Mitchell Parish
Mitchell Parish (born Michael Hyman Pashelinsky; July 10, 1900 – March 31, 1993) was an American lyricist of Lithuanian origin, best known for crafting romantic and evocative lyrics for some of the 20th century's most enduring popular songs, including "Stardust," "Deep Purple," and "Sleigh Ride."[1][2] Born in Lithuania, Parish immigrated to the United States with his family in 1901 aboard the S.S. Dresden, initially settling in Louisiana before moving to New York City around age four, where he grew up on the Lower East Side of Manhattan.[1][2] His early exposure to recorded music, such as Edison cylinders, and influences like Irving Berlin sparked his interest in songwriting; by age 11, he was composing poetry and short stories, and at 18, he began working as a songplugger in the music industry.[2] Parish's career took off in the 1920s on New York's Tin Pan Alley, where he started as a staff lyricist for publisher Jack Mills, earning $12 a week while contributing to vaudeville acts and early radio shows.[1][3] His breakthrough came in 1929 with the lyrics for "Stardust," set to music by Hoagy Carmichael, which became one of the most recorded songs in history and a jazz standard.[1][2] Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, he collaborated with prominent composers such as Duke Ellington on "Sophisticated Lady," Peter de Rose on "Deep Purple," and Leroy Anderson on "Sleigh Ride," producing hits that spanned stage, screen, and big band eras.[3][2] Other notable works include "Sweet Lorraine," "Stars Fell on Alabama," "Moonlight Serenade" with Glenn Miller, and English lyrics for "Volare."[1][3] In addition to his songwriting, Parish lectured on music at universities and theaters, served on the ASCAP Writers Advisory Council, and authored the book For Those in Love about romantic song lyrics.[3] His contributions were recognized with induction into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1972 and the Johnny Mercer Award in 1986 for his lifetime achievements.[3] Parish continued working into his later years, passing away in Manhattan on March 31, 1993, from complications of a stroke at age 92, leaving a legacy of over 400 songs that remain staples in American popular music.[1]Early Life and Education
Birth and Family Background
Mitchell Parish was born on July 10, 1900, in Lithuania, which was then part of the Russian Empire, to a Jewish family. His birth name was Michael Hyman Pashelinsky, though some sources list it as Michael Hyman Peretz.[4][5][6] Parish's parents were Meyer Pashelinsky and Rose Rosenstock, both of whom were part of the Jewish community in Lithuania.[7][4] The family background was rooted in Eastern European Jewish traditions, including Yiddish language and religious observance, which shaped the early environment of Parish's infancy.[8][2] He had at least one sibling, a brother named Harry Parish.[7] This close-knit Jewish family emigrated to the United States when Parish was just seven months old.[5]Immigration and Childhood
Mitchell Parish, born Michael Hyman Pashelinsky to a Jewish family in Lithuania on July 10, 1900, emigrated with his family to the United States in 1901, arriving in New York on February 3 aboard the SS Dresden when he was just seven months old.[5][2] The family initially settled in Shreveport, Louisiana, where they lived until Parish was about four years old, around 1904.[5] This early period in the South exposed him to a blend of regional cultural elements, including the sounds of local music and the rhythms of everyday life in a growing American port city, which subtly influenced his developing sense of storytelling through words.[2] In 1904, the family relocated to New York City's Lower East Side, a densely packed immigrant enclave teeming with Eastern European Jewish newcomers facing economic hardship and the pressures of rapid assimilation into American society.[5] Life there was marked by poverty, with tenement housing, street vendors, and communal Yiddish theaters shaping daily existence amid the challenges of learning English and navigating urban labor markets.[2] Parish's family, like many others, grappled with cultural dislocation while embracing opportunities in the bustling metropolis. During this formative time, he began early exposure to American music through penny arcades featuring Edison cylinders and to literature via books that sparked his love for poetry and verse-writing by age 11.[2] The family's surname was eventually Americanized from Pashelinsky to Parish, and Parish's first name was later changed from Michael to Mitchell by a music publisher, reflecting broader patterns of immigrant adaptation to forge a distinctly American identity.[5][9]Academic Achievements
Mitchell Parish received his early education in the public schools of New York City, where he developed a strong foundation in literature and languages following his family's relocation from Shreveport, Louisiana, to the Lower East Side.[3] His scholarly aptitude became evident during this period, setting the stage for higher education pursuits.[5] In the early 1920s, Parish enrolled at Columbia University, initially focusing on law as a potential career path, though he ultimately dropped out without completing his degree.[4] During his time there, he began writing poetry, a pursuit that highlighted his emerging talent in verse and foreshadowed his later creative endeavors in lyrics.[5] This phase underscored his intellectual interests in literature and poetry, though professional ambitions shifted away from legal studies.[1] Later in life, Parish returned to academia and completed his studies at New York University (NYU), earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1950.[4] His exceptional academic performance culminated in election to the Phi Beta Kappa honor society in 1949, recognizing his outstanding scholarly achievements in the liberal arts, particularly in literature and poetry.[3] This honor affirmed his intellectual prowess and marked a significant pivot from formal legal training to a lifelong commitment to creative writing.[6]Professional Career
Vaudeville Beginnings
Mitchell Parish began his songwriting career around the age of 17 in 1917, crafting what were known as "special material" lyrics—custom songs and additional verses tailored for vaudeville performers to enhance their acts.[10] This early work immersed him in the fast-paced world of vaudeville, where he honed his skills by writing humorous and topical content that could be quickly adapted for live stage performances. His background in literature, developed through studies at Columbia University, provided a strong foundation for crafting evocative and poetic lyrics.[5] In 1922, Parish secured his first steady employment as a lyricist with music publisher Jack Mills, earning $12 per week to produce comedy lyrics specifically for vaudeville acts. He also took on the role of a song-plugger, actively promoting new compositions to performers and bandleaders in the bustling Tin Pan Alley scene, which helped him network and refine his understanding of what resonated with audiences. This hands-on involvement in revues and stage productions allowed Parish to learn the nuances of timing, rhythm, and audience engagement essential to popular songwriting.[10] Parish's professional debut came with his first published song, "Carolina Rolling Stone," released in 1921 with music by Eleanor Young and Harry D. Squires.[11] The track was recorded by the vaudeville duo Van and Schenck for Columbia Records in 1922, marking an early success that validated his emerging talent in the competitive entertainment industry.[1] Through these initial efforts in vaudeville, Parish built the practical experience that would shape his lifelong contributions to American song lyrics.[12]Breakthrough Hits and Collaborations
Mitchell Parish achieved his first major success in 1928 with the lyrics he wrote for "Sweet Lorraine," an instrumental composition by pianist Cliff Burwell that had been published the previous year.[9] The song, popularized by singer Rudy Vallee, became a hit and marked Parish's entry into the upper echelons of Tin Pan Alley songwriting.[13] Parish's collaboration with Hoagy Carmichael on "Stardust" solidified his reputation as a premier lyricist. Originally composed by Carmichael as an instrumental in 1927 and recorded that year with his college band, the piece gained new life in 1929 when Parish added romantic, nostalgic lyrics at the urging of publisher Irving Mills.[14] The vocal version transformed the upbeat jazz tune into a dreamy ballad, achieving widespread popularity through recordings by artists like Irving Mills' Hotsy Totsy Gang and later Bing Crosby, and it has since become one of the most recorded songs in history, with over 1,500 versions and frequent chart appearances across decades.[15] In the early 1930s, Parish contributed lyrics to several Duke Ellington compositions, including uncredited work where Irving Mills took official credit, such as "Sophisticated Lady" (1933).[16] These additions helped elevate the instrumentals into enduring vocal standards, blending Ellington's sophisticated jazz harmonies with Parish's poetic phrasing, though his involvement remained largely unrecognized at the time.[17] Parish continued his ascent with lyrics for "Deep Purple" in 1938, originally a 1933 piano piece by Peter De Rose that had sold well in sheet music form.[18] The song topped the charts in 1939 via recordings by Larry Clinton and Bea Wain, reaching number one on Billboard's predecessor lists and becoming a million-seller. That same year, he penned words for Glenn Miller's "Moonlight Serenade," an instrumental theme that Miller had developed for his orchestra; Parish's lyrics turned it into a romantic hit, peaking at number three on the charts and serving as Miller's signature tune.[19] In 1933, Parish collaborated with Carmichael on "One Morning in May," a gentle ballad, which gained traction through vocal renditions by artists like Dick Todd.[20] Throughout this period, Parish's signature approach involved crafting evocative, romantic lyrics for established instrumentals, often years after their creation, infusing them with emotional depth that broadened their appeal from jazz circles to mainstream audiences.[21] This method, honed from his vaudeville roots, allowed him to partner with leading composers like Carmichael, Ellington, and Miller, producing timeless hits that defined the swing era.[22]Broadway and Revue Contributions
Mitchell Parish contributed additional lyrics to the 1935 revue Continental Varieties, a short-lived production that ran for just six performances at the 44th Street Theatre in New York City.[23] His work in this show highlighted his emerging role as a featured lyricist in early Broadway revues, blending sophisticated wordplay with the era's lighthearted theatrical style.[24] In 1939, Parish provided lyrics for several songs in Lew Leslie's Blackbirds of 1939, an all-Black revue that opened at the Hudson Theatre and featured performers including Lena Horne, who sang "You're So Indifferent," a number co-written by Parish and composer Sammy Fain.[25] The production, which lasted only nine performances, showcased Parish's ability to craft material that supported dynamic live performances by emerging talents like Horne, integrating his lyrics into the revue's vibrant musical sequences.[26] Parish's contributions extended to Earl Carroll's Vanities of 1940, where he served as an additional lyricist for the revue's score, which ran for 25 performances at the New Amsterdam Theatre.[27] His lyrics enhanced the show's glamorous, spectacle-driven format, often tailored to highlight the performers' talents in a manner similar to his work aiding artists like Horne in earlier productions. While not directly credited to Cotton Club revues, Parish's songwriting style influenced the era's nightclub-to-stage transitions, with his pieces frequently adapted for live revue settings that blurred the lines between Harlem's cabaret scene and Broadway.[28] Later in his career, Parish provided English lyrics for Domenico Modugno's "Volare" in 1958, which found application in various theatrical and revue contexts, including international stage adaptations and musical performances that incorporated the song's dreamy narrative.[29] His involvement culminated in the 1987 revue Stardust, a Broadway production at the Biltmore Theatre that centered on 35 of his lyrics set to music by composers like Hoagy Carmichael and Duke Ellington, running for 101 performances and celebrating his legacy through a blend of songwriting and live theatrical elements.[30] This show exemplified Parish's enduring role in musical revues, where his words animated screen-to-stage transitions and performer-driven narratives.[31]Notable Works
Iconic Songs and Lyrics
Mitchell Parish's lyrics for "Stardust," added in 1929 to Hoagy Carmichael's 1927 instrumental melody, exemplify romantic nostalgia through vivid poetic imagery of lost love and lingering memories. The song evokes a dreamlike reverie where the melody itself becomes a haunting reminder of past intimacy, transforming an abstract tune into an emotional narrative of longing. Key verses include:Sometimes I wonder why I spendThis lyrical enhancement elevated the original instrumental, infusing it with universal themes of bittersweet romance that resonated across jazz and pop interpretations.[34] In 1950, Parish provided lyrics for Leroy Anderson's 1948 orchestral piece "Sleigh Ride," adapting the festive instrumental into a holiday classic that captures joyful winter escapism and communal warmth. The words emphasize playful imagery of snow-covered landscapes and shared merriment, making it ideal for choral arrangements and family sing-alongs, as seen in versions by the Andrews Sisters and later ensembles. Excerpted lyrics highlight this spirited adaptation:
The lonely nights dreaming of a song
The melody haunts my reverie
And I am once again with you
When our love was new
And each kiss an inspiration
But that was long ago
Now my consolation
Is in the stardust of a song
Beside the garden wall
When stars are bright
You are in my arms
The nightingale tells his fairy tale
A paradise where roses grew
Tho' you wander far away
While we are apart
In my heart's garden
There's a pathway to the stars above
That leads to your arms of love[32][33]
Just hear those sleigh bells jingling, ring ting tingling tooThe addition of Parish's text broadened the piece's appeal, turning it into a perennial Yuletide staple performed in choral settings worldwide.[37] Parish's 1939 lyrics for "Stairway to the Stars," composed by Matty Malneck and Frank Signorelli, employ celestial metaphors to convey aspirational romance and transcendent emotion, inviting listeners to envision love as a journey to ethereal heights. The words build on the instrumental's dreamy quality, using starry imagery to symbolize idealized union and escape from earthly bounds. Representative verses include:
Come on, it's lovely weather for a sleigh ride together with you
Outside the snow is falling and friends are calling "yoo hoo"
Come on, it's lovely weather for a sleigh ride together with you Giddy up, giddy up, giddy up, let's go
Look at the snow
Giddy up, giddy up, giddy up, let's go
Look at the show
We're riding in a wonderland of snow Giddy up, giddy up, giddy up, it's grand
Just holding your hand
We're gliding along with a song of a wintry fairyland
Our cheeks are nice and rosy and comfy cozy are we
We're snuggled up together like two birds of a feather would be
Let's take that road before us and sing a chorus or two
Come on, it's lovely weather for a sleigh ride together with you[35][36]
There's a lane of misty moonlight leading upward to the skyThis collaboration enriched the original melody, amplifying its evocative potential through Parish's poetic elevation of romantic yearning.[40] Another landmark contribution was Parish's 1938 lyrics for "Deep Purple," originally a 1933 piano instrumental by Peter De Rose. The song's lyrics evoke a passionate, enveloping romance likened to the flower's deep hue, blending sensuality and tenderness in a jazz standard that gained popularity through recordings by Artie Shaw and others. Key verses include:
And the night is like a velvet lullaby
Over the rim of the hill
Can't we sail away on a little dream
And settle high on the crest of a thrill Let's build a stairway to the stars
The lovely stairway to the stars
It would be heaven to climb to Heaven with you
And if we build a stairway to the stars
The lovely stairway to the stars
We could linger long in the rapture above
And touch the stars that shine
And kiss the night that is divine
For that is where love is
Where love is, where love is[38][39]
When the deep purple falls over sleepy garden wallsThis adaptation transformed the instrumental into a romantic ballad, cementing its place in popular music. Parish also penned the 1933 lyrics for Duke Ellington's "Sophisticated Lady," adding witty yet poignant words to the composer's melody (with Irving Mills credited). The song portrays a worldly woman with a mix of admiration and melancholy, becoming a cornerstone of the jazz repertoire. Excerpted lyrics:
Someone's sighin' someone's sighin' a lover's lullaby
When the deep purple falls over sleepy garden walls
Someone's sighin' someone's sighin' a lover's lullaby When the twilight brings the sunset's afterglow
Deep purple falling, lovers calling, sweethearts calling
I dream of you, deep purple, deep purple, dream of you[41][18]
They say into your early life romance cameThe lyrics enhanced the tune's elegance, making it an enduring Ellington classic. Across Parish's oeuvre, recurring themes of romance, nature, and raw emotion unify his contributions, often transforming instrumental works by composers like Carmichael, Anderson, De Rose, or Ellington into deeply personal expressions. His lyrics frequently draw on natural elements—stars, gardens, snow, purple—to mirror human feelings of nostalgia, joy, and intimacy, enhancing the originals' emotional depth without overpowering their musical essence. Other notable works include "Sweet Lorraine," "Stars Fell on Alabama," and "Moonlight Serenade" with Glenn Miller.[34][44] In 1965, Parish compiled a collection of his lyrics as poems in the book For Those in Love, published by The Richmond Organization in New York, offering readers intimate access to his romantic verse beyond musical contexts.[45]
And in this heart of yours burned a flame
A flame that flickered one day and died away
Then with a reverie you'd sit and sigh
And watch the clouds that drift on by
And wish that you could be a free bird in the sky But you're a sophisticated lady
A beautiful rose of the garden of love
You're a sophisticated lady
But you're nobody's fool, oh no[42][43]