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Freethought of the Day
April 8, 2009

On this date in 1978, the Freedom From Religion Foundation was launched as a national organization.

There are 2 entries for this date: Yip Harburg and Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon.

E.Y. (Yip) Harburg

On this date in 1896, lyricist and social justice poet E.Y. (Yip) Harburg, known as "Broadway's social conscience," was born of Russian-Jewish immigrant parents. Raised in poverty on Manhattan's Lower East Side, he later attended City College of New York, and struck up a lifelong friendship with classmate Ira Gershwin. Harburg began writing lyrics for Broadway revues in the 1930s, including the classic anthem of the depression, "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?" (with composer Jay Gorney, 1932) and "April in Paris" (with Vernon Duke, 1932). Harburg conceived and wrote lyrics for book musicals with political and social themes, including "Hooray for What!" (1937, with an anti-war theme, music by Harold Arlen) and "Bloomer Girl" (1944, feminist, anti-racist theme, music by Arlen). He co-wrote the book (with Fred Saidy) and wrote the lyrics for "Finian's Rainbow" (1947, music by Burton Lane), which, despite its slyly subversive message, won the Henderson and George Jean Nathan Awards for Best Musical Comedy. He called himself a "rebel by birth." "The House of God never had much appeal for me. Anyhow, I found a substitute temple--the theatre," Harburg said (Who Put the Rainbow in the Wizard of Oz?, 1993, by Harold Meyerson and Ernie Harburg).

His most famous Hollywood work was in "The Wizard of Oz" (1939, music by Arlen) with his Academy Award-winning song, "Over the Rainbow." In 1962 he and Arlen scored the animated feature "Gay Purr-ee" (featuring the voice of Judy Garland). From 1951 to 1961 during the House Un-American Activities Committee investigations and the McCarthy hearings, Harburg was "blacklisted" for his political views from film, television and radio but kept working on Broadway. Harburg wrote the lyrics to over 600 songs with a variety of composers, including: "It's Only a Paper Moon" (1932, with Arlen), and "Happiness Is Just a Thing Called Joe" (1943, Arlen, from the film "Cabin in the Sky"). With Lane, he wrote "Old Devil Moon" and "How Are Things in Glocca Morra?" The team of Arlen and Harburg also wrote Groucho Marx's signature song, "Lydia, the Tattooed Lady" (1939, from "At the Circus"). His volume of satiric light verse, Rhymes for the Irreverent (1965), was reissued in 1999. A second volume, At This Point in Rhyme (1976) was reissued in 2000 under the title More Rhymes for the Irreverent. Yip Harburg died at age 84. D. 1981. (For more detail, see The theater was his temple: Yip Harburg, Secular Songwriter.)

Do Unto Others?

'Love thy neighbor as thyself?'
Hide that motto on the shelf!
Let it lie there, keep it idle
Especially if you're suicidal.

Realist

'For what we are about to receive,
Oh Lord, 'tis Thee we thank,'
Said the Cannibal as he cut a slice
Of the missionary's shank.
-- Yip Harburg, Rhymes for the Irreverent (1965). His two rhymebooks are available for sale from FFRF at our bookstore.


Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon

On this date in 1827, Barbara Leigh Smith (later Bodichon) was born in England. Her father Benjamin Leigh Smith was a dissenter, Universalist and benefactor to the poor. Smith had five children with a young milliner whom he never married, possibly out of principle. Barbara's working class mother died young. The children grew up in an egalitarian home, and Barbara received an inheritance at 21, just like her brothers. No college admitted women at the time, but she and a female friend took an unprecedented walking tour of Europe unchaperoned. Barbara was a lifelong friend of novelist and freethinker George Eliot, who modeled "Romola" after her, and associated with many artists and intellectuals, including freethinker G.J. Holyoake. (Barbara's cousin Florence Nightingale snubbed her, evidently because of her "illegitimate" status.) In 1854, Barbara wrote a summary of laws concerning women, which became a major catalyst of the British feminist movement, and resulted in the adoption of the Married Women's Property Bill in 1857. Barbara, who had met Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott, also petitioned Parliament for suffrage. She founded Girton College, which admitted women, endowing it with over £11,000. D. 1891.

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Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor. © Freedom From Religion Foundation. All rights reserved.