Prolific, celebrated Broadway and Hollywood composer

Browse Song Catalog: ASCAP

Betty Comden

Inductee
Born/Died
Inducted

Teamed with Adolph Green, the longest running creative partnership in theatre history; gave us "New York, New York" and "The Party's Over"

* Betty Comden was also the 1991 recipient of The Johnny Mercer Award, the SHOF’s highest honor

The team of Betty Comden and Adolph Green, the longest running creative partnership in theatre history, began writing and performing their own satirical comic material in a group called "The Revuers," which included the late Judy Holliday. They went onto collaborate with Leonard Bernstein and Jerome Robbins on what was the first show for all of them, "On The Town." Also with Mr. Bernstein they did the score for "Wonderful Town." With Jule Styne they wrote the book and/or lyrics for "Bells Are Ringing," "Hallelujah, Baby," "Do Re Mi," "Subways Are For Sleeping," "Peter Pan," and others, wrote the book for "Applause," and book and lyrics for "on The Twentieth Century" and "A Doll's Life." Four of these, "Applause," "Hallelujah, Baby," "Wonderful Town," and "On The Twentieth Century," won them five Tony Awards, and "A Doll's Life," a Tony nomination.

Betty Comden was born Elizabeth Cohen in Brooklyn, New York on May 3, 1919. In 1938, soon after her graduation from New York University, where she studied drama, she started making the rounds of theatrical agents. While she didn’t find an agent, she did get acquainted with Green, who was also searching for a theatrical agent.

Their many film musicals include "Singin' In The Rain," "The Band Wagon," "On The Town," "Bells Are Ringing," "It's Always Fair Weather," "Good News," and "The Barkleys Of Broadway." Two of these, "The Band Wagon" and "It's Always Fair Weather," received Academy Award Nominations, and those two plus "On The Town" won the Screen Writer's Award. "Singin' In The Rain" was recently voted one of the ten best American films ever made and, by a vote of international film critics conducted by the prestigious magazine "Sight and Sound," it was chosen as Number Three of the ten best films of all time.

As performers, they appeared in "On The Town," and later did an evening at the Golden Theatre, "A Party With Betty Comden and Adolph Green," comprised of material from their own shows and movies, and from their act, "The Revuers." In 1977 they did a new version of "A Party" to unanimous acclaim at the Morosco Theatre, and toured with it. "A Party" received an Obie Award when it was first performed.

Both Comden and Green are members of the Council of the Dramatists' Guild, have been elected to the Theatre Hall of Fame and have received the Mayor of New York's Certificate of Excellence. Miss Comden received the Woman of the Year Award from the Alumni Association of New York University. She appeared in the film "Garbo Talks," and on the stage in the Playwrights' Horizons production of Wendy Wasserstein's "Isn't It Romantic?"

Highlights from the Comden-Green catalog include “Just In Time," "The Party's Over," "Make Someone Happy," "New York, New York," "Neverland," "It's Love," "Lonely Town" and "Some Other Time."

Stars they have written for in their musicals and films include Gene Kelly, Fred Astaire, Lauren Bacall, Rosalind Russell, Judy Holliday, Mary Martin, Phil Silvers, Carol Burnett and Nancy Walker.

In 1991, Comden and Green reunited with Cy Coleman to write the lyrics for the Tony Award winning Broadway success: The Will Rogers Follies.

Comden died in 2006.

Honored with SHOF’s highest accolade, the Johnny Mercer Award, in 1991

Links