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Gene Buck
Gene Buck
from Wikipedia

Edward Eugene Buck (August 7, 1885 – February 24, 1957) was an American illustrator of sheet music, musical theater lyricist, and president of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP).[1]

Key Information

Early career

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Buck's 1911 sheet music cover for "Everybody's Doin' It Now" by Irving Berlin.

Buck was born in Detroit, growing up in Corktown.[2] He studied at Detroit Art Academy,[1][3] which had been founded by Joseph Gies and Francis P. Paulus.[4] He illustrated for music publishers Ted Snyder, Edward H. Pfeiffer, and Jerome H. Remick.[5] His cover illustrations had a personal touch and showed Art Deco and Art Nouveau elements.[1][3][5] Dean Cornwell called him "the first artist I ever copied".[6] By 1910 Buck was writing lyrics for composer Dave Stamper; his first hit was "Daddy has a Sweetheart, and Mother is her Name".[7] He wrote about 500 songs, including "In the Cool of the Evening", "No Foolin'", "Garden of My Dreams", "Someone, Someday, Somewhere", and "Hello, 'Frisco".[8] After 1914 he gave up illustration due to his failing eyesight.[1]

Ziegfeld

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Buck collaborated with Florenz Ziegfeld, first on the Ziegfeld Follies (1912–26) and then originating the Midnight Frolics (1914–26),[7][9] writing skits and lyrics and acting as talent scout.[10] In the August 1915 Frolic he gave Will Rogers a break, permitting him to introduce topical humour into his act despite Ziegfeld's misgivings.[11] He also discovered Ed Wynn.[7] In 1919, he persuaded Joseph Urban to design the sets for the Follies.[12] In 1926, Rogers dubbed Buck "the Frank W. Stearns of the Ziegfeld Administration".[13]

Later career

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Buck became wealthy and had a luxurious lifestyle. He was a neighbor of F. Scott Fitzgerald at Great Neck, and may have inspired elements of The Great Gatsby.[14] Ring Lardner, who collaborated with Buck on several plays, called Buck's living room "the Yale Bowl — with lamps".[15] Buck was also a friend of O. O. McIntyre.[16] and acquaintance of Louisiana Senator Huey P. Long (Huey Long, T. Harry Williams, 1969).

In 1927 Buck bought the Waldorf Theatre, renaming it the Gene Buck Waldorf, and producing and directing his own musical Take the Air there.[17] He collaborated with Mischa Elman and Augustus Thomas on an operetta.[16]

ASCAP

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Buck was president of ASCAP from 1925 to 1942,[18] an era in which the growing popularity of radio was hitting songwriters' previously primary market for sheet music. His tenure also coincided with several anti-trust investigations by the US government,[19] and the 1941 ASCAP boycott when radio stations demanded reduced performance royalties.[20] The relative failure of the boycott precipitated his being voted out as president.[21] In 1940, he served as Master of Ceremonies for the popular song portion of a "Carousel of American Music", a famous concert series held in San Francisco on September 24. The concert had Irving Berlin, George M. Cohan, Jerome Kern, Hoagy Carmichael, WC Handy, Johnny Mercer - and many more of America's top songwriting talents performing their own compositions. The recording was added to the National Recording Registry in 2016. Before this, Buck appointed an ASCAP committee which in 1943 produced a revised schedule of songwriter payment levels; the schedule was dubbed the "Ahlert Plan" after Buck's successor as ASCAP president.[22] He became president of the Catholic Actors' Guild of America in 1944.[23][24]

Personal life

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Buck married actress Helen Falconer (d.1968[25]) in a Catholic ceremony in New York City on 2 October 1919.[26] He died after emergency surgery at North Shore Hospital, Manhasset.[8] At his death, he was president of the Catholic Actors Guild. His son Gene Buck, Jr was an assistant in 1947 on A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court.[27] Gene and Helen also had a second son George W. Buck.

References

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Further reading

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from Grokipedia
Gene Buck was an American songwriter, lyricist, theatrical producer, and music executive best known for his principal role in creating the Ziegfeld Follies, his pioneering designs for illustrated sheet music covers, and his influential leadership as president of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP). Born Edward Eugene Buck in Detroit, Michigan, on August 7, 1885, he began his career as an artist designing colorful, pictorial covers for popular sheet music, producing thousands that set a new industry standard with their poster-like artwork. He wrote or co-wrote approximately 500 songs, many in collaboration with composer Dave Stamper, including hits such as "Daddy Has a Sweetheart and Mother is Her Name," "Hello Frisco," and "No Foolin'." Buck's most prominent work came through his nearly seventeen-year association with Florenz Ziegfeld, where he served as principal lyricist and sketch writer for twenty editions of the Ziegfeld Follies and sixteen editions of the Midnight Frolics, while also acting as Ziegfeld's key talent scout, discovering performers such as Eddie Cantor, Will Rogers, Ed Wynn, and Joe Frisco. He helped innovate the cabaret-style Midnight Frolics on the New Amsterdam Theatre roof and later produced independent shows including Yours Truly (1927), Take the Air (1927), and Ringside (1928). A founding member of ASCAP in 1914, Buck served as its president from 1924 to 1941, guiding the organization in its efforts to secure fair compensation for songwriters amid challenges from radio broadcasters and other industries, earning recognition as a fierce advocate against music piracy. He received the Henry Hadley Medal in 1940 for advancing American music and remained active in industry organizations until his death on February 24, 1957.

Early life

Birth and upbringing

Gene Buck was born Edward Eugene Buck on August 7, 1885, in Detroit, Michigan. He grew up in the Corktown neighborhood of Detroit. Corktown, one of Detroit's oldest neighborhoods, provided the setting for his early years before he later pursued opportunities elsewhere.

Art education and early illustration career

Gene Buck studied at the Detroit Art Academy, an institution founded by artists Joseph Gies and Francis P. Paulus. This training provided him with a foundation in illustration that shaped his early professional work. Following his studies, Buck established himself as a sheet music cover illustrator, creating artwork for music publishers Ted Snyder, Edward H. Pfeiffer, and Jerome H. Remick. His designs were characterized by a distinctive personal touch, incorporating elements of Art Nouveau style. The quality of his work earned recognition from peers, with prominent illustrator Dean Cornwell later describing Buck as “the first artist I ever copied.” Buck pursued illustration into the 1910s, but he gave up the profession after 1914 due to failing eyesight. By 1910 he had already begun shifting toward lyric writing.

Songwriting beginnings

First lyrics and collaborations

Gene Buck began writing lyrics around 1910, marking his transition into songwriting while still active as an illustrator. He formed a key early collaboration with composer Dave Stamper, with whom he would write many songs over the years. Their partnership yielded Buck's first notable hit, "Daddy Has a Sweetheart and Mother Is Her Name," published in 1912. In 1911, Buck also illustrated the sheet music cover for Irving Berlin's "Everybody’s Doin’ It Now," showcasing his continued work in graphic arts alongside his emerging lyricist role. (note: wiki for reference only, not cited) Other early compositions from this period include "In the Cool of the Evening" (1912). Across his entire career, Buck ultimately wrote approximately 500 songs. These initial efforts laid the foundation for his later contributions to musical theater.

Transition from illustration

Gene Buck's prolific career as an illustrator of sheet music covers, during which he produced some of his finest work between 1904 and 1914, included a temporary loss of vision in 1907 due to retinal ulcers (from which he recovered after several months). More permanent vision problems later developed, preventing him from continuing in illustration after 1914 and prompting a full transition to lyric writing by the mid-1910s. Although he had already begun writing lyrics around 1910 while still active as an illustrator, the vision problems solidified songwriting as his primary occupation.

Ziegfeld Follies and Midnight Frolics

Principal lyricist role

Gene Buck served as the principal lyricist for Florenz Ziegfeld's annual Ziegfeld Follies revues, supplying lyrics for most of the twenty editions from the early 1910s to the mid-1920s. He originated and wrote much of the material for the Midnight Frolics, a nightly rooftop entertainment series at the New Amsterdam Theatre that ran from 1914 to 1922 and featured more intimate performances than the main Follies. In addition to his writing responsibilities, Buck functioned as a talent scout and artists-and-repertoire figure for Ziegfeld, identifying and developing performers and songs to fit the producer's vision for extravagant revues. Buck brought the noted designer Joseph Urban to Ziegfeld's productions around 1914, where Urban created innovative sets first for the Midnight Frolics and subsequently for the Follies, bringing a sophisticated European aesthetic and innovative staging that elevated the productions' visual impact. His lyrics during this era contributed to signature songs such as "Hello Frisco Hello" and "Tulip Time."

Key discoveries and contributions

Gene Buck distinguished himself as a keen talent scout for Florenz Ziegfeld's productions, particularly through the Midnight Frolics, where he identified and promoted several comedians who went on to major stardom. He introduced Will Rogers to audiences in the Midnight Frolic, bringing him from vaudeville despite Ziegfeld's initial objections to the cowboy's unkempt appearance. Ziegfeld later ordered Buck to fire Rogers due to doubts about the act, but Buck refused and encouraged Rogers to incorporate topical commentary on current events into his rope-twirling routine, which gradually won over audiences and persuaded Ziegfeld to retain him after initial controversies. Buck similarly provided early critical exposure to Ed Wynn, discovering the comedian in vaudeville and placing him in the Ziegfeld Follies, where Wynn began developing his distinctive manic style that would define his career.

ASCAP presidency

Election and tenure

Gene Buck was elected president of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) in 1925 and served until 1942. During his seventeen-year tenure, he guided the organization through the rapid rise of radio broadcasting, which substantially reduced revenue from sheet music sales as listeners turned to on-air performances rather than purchasing printed music. Buck advocated for the licensed use of music on radio, working to secure fair compensation for ASCAP members amid these industry shifts. A notable event during his presidency was his role as master of ceremonies for the “Carousel of American Music” concert at the Golden Gate International Exposition in San Francisco on September 24, 1940. This event, part of ASCAP's 25th anniversary celebrations, featured performances by ASCAP members and highlighted the society's catalog through symphonic and popular music presentations. Buck introduced performers, provided commentary on the works, and contributed to the program's organization and flow. He continued as a member of ASCAP's board of directors for the remainder of his life.

Radio-era challenges and boycott

During Gene Buck's leadership as president of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), the organization encountered substantial challenges arising from the expansion of radio broadcasting and federal oversight of its licensing monopoly. In the summer of 1940, the U.S. Department of Justice filed an antitrust suit against ASCAP under the Sherman Antitrust Act, charging the society with restraint of trade, monopolistic practices, and discrimination against nonmembers. A consent decree followed in February 1941 that imposed significant regulatory changes on ASCAP's licensing and operations. The most prominent conflict under Buck's tenure was the 1941 radio boycott. ASCAP sought a substantial increase in performance royalties from broadcasters, demanding approximately 7.5 percent of radio stations' advertising revenues—a roughly 70 percent rise over prior rates, with much of the increase targeted at major networks. When broadcasters rejected these terms, ASCAP music was taken off the air starting January 1, 1941, after existing contracts expired, prompting radio stations to rely heavily on the rival Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI) catalog. During the boycott, BMI subscribers outnumbered ASCAP's competitors by three to one among radio outlets. The dispute persisted for nearly a year, forcing ASCAP to settle in November 1941 for a reduced rate of 2.75 percent of advertising revenues—well below the demanded figure and ultimately less favorable than the previous arrangement. The boycott's relative failure, combined with the antitrust pressures and lost revenue during the standoff, contributed to internal upheaval at ASCAP, leading to Gene Buck's removal from the presidency in 1942.

Later career

Theater productions

In 1927, Gene Buck purchased the Waldorf Theatre in New York City, renaming it the Gene Buck Waldorf, where he produced and directed the musical comedy Take the Air. The production, with book and lyrics by Anne Caldwell and Gene Buck and music by Dave Stamper, opened on November 22, 1927, and featured performer Will Mahoney in a leading role. Buck also collaborated with violinist Mischa Elman and playwright Augustus Thomas on an operetta. Additionally, he co-wrote several comedies with humorist Ring Lardner. These efforts marked his shift toward independent producing and writing in the late 1920s.

Catholic Actors’ Guild presidency

Gene Buck served as president of the Catholic Actors' Guild of America from 1944 until his death in 1957. By February 1944, he was already acting in this capacity, as demonstrated when he presented an army field ambulance donated by the guild to the United States Army during a ceremony at the Hotel Astor in New York. He was re-elected president in June 1954, alongside Pat O'Brien as vice president, with other officers including Ed Beeler as recording secretary and various executive board members. Buck continued to hold the presidency through multiple terms until his passing.

Personal life

Marriage and family

Gene Buck married actress Helen Falconer in a Catholic ceremony in New York City on October 2, 1919. The wedding took place in the rectory of St. James' Church on Oliver Street and was officiated by Rev. Vincent de Paul McGean, a former chaplain of the Fire Department. The couple had been dating for three years prior to the marriage. The Bucks had two sons, Gene Buck, Jr. (also known as Eugene Falconer Buck) and George William Buck. Gene Buck, Jr. worked as an assistant on the 1949 film A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court and as a script supervisor on other productions in the late 1940s. Helen Falconer Buck died in 1968.

Residences and social connections

Gene Buck amassed considerable wealth through his work as a lyricist and producer for the Ziegfeld Follies, enabling him to maintain a luxurious lifestyle in Great Neck, Long Island. He resided on a three-acre estate in the Kensington section of Great Neck, which included his own orchard, truck garden, and vineyard. His home was the only private residence ever decorated by the noted designer Joseph Urban, who undertook the elaborate project as a wedding present, resulting in distinctive features such as an all-black dining room and an orange study. The scale and opulence of Buck's living room prompted his friend and fellow Great Neck resident Ring Lardner to famously describe it as "the Yale Bowl—with lamps." Buck actively engaged with the local community by hosting events at his residence, most notably the Great Neck Garden Party, which featured a sixty-foot stage and raised ten thousand dollars to equip the Vigilants volunteer fire department. He was a neighbor of F. Scott Fitzgerald in Great Neck, and it has been speculated that aspects of his affluent lifestyle and home may have influenced elements of Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby. Buck's social connections included friends such as Ring Lardner and newspaper columnist O. O. McIntyre, as well as an acquaintance of Louisiana Senator Huey P. Long.

Death and legacy

Death

Gene Buck died on February 24, 1957, at the age of 71 in Manhasset, New York. He passed away following emergency surgery at North Shore Hospital. At the time of his death, Buck was serving as president of the Catholic Actors' Guild of America.

Influence and recognition

Gene Buck bridged the era of sheet music illustration and the opulent Broadway revues of Florenz Ziegfeld to the contentious radio-age battles over performance rights, leaving a lasting mark on American popular music and theater. His innovative pictorial and colorful covers for sheet music, of which he created thousands in the early 1900s, established him as one of the chief molders of modern sheet music presentation before he transitioned into songwriting and production. In his long association with Ziegfeld, Buck contributed lyrics to twenty editions of the Ziegfeld Follies and helped originate the Midnight Frolics, while serving as Ziegfeld's principal male talent scout. He discovered or engaged such performers as Will Rogers, Ed Wynn, Eddie Cantor, and designer Josef Urban, playing a key role in assembling the star power and visual extravagance that defined the Follies era. Buck's most substantial influence emerged through his leadership in the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), which he helped found in 1914 and presided over as president from 1924 to 1941. He played a large role in establishing licensed use of music on radio and led ASCAP to a major Supreme Court victory for music protection in 1931. Committed to ensuring composers received fair compensation from public performances, he navigated the challenges of the emerging radio industry and was characterized as “the greatest exterminator of piracy since Decatur.” For his efforts in advancing and protecting American music amid these shifts, Buck received the Henry Hadley Medal in 1940 from the National Association of American Composers and Conductors.

References

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