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Tom Lehrer, mathematician turned musical satirist, dies aged 97

Tom Lehrer, whose biting songs skewered American politics and culture in the 1950s and 1960s, has died at his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He was 97.

A Harvard‑trained mathematician, Lehrer wrote his first parody to entertain classmates, then captured a national following with albums such as Songs by Tom Lehrer and That Was the Year That Was. Over a brief seven‑year burst he produced just 37 songs, yet their sharp wit and gleeful irreverence made a lasting impact on comedy, Broadway and protest music.

From prodigy to provocateur

Born in New York City on 9 April 1928, Thomas Andrew Lehrer enrolled at Harvard at 15 and began penning musical spoofs between calculus assignments. Early favourites included “The Elements”, which set the periodic table to a Gilbert and Sullivan tune, and “Fight Fiercely, Harvard”, a mock pep song that gently poked fun at Ivy League swagger.

After a two‑year stint in the United States Army, Lehrer recorded homemade albums that circulated on college campuses. His lyrics tackled racism in “I Wanna Go Back to Dixie”, Cold War anxiety in “We Will All Go Together When We Go” and Boy Scout hypocrisy in “Be Prepared”. Time magazine grouped him with groundbreaking stand‑up comics Lenny Bruce and Mort Sahl as part of a new wave of “sick” humorists challenging post‑war conformity.

Reluctant celebrity

Lehrer never embraced show‑business trappings. He continued graduate work in mathematics, taught at Harvard, MIT and the University of California, Santa Cruz, and often vanished from the spotlight for years. By the mid‑1960s he had largely stopped performing, though his songs lived on through revues such as Tomfoolery produced by Cameron Mackintosh in 1980.

“I am not a professional singer, I am merely an amateur mathematician,” Lehrer once quipped, underplaying the sophistication of his wordplay and melodies. Admirers ranging from Randy Newman to Lin‑Manuel Miranda cite him as an influence.

Legacy of a limited catalogue

Lehrer’s entire output fits on two compact discs, yet lines like “Pollution, pollution, you can use the latest toothpaste” still feel eerily current. In 2020 he placed his lyrics and sheet music into the public domain, inviting new generations to adapt and perform them freely.

Lehrer is survived by cousins and a devoted circle of former students and friends. A private funeral is planned. In lieu of flowers, fans might heed his own sardonic advice from “National Brotherhood Week” and “be nice to people who are inferior to you”, if only for a week.

Belaid S

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