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Peggy Lee, Meredith Willson named to Songbook Hall of Fame

9/8/2020 12AM

Composer, playwright, bandleader and broadcaster Meredith Willson and singer, songwriter and actress Peggy Lee will be celebrated with a series of online events.


Online induction celebration begins this week

 

CARMEL, IN – The Great American Songbook Foundation is honoring singer-songwriter Peggy Lee and The Music Man creator Meredith Willson as the 2020 inductees to its Great American Songbook Hall of Fame.

 

The Songbook Foundation will celebrate the legacies of these artists with two weeks of livestreamed tributes, discussions and other activities shared through its Facebook page and YouTube channel.

 

Peggy Lee Induction Week takes place Sept. 10-12, kicking off with a private visit to the Peggy Lee Archives led by her granddaughter Holly Foster Wells. The full schedule is available at TheSongbook.org/PeggyLeeHOF.

 

Meredith Willson Induction Week, scheduled Sept. 17-19, includes a tour of the Songbook Archives’ Meredith Willson Collection with Archivist Lisa Lobdell and Songbook Foundation Founder Michael Feinstein, as well as a presentation by British musicologist Dominic McHugh on Willson’s life and legacy. The full schedule is available at TheSongbook.org/MeredithWillsonHOF.

 

The Songbook Hall of Fame celebrates composers, lyricists and performers who have created the soundtrack of our lives with their contributions to American popular song. Hall of Fame inductees are selected based on factors including musical influence on other artists, length and depth of career and body of work, innovation and superiority in style and technique, and overall musical excellence. Previous inductees have included Cole Porter, Nat King Cole, George and Ira Gershwin, Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra and Liza Minnelli.

 

This is the centennial year for Lee, who was born Norma Deloris Egstrom in 1920 and died in 2002. She rose to fame singing with Benny Goodman’s big band and went on to record decades of jazz and pop hits, including “Fever” and “Is That All There Is?” She also was an actress, composer and writer of over 200 songs, combining those talents to co-write six songs and voice four characters in the 1955 Disney classic Lady and the Tramp.

 

Willson (1902-1984) was a noted bandleader, broadcaster and songwriter (“It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas”) well before he cemented his legacy as the playwright and composer behind The Music Man. The Tony Award-winning 1957 Broadway smash has spawned countless revivals and adaptations and remains one of the most popular musicals in American theater. His family’s The Music Man Foundation entrusted his personal papers – including correspondence with presidents and other famous figures – to the Great American Songbook Archives & Library, where they are being digitized for online research access.

 

About the Great American Songbook Foundation

The mission of the Great American Songbook Foundation, founded in 2007 by five-time Grammy® Award nominee Michael Feinstein, is to inspire and educate by celebrating the timeless standards of pop, jazz, Broadway and Hollywood. Headquartered at the Center for the Performing Arts in Carmel, Indiana, the Foundation advances this rich musical legacy by curating a vast archive of items representing its creators, performers and publishers; operating a multimedia exhibit gallery; overseeing the Songbook Hall of Fame; offering programs for the public and research opportunities for scholars and artists; and providing educational opportunities for student musicians, including the annual Songbook Academy® summer intensive. The Foundation is a Cultural Affiliate of the Los Angeles-based Grammy Museum®. More information is available at TheSongbook.org.