Composer, songwriter ("I'll be Home for Christmas", "The White Cliffs
of Dover", "I'm Gonna Live Till I Die") and architect, educated at
Townsend Harris Hall, Juilliard (on scholarship), at City College of
New York, and in private music study with Leopold Auer and Samuel
Gardner. He was a practising architect and conducted his own orchestra
on radio and in theatres. Coming to Hollywood in 1943 as a freelance
architect, he also wrote the stage score for "Seventeen". Joining ASCAP
in 1934, his other popular-song compositions include "Puleeze, Mr.
Hemingway", "I Never Mention Your Name", "Too Much in Love", "Apple
Blossoms and Chapel Bells", "I Cross My Fingers", "After All It's
Spring", and "Never a Dream Goes By".