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Gus Edwards See play(s)
Gus Edwards was an American songwriter and vaudevillian. He also organized his own theatre companies and was a music publisher. In 1896, Edwards was just seventeen years old when he debuted in The Newsboys Quintet act. In 1898, while performing in this act, Edwards wrote his first song, to a lyric by Tom Daly, "All I Want Is My Black Baby Back." Edwards could not write music at that time, so he hired Charles Previn to write down the notes. May Irwin sang the song in her act, and helped to popularize it. While entertaining soldiers at Camp Black during the Spanish-American War, Edwards met lyricist Will Cobb, and they formed "Words and Music," a partnership that lasted for many years. Edwards wrote the Broadway stage scores for WHEN WE WERE FORTY-ONE, HIP HIP HOORAY, THE MERRY-GO-ROUND, SCHOOL DAYS, ZIEGFIELD FOLLIES OF 1910, SUNBONNET SUE, and SHOW WINDOW. He founded the Gus Edwards Music Hall in New York, and also his own publishing company, then produced special subjects for films, and returned to vaudeville between 1930 and 1937, finally retiring in 1939. His chief musical collaborators included Edward Madden, Will Cobb, and Robert B. Smith. His other popular-song compositions include "Meet Me Under the Wisteria," "By the Light of the Silvery Moon," "I Can't Tell You Why I Love You but I Do," "Goodbye, Little Girl, Goodbye," "I Just Can't Make My Eyes Behave," "I'll Be With You When the Roses Bloom Again", "He's My Pal", "Way Down Yonder in the Cornfield", "In Zanzibar", "If a Girl Like You Loved a Boy Like Me", "Jimmy Valentine", "If I Were a Millionaire," "Laddie Boy," and "In My Merry Oldsmobile." Bing Crosby played Edwards in a fictionalized version of his life in the 1939 film "The Star Maker," directed by Roy Del Ruth. Edwards himself made few screen appearances, the most notable being "The Hollywood Revue of 1929," in which he performs as part of a vaudeville act. He also wrote all the music for "The Hollywood Revue," as credited in the closing credits of the production, with the exception of “Singing in the Rain” with lyrics by Arthur Freed and music by Nacio Herb Brown. He also performed a specialty number: "Lon Chaney's Gonna Get You If You Don't Watch Out." Edwards was a founding member of ASCAP in 1914 and was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970.