Lew Pollack


Lew Pollack was an American song composer and musician active during the 1920s and the 1930s.

Career

Pollack was born in New York City, where he went to DeWitt Clinton High School and was active as a boy soprano in a choral group headed by Walter Damrosch.
Starting out as a singer and pianist in vaudeville acts, he began writing theme music for silent films before collaborating with others on popular songs. In 1914, he wrote "That's a Plenty", a rag that became an enduring Dixieland standard.
Pollack composed the music for several Broadway musicals, including The Whirl of New York and The Mimic World, among others.
Among his best-known songs are "Charmaine" and "Diane" with Ernö Rapée; "Miss Annabelle Lee"; "My Yiddishe Momme" with Jack Yellen, made famous by Sophie Tucker; "Two Cigarettes in the Dark"; "Alone with You" ; and "At the Codfish Ball". He also collaborated with Paul Francis Webster, Sidney Clare, Sidney Mitchell, and Ned Washington, among others. He died of a heart attack in Hollywood at age 50.

Recognition

Lew Pollack was elected to the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970.