=Kennedy Center Honors |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

1958

| rowspan="2"| Primetime Emmy Awards

| Best Musical Contribution for Television

| Cinderella

| {{nom}}

| align="center" rowspan="2"| {{cite web |url=https://www.emmys.com/bios/richard-rodgers |title=Richard Rodgers |publisher=Academy of Television Arts & Sciences |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

1962

| Outstanding Achievement in Original Music Composed for Television

| Winston Churchill: The Valiant Years

| {{won}}

1944

| rowspan="2"| Pulitzer Prize

| Special Citations and Awards

| Oklahoma!

| {{won}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.pulitzer.org/winners/richard-rodgers-and-oscar-hammerstein-ii |title=Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II |publisher=Pulitzer Prize |access-date=December 27, 2020}}

1950

| Drama

| rowspan="4"| South Pacific

| {{won}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.pulitzer.org/prize-winners-by-year/1950 |title=1950 Pulitzer Prize Winners & Finalists |publisher=Pulitzer Prize |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

rowspan="3"| 1950

| rowspan="14"| Tony Awards

| Best Musical

| {{won}}

| align="center" rowspan="3"| {{cite web |url=https://www.tonyawards.com/nominees/year/1950/category/any/show/any/ |title=1950 Tony Awards |publisher=Tony Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

Producers (Musical)

| {{won}}

Best Score

| {{won}}

1952

| rowspan="5"| Best Musical

| The King and I

| {{won}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.tonyawards.com/nominees/year/1952/category/any/show/any/ |title=1952 Tony Awards |publisher=Tony Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

1956

| Pipe Dream

| {{nom}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.tonyawards.com/nominees/year/1956/category/any/show/any/ |title=1956 Tony Awards |publisher=Tony Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

1959

| Flower Drum Song

| {{nom}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.tonyawards.com/nominees/year/1959/category/any/show/any/ |title=1959 Tony Awards |publisher=Tony Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

1960

| The Sound of Music

| {{won}}{{efn|Tied with Fiorello!.}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.tonyawards.com/nominees/year/1960/category/any/show/any/ |title=1960 Tony Awards |publisher=Tony Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

rowspan="3"| 1962

| rowspan="3"| No Strings

| {{nom}}

| align="center" rowspan="2"| {{cite web |url=https://www.tonyawards.com/nominees/year/1962/category/any/show/any/ |title=1962 Tony Awards |publisher=Tony Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

Best Composer

| {{won}}

Special Tony Award

| {{won}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.tonyawards.com/special-awards/year/1962/category/any/show/any/ |title=1962 Special Tony Award |publisher=Tony Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

1965

| Best Composer and Lyricist

| Do I Hear a Waltz?

| {{nom}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.tonyawards.com/nominees/year/1965/category/any/show/any/ |title=1965 Tony Awards |publisher=Tony Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

1972

| Special Tony Award

| {{n/a}}

| {{won}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.tonyawards.com/special-awards/year/1972/category/any/show/any/ |title=1972 Special Tony Award |publisher=Tony Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

1979

| Lawrence Langner Memorial Award

| {{n/a}}

| {{won}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.tonyawards.com/special-awards/year/1979/category/any/show/any/ |title=1979 Special Tony Award |publisher=Tony Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

1996

| Best Original Score

| State Fair

| {{nom}}

| align="center"| {{cite web |url=https://www.tonyawards.com/nominees/year/1996/category/any/show/any/ |title=1996 Tony Awards |publisher=Tony Awards |access-date=September 5, 2023}}

Shows with music by Rodgers

=Lyrics by Lorenz Hart=

{{columns-list|colwidth=30em|

}}

=Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II=

{{columns-list|colwidth=30em|

}}

=Other lyricists and solo works=

{{columns-list|colwidth=30em|

}}

Notes

{{Notelist}}

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book | author=Secrest, Meryle | title=Somewhere For Me | publisher=Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc. | year=2001 | isbn=1-55783-581-0 | url=https://archive.org/details/somewhereformebi00secr }}