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Whip It is a 2009 American sports comedy drama film co-produced and directed by Drew Barrymore from a screenplay by Shauna Cross, based on her 2007 novel Derby Girl. It stars Elliot Page [ a ] as a teenage girl from the fictional town of Bodeen, Texas , who joins a roller derby team.
"Dinah" is a popular song published in 1925 and introduced by Ethel Waters at the Plantation Club on Broadway. It was integrated into the show Kid Boots . [ 1 ] The music was written by Harry Akst and the lyrics by Sam M. Lewis and Joe Young .
"This Bitter Earth" is a 1960 song made famous by rhythm and blues singer Dinah Washington. [1] Written and produced by Clyde Otis , [ 2 ] [ 3 ] it peaked to #1 on the U.S. R&B charts for the week of July 25, 1960, and also reached #24 on the U.S. pop charts.
A Stranger on Earth is a studio album by American singer Dinah Washington, released in 1964 by Roulette Records after her death. [1] The album contains unreleased material by the singer, recorded with producer Henry Glover and arranger Fred Norman.
Dinah Minot: Children: 3: Relatives: Season Hubley (sister) Susan Minot (sister-in-law) Grant Shelby Hubley Jr., known as Whip Hubley, is an American actor. [1]
"Dinah, Dinah Show us your Leg" is an American bawdy song. The formula is a descending scale: "Rich girl [does something,] Poor girl [does something else], my girl don't [do whatever the other two do, usually with comic effect.]. The twentieth century versions are possibly the result of merging a minstrel song with "Coming Round the Mountain".
Dinah has yet to release a full-length solo album since the group’s hiatus, but her debut EP, Dinah Jane 1, dropped in April 2019 via L.A. Reid’s Hitco Entertainment and her most recent solo ...
Villikins and his Dinah" (Laws M31A/B, Roud 271) [1] is a stage song which emerged in England in 1853 as a burlesque version of a traditional ballad called "William and Dinah". Its great popularity led to the tune being later adopted for many other songs, [ 2 ] of which the best known today is " Sweet Betsy from Pike ".