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A gif of A little girl loving some cotton candy at a Seattle Mariner's baseball game was shared on the team's Twitter page, and of course, everyone loved it.
"Candy Girl" is the debut single by New Edition from their debut album Candy Girl. It was released as a single in late February 1983 and the song hit number one on the UK Singles Chart, [4] becoming the 31st-best-selling single of the year.
The music video version of the song samples and interpolates elements of "Candy Girl" by New Edition, whereas the CD single version of the song excludes the sampling. The song was produced by Born Immaculate, Broderick Thompson Smith and "K-Rab", and the music video was directed by Thomas Forbes.
Candy was born Vicki Jane Husted on February 8, 1944, in San Gabriel, California, to Jeannette (Rathmann) and Clarence Husted. After her mother remarried, she took her stepfather's surname of Johnston. In her San Gabriel High School yearbooks she was listed as "Candy Johnston."
The lead single of the album, Candy Girl, while being a massive hit on Black radio stateside and overseas, struggled for consistent plays on Pop radio and the video failed to crack the rotation at MTV in the U.S. despite strong sales numbers and being No. 1 on the Black Singles charts, surpassing George Clinton's "Atomic Dog" and Michael Jackson's "Billie Jean" while staving off "Beat It" on ...
Barbara Hetmańska (born 29 November 1986 in Katowice, Poland), known as Candy Girl, is a Polish dance pop singer. She has collaborated with such Polish musicians as Alchemist Project, East Clubbers, Wet Fingers, and with the British duo Riff & Rays. Hetmańska has signed in 2006 to Magic Records.
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"Candy Girl" is the title of a hit single recorded in 1963 by the Four Seasons. Written by Larry Santos, it is the first original Four Seasons single composed by neither Bob Gaudio nor Bob Crewe. The writer, Larry Santos, would become a chart artist in his own right with 1976's "We Can't Hide It Anymore".