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"I'll Be Seeing You" is a popular song about missing a loved one, with music by Sammy Fain and lyrics by Irving Kahal. [1] Published in 1938, it was inserted into the Broadway musical Right This Way , which closed after fifteen performances. [ 2 ]
I'll Be Seeing You is a 1944 American drama film made by Selznick International Pictures, Dore Schary Productions, and Vanguard Pictures, and distributed by United Artists. It stars Joseph Cotten , Ginger Rogers , and Shirley Temple , with Spring Byington , Tom Tully , and John Derek .
Follow-ups "Seven Minutes In Heaven" (#85 Pop) and "I'll Be Seeing You" (#87 Pop) fared less well, and the group's last single, 1960's "Who, When And Why", did not chart. [ 3 ] ABC-Paramount attempted to sign the group to a further five-year contract, but they turned it down.
Tongi sang on the song's soaring chorus, "I'll be seeing you/ Seeing you/ Wherever I go." Tongi's performance — and the song itself — touched the hearts of viewers.
"I'll Be Seeing You" (song), a popular song published in 1938 with music by Sammy Fain and lyrics by Irving Kahal featured as title track on many of the albums below; I'll Be Seeing You (Anne Murray album), 2004; I'll Be Seeing You (Jo Stafford album), 1959; I'll Be Seeing You (Etta Jones album), 1987; I'll Be Seeing You (Richard Poon album), 2010
I'll Be Seeing You premiered on May 1, 2004 on the PAX Network. [2] In 2023 the film was released through Rifftrax with an accompanying synchronous commentary by Mary Jo Pehl and Bridget Jones Nelson. [3]
In 2021 a re-mix from the original version of "As" was featured in the In Memoriam moment of the Academy Awards ceremony, credited as "I'll Be Loving You Always". [50] In the 2024 experimental film ***** created by Arthur Jafa the character Scar sings along to "As" in one scene, the song then becoming the non-diegetic soundtrack of the ...
I'll Be Seeing You is the thirty-first studio album by Canadian artist Anne Murray.It was released by Straightway Records on October 19, 2004. It was Murray’s second standards album (following Croonin’ 11 years earlier) The album was re-released as All of Me in 2005 with a bonus greatest hits disc included.