Selected film scores Source: •
Animal Crackers (1930) •
Horse Feathers (1932) •
Duck Soup (1933) •
Bright Lights (1935) •
Walking on Air (1936) •
Wake Up and Dream (1946) •
Three Little Words (1950)
Selected screenplays Source: •
Ziegfeld Follies of 1918 (1918) -
revue - featured songwriter •
Helen of Troy, New York (1923) -
musical - co-
composer and co-
lyricist •
No Other Girl (1924) - musical - co-composer and co-lyricist •
Holka Polka (1925) - musical - co-
book-
editor •
The Ramblers (1926) - musical - co-composer, co-lyricist and co-bookwriter •
Lucky (1927) - musical - co-bookwriter • ''
The Five O'Clock Girl'' (1927) - musical - composer • ''She's My Baby'' (1928) - musical - co-bookwriter •
Good Boy (1928) - musical - co-composer and co-lyricist •
Animal Crackers (1928) - musical - co-composer and co-lyricist •
Top Speed (1929) - musical - co-
producer and co-bookwriter •
High Kickers (1941) - musical - co-composer, co-lyricist and co-bookwriter •
Fosse (1998) - revue - featured songwriter for "
Who's Sorry Now?" from
All That Jazz 1979
Notable songs Source: • "The Sheik of Avenue B" (1922) • "
Who's Sorry Now?" (1923), Kalmar and Ruby's first big hit • "
I Wanna Be Loved by You" (1928), a hit for
Helen Kane, known as the "Boop-boop-a-doop girl", and sung by
Marilyn Monroe in the film
Some Like It Hot • "
Hooray for Captain Spaulding" from
Animal Crackers (1928): became Groucho Marx's signature tune. • "I Love You So Much" (1928) •
"Three Little Words" (1930), their biggest hit. •
"Nevertheless" (1931), a hit for
Jack Denny (vocal by Bob May) that year, later done by
The Mills Brothers and
Frank Sinatra • "I'm Against It", "I Always Get My Man" and "Everyone Says I Love You" from
Horse Feathers (1932) • "Hail, Hail Freedonia" from
Duck Soup (1933) • "What a Perfect Combination" (1932), lyrics by Kalmar and
Irving Caesar, music by Ruby and
Harry Akst, written for the
Broadway show The Kid, starring
Eddie Cantor • "
A Kiss to Build a Dream On" (1935), their last hit • "Omaha, Nebraska" (1951), lyrics and vocal by Groucho Marx • "Show Me a Rose" (1952), Groucho Marx recording • "
The Real McCoys" (1957-1963), television theme
Selected bibliography •
The Kalmar-Ruby Song Book Random House (1936) B009X7KK6K Introduction by
Ben Hecht with contributions by
Groucho Marx,
Robert Benchley,
Moss Hart,
Irving Berlin,
Marc Connelly,
James Kevin McGuinness,
Franklin P. Adams and
Nunnally Johnson. •
Songs My Mother Never Sang Random House (1943) B002B9VFCA •
The Four Marx Brothers in Monkey Business and Duck Soup Simon & Schuster (1973) 978-0671212735
S.J. Perelman;
Will B. Johnstone;
Bert Kalmar; and Harry Ruby ==Death==