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  • Biography
IMDbPro

Abe Lyman(1897-1957)

  • Actor
  • Music Department
  • Composer
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Abe Lyman
Abe Lyman was an extrovert bandleader with a penchant for organisation and marketing, nicknamed 'the Hurricane of Music'. He led several orchestras from the 1920's to the 40's, successfully catering to changing tastes in music. Trained as a drummer from the age of 14, Lyman worked predominantly in the cinema pits of theatre bands in the Chicago area until prompted by his brother Mike to move to the West Coast. He formed his first dance orchestra, Abe Lyman and His Californians, in Santa Monica in the early 1920's. Through appearances at the Ship Café in Venice, Lyman made connections with several of the more glamorous patrons, including film stars Bebe Daniels and Gloria Swanson. These connections in turn paved the way for more prestigious bookings to the Cocoanut Grove Ballroom at the Ambassador Hotel, where Lyman and his band remained in residence until 1926.

The popularity of the group enabled Lyman to recruit a number of quality musicians, including New Orleans 'hot' trumpeter Ray Lopez, Si Zentner, Jimmie Grier, Gus Arnheim, Jack Pleis and Yank Lawson. In the late 1920's, the band went on a successful tour, first nationally, then to Europe, where they appeared at the Kit Kat Club, the London Palladium and the Moulin Rouge. Upon their return, Lyman expanded his profile through appearances in early sound pictures and synchronizing work on three classic 'Merrie Melodies' soundtracks for the Warner Brothers animation unit in 1931. The band also recorded prolifically under the Brunswick, Decca and Bluebird labels. Best-known songs included "Mandalay", "Mary Lou", "After I Say I'm Sorry" (composed by Lyman) and the band's signature pieces "California, Here I Come" and "Moon Over America". Further exposure came through weekly national radio broadcasts on 'Waltz Time' (NBC) and 'Your Hit Parade' (CBS). Lyman relocated the orchestra from the West Coast to New York in 1933.

By the mid-1940's, the band began to fade in popularity and fewer recordings were made. Lyman left the music business altogether at the end of the decade, starting an insurance business with his wife Rose Blane (one of his former vocalists) in Beverly Hills and, subsequently, getting into restaurant management. Lyman died in October 1957 at the age of 60.
BornAugust 4, 1897
DiedOctober 23, 1957(60)
BornAugust 4, 1897
DiedOctober 23, 1957(60)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

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Known for

Robert De Niro and Mickey Rourke in Angel Heart : Aux portes de l'enfer (1987)
Angel Heart : Aux portes de l'enfer
7.2
  • Soundtrack("I Cried For You")
  • 1987
Olive Borden and Jack Pickford in Cité de la terreur (1928)
Cité de la terreur
6.6
  • Soundtrack("Ya Comin' Up Tonight, Huh?")
  • 1928
Les liens du sang (1995)
Les liens du sang
5.0
  • Soundtrack("I Cried for You (Now It's Your Turn to Cry for Me)")
  • 1995
La fête au ranch (1930)
La fête au ranch
4.7
  • Band Leader
  • 1930

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Actor



  • Alan Hale Jr., Candy Candido, Frankie Darro, Abe Lyman, Wingy Manone, Warren Mills, Noel Neill, Les Paul, June Preisser, Jess Stacy, Freddie Stewart, Joe Venuti, Jerry Wald, Jack McVea, and The Jam Session in Sarge Goes to College (1947)
    Sarge Goes to College
    6.2
    • Drums, The Jam Session
    • 1947
  • Eddie Heywood, Abe Lyman, June Preisser, Freddie Stewart, Harry 'The Hipster' Gibson, and Abe Lyman Orchestra in Junior Prom (1946)
    Junior Prom
    4.2
    • Orchestra Leader Abe Lyman
    • 1946
  • Sweet Surrender (1935)
    Sweet Surrender
    5.4
    • Abe Lyman, Band Leader
    • 1935
  • Tin Hat Harmony
    Short
    • Abe Lyman
    • 1934
  • Russ Columbo, Abe Lyman, and Walter Winchell in Nuits de Broadway (1933)
    Nuits de Broadway
    6.4
    • Abe Lyman - Orchestra Leader
    • 1933
  • Mr. Broadway (1933)
    Mr. Broadway
    6.2
    • Abe Lyman
    • 1933
  • Beauty on Broadway
    Short
    • Band Leader
    • 1933
  • Connee Boswell, Martha Boswell, Vet Boswell, and The Boswell Sisters in Rambling 'Round Radio Row #1 (1932)
    Rambling 'Round Radio Row #1
    6.5
    Short
    • Radio Band Leader (uncredited)
    • 1932
  • Barbara Stanwyck, Ricardo Cortez, and Monroe Owsley in Dix sous la danse (1931)
    Dix sous la danse
    6.5
    • Band Leader
    • 1931
  • La fête au ranch (1930)
    La fête au ranch
    4.7
    • Band Leader
    • 1930
  • Kay Johnson in Madame Satan (1930)
    Madame Satan
    6.3
    • Abe Lyman
    • 1930
  • Ann Dvorak, Cliff Edwards, Lola Lane, Mary Lawlor, Bessie Love, Gus Shy, Penny Singleton, and Stanley Smith in Good News (1930)
    Good News
    6.4
    • Abe Lyman
    • 1930
  • Nancy Carroll in Paramount on Parade (1930)
    Paramount on Parade
    5.6
    • Abe Lyman - Episode - 'Dance Mad'
    • 1930
  • Joe E. Brown, Georges Carpentier, and Winnie Lightner in Hold Everything (1930)
    Hold Everything
    7.1
    • Orchestra Leader (as Abe Lyman Orchestra)
    • 1930

Music Department



  • Charlie Barnet, June Preisser, Chuy Reyes, Freddie Stewart, and Charlie Barnet and His Orchestra in Freddie Steps Out (1946)
    Freddie Steps Out
    4.3
    • musical director
    • 1946
  • Eddie Heywood, Abe Lyman, June Preisser, Freddie Stewart, Harry 'The Hipster' Gibson, and Abe Lyman Orchestra in Junior Prom (1946)
    Junior Prom
    4.2
    • musical director
    • 1946
  • One More Time (1931)
    One More Time
    5.7
    Short
    • conductor
    • 1931
  • Smile, Darn Ya, Smile! (1931)
    Smile, Darn Ya, Smile!
    5.6
    Short
    • conductor
    • 1931
  • Lady, Play Your Mandolin! (1931)
    Lady, Play Your Mandolin!
    5.6
    Short
    • conductor
    • 1931
  • Barbara Stanwyck, Ricardo Cortez, and Monroe Owsley in Dix sous la danse (1931)
    Dix sous la danse
    6.5
    • music by (as Abe Lyman and His Band)
    • 1931

Composer



  • Charles Chaplin in La Ruée vers l'or (1925)
    Chaplin Today: The Gold Rush
    6.7
    TV Movie
    • Composer
    • 2003

Personal details

Edit
  • Alternative names
    • Abe Lyman and His Band
  • Born
    • August 4, 1897
    • Chicago, Illinois, USA
  • Died
    • October 23, 1957
    • Beverly Hills, California, USA

Did you know

Edit
  • Nickname
    • The Hurricane of Music

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