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Don't Blame Me" is a popular song with music by Jimmy McHugh and lyrics by Dorothy Fields. The song was part of the 1932 show Clowns in Clover and was published in 1933. Popular versions that year were recorded by: Ethel Waters (US No. 6), Guy Lombardo , and Charles Agnew .
After each interview, a chorus is sung by multiple voices, though the chorus is the only part of the song that is actually sung while the rest is spoken. After the third interview, the man sees the Streak again, and to his horror, Ethel is streaking too, with the witness yelling: "You get your clothes on", and "Say it ain't so". [5]
and "Don't look Ethel!" the latter of which is part of the lyrics to the primary single of the album. "The Streak" proved to be an even bigger success than Stevens' 1970 hit " Everything Is Beautiful ," reaching #1 in the US, Canada, UK, and New Zealand.
"American Teenager" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Ethel Cain from her debut studio album, Preacher's Daughter (2022). It was released through her record label Daughters of Cain on April 21, 2022, as the third and final single from the album. Cain produced the song and wrote it with Steven Mark Colyer.
Ethel campaigned for Robert’s older brother John F. Kennedy when he ran for Congress in 1946, and soon became engaged to Robert. They married in 1950, and had their first child, Kathleen, a year ...
with Ethel Gumm at the piano Will Hudson Irving Mills Eddie DeLange: Lost recording — [16] "Bill" Judy Garland with Ethel Gumm at the piano Jerome Kern P.G. Wodehouse: Lost Tracks: 1929—1959: 2010 [16] Medley: a) "On the Good Ship Lollipop" b) "The Object of My Affection" c) "Dinah" Richard A. Whiting Sidney Clare Pinky Tomlin Harry Akst ...
Director D.A. Pennebaker's iconic "Don't Look Back," a 1967 documentary on the American rock 'n' roll bard, will launch the indie moviehouse's Direct Cinema: Then and Now miniseries.
"Stormy Weather" is a 1933 torch song written by Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler. Ethel Waters first sang it at The Cotton Club night club in Harlem in 1933 and recorded it with the Dorsey Brothers' Orchestra under Brunswick Records that year, and in the same year it was sung in London by Elisabeth Welch and recorded by Frances Langford.