Baby It's Cold Outside--Johnny Mercer and Margaret Whiting
It is the perfect time to consider
another of those pop songs that
really have nothing to do with Christmas
but have become staples of holiday play
lists. Among the most enduring of
these winter songs is the playful duet Baby
it’s Cold Outside. But lately
the perineal favorite has been
caught up in controversy.
The song had its origin in 1944 when
Frank Loesser, a Hollywood lyricist turned composer wrote it as a novelty to sing at cocktail parties with his wife
Lynn Garland. At the time Loesser
was in the Army Airforce based in California where he penned songs for war effort broadcasts and moral boosting films
including Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition, What Do You Do in the Infantry
and others. Some of the songs also made
it to Hollywood films like They’re Either Too Young or Too Old
for the 1943 film Thank Your Lucky Stars.
Frank Loesser and his wife Lynn Garland entertained Hollywood pals with their personal song, Baby it's Cold Outside.
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Baby
it’s Cold Outside proved so popular among their
friends that Lynn Garland objected to offers to buy “our song.” But after the success of Loesser’s first Broadway musical, Where’s Charley staring Ray
Bolger in 1948, the offers became too lucrative
to turn down. He sold the song to MGM which featured it in the 1949 film Neptune’s
Daughter in which it was performed by Ricardo Montalbán and Esther
Williams and in a role reversal
version by Red Skelton and Betty Garrett. The song was the highlight of the film
and went on to win the Academy Award
for Best Song.
That year in addition to versions by
Montalbán and William and by Loesser and his wife—billed as Mrs. Frank Loesser—almost
a dozen covers were released
including four that climbed into the upper reaches of the pop charts and stayed there for weeks—Don Cornell and Laura Leslie
with the Sammy Kaye Orchestra, Ella
Fitzgerald and Louis Jordan, Dinah
Shore and Buddy Clark, and Johnny Mercer and Margaret Whiting.
Baby it's Cold Outside performed by Esther Williams and Ricardo Montalban won the Oscar for Best Song in 1949.
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Since then the song has been covered
or included in TV shows countless
times featuring a wide variety of duet
partners. Among the most noted
versions were by Dean Martin with a female chorus and later with various
partners on his TV series and specials, Steve
Lawrence and Eydie Gorme, Brian
Setzer and Ann-Margret, Zooey Deschanel and Leon Redbone, Willie Nelson and Norah Jones, Lady Gaga and Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood.
The song was always considered a bit
coyly risqué but good hearted fun.
But in the #MeToo era it has drawn criticism that it is essentially a date rape song and a classic example of
a man refusing to accept a woman’s no. The main point of contention is the
woman’s line, “say what’s in this drink?” and protests that she has to go
home. In response WDOK in Cleveland announced
last year that it was removing all versions of the song from its holiday playlist.
Some other US stations followed and in Canada it was banned by Bell Media, CBC Radio, and Rogers Media
which together represent the bulk of Canadian stations.
The bans have stirred a veracious backlash. Right
wingers, or course, paint them as an example of the infamous but
non-existent War on Christmas
despite the fact the song has nothing to do with Christmas. Other fans of the song are simply vexed that it has fallen victim to political correctness, whatever that
is.
Susan
Loesser, the daughter of the composer, has
leapt to the defense of her parents and the song insisting that it was never a
date rape song. She said the controversy
actually began when Comedian Bill Cosby was
accused of drugging and raping
scores of women over decades. Both Saturday
Night Live and South Park featured skits with Cosby
crooning the song to a victim.
But Susan pointed out that in 1944
“People used to say ‘what’s in this drink, as a joke. You know, ‘this drink is
going straight to my head so what’s in this drink?’ Back then it didn’t mean
‘you drugged me.’” Others noted that
despite the woman’s initial demurrals
in the end she wants to stay.
Dean Martin’s now 70-year-old
daughter Deana Martin also defended
the song and insisted that she would continue to perform it in her own act.
John Legend and Kelly Clarkson stirred controversy with an updated adaptation of Baby It's Cold Outside for the #MeToo era.
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This year John Legend, as hot a male
singer/songwriter as there is and an outspoken progressive, stirred the pot by penning updated lyrics that answer
the objection. In a duet with another mega-star, Kelly Clarkson, they were all over the airways in December from The Voice, Clarkson’s new
day time talk show, late night gab
fests, to multiple holiday specials. Legend’s version made multiple changes. Clarkson’s lines are in standard type, Legend’s in italics,
and both in bold.
I really can’t stay (Baby, it’s cold outside)
I’ve got to go away (But, I can call you a ride)
This evening has been (I’m so glad you that you dropped
in)
So very nice (Time spent with you is paradise)
My mom will start to worry (I’ll call the car and tell
him to hurry)
My daddy will be pacing the floor (Wait, what are
you still livin’ home for?)
So, really, I’d better scurry (Your driver, his name is
Murray)
But maybe just a half a drink more (Oh, we’re both
adults, so who’s keepin’ score?)
What will my friends think? (Well I think they should
rejoice)
If I have one more drink? (It’s your body and your
choice)
Ooh you really know how (Your eyes are like starlight
now)
To cast a spell (One look at you and then I fell)
I ought to say, “No, no, no, sir” (Then you really ought
to go, go, go)
At least I’m gonna say that I tried (Well, Murray, he
just pulled up outside)
Chorus: Kelly Clarkson, John Legend & Both
I really can’t stay
I understand, baby
Baby, it’s cold outside
I simply should go (Text me when you get home)
On I’m supposed to say no (Mm, I guess that’s
respectable)
This welcome has been (I’ve been lucky that you dropped
in)
So nice and warm (But you better go before it storms)
My sister will be suspicious (Well, gosh your lips look
delicious)
My brother will be there at the door (Oh, he loves my
music, baby, I’m sure)
My gossipy neighbors for sure (I’m a genie, tell me what
your wish is)
But maybe just a cigarette more (Oh, that’s somethin’ we
should probably explore)
I’ve got to get home (Oh, baby, I’m well aware)
Say, lend me a coat (Oh, keep it girl, I don’t care)
You’ve really been grand (I feel it when you touch my
hands)
But don’t you see? (I want you to stay, it’s not up to
me)
There’s bound to be talk tomorrow (Well, they can talk,
but what do they know?)
At least there will be plenty implied (Oh, let them mind
their business, and go)
[The driver ] Ma’am, I really can’t stay.
Chorus:
Baby, just go
It’s cold, baby
It’s cold, baby
But, ooh, I don’t wanna go
It’s cold outside
Activists applauded the new version,
but Legend was slammed by both the usual right-wing suspects and several
musicians and performers who defended Loesser’s original song. Legend defended himself in several
interviews. “The song was supposed to be
silly. It wasn’t supposed to be preachy
at all. I never disparaged the old version.”
And:
People thinking we’ve gone too far speaking up for a woman’s
right to not get raped or sexually harassed, when some would argue we’ve not
gone far enough, when we have an admitted sexual assailant in the highest
office in the land. People think that because some people have lost their jobs,
or have been expelled from Hollywood, like [Harvey] Weinstein, that we’ve gone
too far. I don’t agree. But people wanted the Baby It’s Cold Outside war to be a proxy war for all that.
I understand the objections to the
song and am loathe to dismiss them out of hand, but I also believe that songs
can be sung and considered for the times in which they were composed. A hell of a lot of music from classic opera to county and western cry-in-your-beer juke box favorites, to blues and rap would have to be sacrificed along with this novelty song. And I
am just not a fan of censorship in
general.
But you be the judge.
Johnny Mercer and Margaret Whiting in a Capitol Records recording studio.
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My personal favorite version of the
song was the one by Johnny Mercer and Margaret Whiting. Mercer was a prolific song writer and a
popular singer who founded and ran Capitol
Records in Los Angeles. Twenty-four year old Whiting was a Mercer protégé and one of the first artists he
signed to his new label.
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