Lee Pockriss:LEE POCKRISS, who wrote the music for mid-century pop hits like Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini, Catch a Falling Starand Johnny Angel, has died at his home in Bridgewater, Connecticut. He was 87.
Perry Como made a hit of the gentle ballad Catch a Falling Star("Put it in your pocket/Save it for a rainy day"), which Pockriss wrote with Paul Vance, in 1957. Shelley Fabares introduced Pockriss and Lynn Duddy's wistful love song Johnny Angel("I dream of him and me/And how it's gonna be") through her teenage character on the family sitcom The Donna Reed Showin 1962.
But in between, Pockriss struck a very different note in another collaboration with Vance: Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini,a novelty number about a young woman "afraid to come out of the water" and be seen in the revealing swimsuit she was wearing. Her reluctance was understandable, because the navel-revealing bikini was still considered relatively shocking outside Hollywood and the French Riviera. In fact, the song has been credited with helping it gain acceptance.
Brian Hyland had a number one hit with the song in 1960, and it was so inescapable as part of popular culture that a Hollywood film, Billy Wilder's One, Two, Three(1961), affectionately lampooned it with a scene in which East German soldiers tortured a character (played by Horst Bucholz) by forcing him to listen to the song repeatedly.
Pockriss also worked in musical theatre for decades. He wrote the music and Anne Croswell wrote the lyrics for the 1963 Broadway show Tovarich, for which Vivien Leigh won the Tony Award for best actress in a musical. The two also collaborated on Ernest in Love, a musical version of Oscar Wilde's Importance of Being Earnest, first produced off-Broadway in 1960 and revived by the Irish Repertory Company in 2009; Conrack, based on Pat Conroy's book, which had an off-Broadway production in 1987; and Bodo, about a 12th-century goat herd, produced at the Promenade Theater in 1983.
With the lyricist Carolyn Leigh and Hugh Wheeler of Sweeney Todd, Pockriss created Gatsby, a musical based on F Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby, in 1969. It was best known as an unproduced work, but this year it received two concert performances as part of the New York Musical Theater Festival.
David Rooney, reviewing it in the New York Times, said that the songs succeeded in "evoking Fitzgerald's characters, spreading a beguiling carpet of melancholy beneath all that jazz age revelry".
Pockriss also wrote songs for Sesame Street,including My Polliwog Ways, sung by Kermit the Frog.
Lee Julian Pockriss was born in 1924 in Brooklyn, the son of Joseph and Ethel Price Pockriss. He attended Erasmus Hall High School and Brooklyn College, and studied musicology at New York University. He served in the US air force during the second World War as a cryptographer.
He is survived by his wife, Sonja, and a brother, Harold.
Lee Julian Pockriss: born January 20th, 1924; died, November 14th, 2011.