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Author Topic: Allen & Robert Sherman in LA Times (long)  (Read 2887 times)

clarkh

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Allen & Robert Sherman in LA Times (long)
« on: August 16, 2003, 03:48:11 AM »
August 16, 2003          
       
             COLUMN ONE
   The Boy in Camp Granada
            The song that begins 'Hello Muddah, hello Fadduh' captured the angst of many, especially the songwriter's son, who truly hated camp.

        By Paul Lieberman, Times Staff Writer

                       
                  My uncle owned Camp Champlain in upstate New York and various relatives went there, or worked there, so it was a home away from home for me. But I could see that camp was not such a comfortable experience for some kids — early in the summer, in particular, it was not unusual to hear one or two in a cabin weep at night from homesickness.
 
  I never saw anyone as unhappy, though, as the boy we called Sherman, using only his last name. From the first day of camp, he wanted out, to get back home. We were 11 or 12, I'm pretty sure, but it's been four decades, so the memories are hazy — though not my memory of the knife. That I'll never forget. And the song, of course.
 
  Sherman had never been to camp before he arrived at my uncle's on Lake Champlain. He was the smallest boy in the cabin but made his presence known by reading us the letters he was sending his parents, telling them how miserable he was: \"I wish you were here and I was there.\" \"The counselor plays the trumpet in the middle of the night and won't let me sleep.\" That sort of stuff. But the letters didn't work. Sherman remained at the camp, and remained miserable, right up until the lunch hour when he took matters into his own hands.
 
  We were at one of the long tables in the barn-like mess hall. He was sitting on my left. Another boy was on my right. They began arguing. About what I can't recall. But, as I said, I'll never forget the knife. Sherman picked his up and threw it. It hit the other boy square in the chest — OK, it was a dull butter knife, and it may well have been the thick handle that hit the boy. But he fell backward nonetheless and started wailing. I grabbed Sherman in a headlock and probably started pounding on him. Of that I'm not certain — but the headlock definitely. And the next day he was gone. They'd kicked him out.
 
  I was amazed later when word filtered down that Sherman's parents had asked if he could come back. But it was near the end of camp and my uncle wouldn't budge. We never saw Sherman again.
 
  Nor did we put two and two together when, in the next year or so, a man named Allan Sherman became the most unlikely of overnight celebrities.
 
  A hitherto unknown TV quiz show producer, he was by his own account \"a fat, ugly gargoyle,\" an asthmatic who wheezed and \"the worst singer in the world.\" Yet in short order, his raspy voice produced three chart-topping albums by transforming familiar melodies into Jewish-themed spoofs. He scored his first hit with a takeoff on the French children's tune \"Frere Jacques,\" his version making it \"Sarah Jackman, Sarah Jackman. How's by you? How's by you?\"
 
  His third album, however, sent him to the peak of his success. Released in summer 1963, \"My Son the Nut\" included a song set to Ponchielli's \"Dance of the Hours.\" Allan Sherman titled his version \"Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh (A Letter From Camp).\"
 
 Hello Muddah, hello Fadduh
 
  Here I am at Camp Granada
 
  Camp is very entertaining
 
  And they say we'll have some fun if it stops raining
 
  It's about a boy who desperately wants to go home, at least until the end of the song, when he decides camp isn't that bad after all, so \"Muddah, Fadduh, kindly disregard this letter!\"
 
  I still did not make the connection until my uncle said, \"You remember his son, don't you?\"
 
the rest of this is at: http://www.latimes.com/features/lifestyle/...a-home-leftrail

yrs.,
Clark H.
http://www.miscmedia.com

DrBear

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Allen & Robert Sherman in LA Times (long)
« Reply #1 on: August 16, 2003, 09:57:50 AM »
For the three or four of you who don't know why this was on-topic (I know most of you do)...

Allan Sherman was the original producer of \"I've Got A Secret\" long before he became known for singing. Son Robert later followed in dad's footsteps at Goodson-Todman.

(I probably shouldn't have posted this in retrospect; it's better if you read the very good article.)
« Last Edit: August 16, 2003, 10:03:43 AM by DrBear »
This isn't a plug, but you can ask me about my book.

Ghastly_Gary

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Allen & Robert Sherman in LA Times (long)
« Reply #2 on: August 16, 2003, 10:40:34 PM »
That was a great article and I finally got to know about Allan Sherman's son Robert whose names I kept seeing in 1970s G/T game shows, especially Match Game.  I have the Rhino CD \"My Son The Greatest--The Best of Allan Sherman\" which is essential if you like Allan Sherman's song parodies.  I wonder if Robert gets royalties from Rhino.