THIS IS A LISTING FOR ONE MINT NEVER HINGED ORIGINAL GUM PLATE BLOCK OF FOUR:
THE ABOVE IMAGE(S) ARE OF THE ACTUAL STAMP(S) YOU WILL RECEIVE IF YOU ARE THE WINNING BIDDER
Please peruse my other philatelic materials available for your collection!
Shipping & Handling:
Please pay for items within 7 days.
Any items left unpaid after 11 days will be handled automatically by eBay according to their unpaid item policy.
Berlin was born Israel Beilin on May 23, 1888, in Russia. He was one of eight children of a Russian-Jewish cantor. In 1893, his family moved to New York City in search of a better life.
After his father died, Berlin began selling newspapers to help support the family. He would hear songs from outside the saloons and restaurants and began singing them while selling his papers. Soon, he found people gave him money for his singing, and he realized he wanted to become a singing waiter. Though he had little schooling and no formal musical training, he left home to follow his dream and started out singing in restaurants. By the time he was 18, he got a job as a singing waiter in Chinatown.
Berlin started out singing popular songs but soon started improvising. In 1907, he published his first song, “Marie from Sunny Italy,” for which he received 37¢ in royalties. A printer’s error listed his name as “Irving Berlin,” and he kept the name after that. Eventually, Berlin’s restaurant performances earned him the attention of a music publisher and he was hired to write music.
In the coming years, Berlin began to abandon ragtime for love songs. His first ballad, “When I Lost You,” was an instant hit and sold over one million copies. Berlin also began writing songs for the new dance crazes, such as the “grizzly bear,” the “chicken walk,” and the foxtrot, as well as for the Hawaiian dance craze. At this point, he was writing several new songs every week.
Among the songs Berlin wrote for the show but didn’t use was “God Bless America.” He thought it was too patriotic and set it aside. Then, 20 years later, Kate Smith’s manager asked Berlin for a song to mark the 20th anniversary of the end of World War I. She sang the song on her weekly radio show that year and it lifted a nation weary of depression and became a rallying cry during World War II. A movement began to make the song America’s national anthem. Berlin donated his royalties from the song to benefit the Boy and Girl Scouts of America.
Over the course of his 60-year career, Berlin wrote about 1,500 songs. He also produced the scores for 19 Broadway shows and 18 Hollywood movies – 18 of his songs were nominated for Academy Awards. Berlin once said he wanted his music to “reach the heart of the average American,” and his legacy shows he did that. Berlin died in his sleep on September 22, 1989. The lights were dimmed on Broadway the following night in his honor.