“I’m
tired of keeping up with the economic trends
And
the universal problems that perplex;
Oh,
tell me where I can find a man who condescends
To
show an int’rest in sex.”—"The Economic Situation," music by George
Gershwin, lyrics by Ira Gershwin, in Ira Gershwin: Selected Lyrics, edited
by Robert Kimball (2009)
For The
Ziegfeld Follies of 1936, George Gershwin (1998-1937) and brother Ira (1896-1983)
had “Miss Gherkin” (a young Eve Arden) and a group of chorus girls lament the
terrible impact of hard times on their love lives. It’s not so much that
anxiety and overwork lacerate the male libido, but rather that politically
active intellectuals now show no interest in them whatsoever.
I really had to chuckle, though, when I came across
this couplet:
“You’re
looking your best, but he hasn’t noticed
For
you’re up to your neck in the Taxpayers’ Protest.”
How
did the Gershwins anticipate the Tea Party movement of the last decade?
Leave
it to the wise, witty and brilliant brothers to make the nation chuckle even
during the Great Depression.
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