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Blue Skies is a 1946 American musical comedy film directed by Stuart Heisler and starring Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire, and Joan Caulfield. Based on a story by Irving Berlin , the film is about a dancer who loves a showgirl who loves a compulsive nightclub-opener who can't stay committed to anything in life for very long.
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Blue Skies, Broken Hearts...Next 12 Exits is the second studio album by the American pop punk band The Ataris.It was released on Kung Fu Records on April 13, 1999. The album cover is the neon sign for the Blue Skies Mobile Park in Santa Barbara, California, taken by Roe.
Blue Skies is an album of phonograph records by Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire released in 1946 featuring songs that were presented in the American musical film Blue Skies. Like Song Hits from Holiday Inn , the entire 78 rpm album would be composed of Irving Berlin songs written specifically for the film.
Blue Skies is the third album by Australian (English born) singer Frank Ifield released in 1964 on the Columbia label. Blue Skies reached No. 10 in the UK Albums Chart. [ 2 ] It was also the first Frank Ifield album released by the World Record Club.
Blue Skies is an American drama television series created by Carol and Nigel Evan McKeand, that aired on CBS from June 13 until August 1, 1988. Premise [ edit ]
Blue Skies is an American sitcom that aired from September 12, 1994 to October 24, 1994.. The show aired Monday nights at 8:30pm on ABC. [1] Three months after it was canceled, another sitcom by the same creators (John Peaslee and Judd Pillot) and featuring several of the same cast members (Julia Campbell, Richard Kind and Stephen Tobolowsky), A Whole New Ballgame, aired in the same timeslot.
AllMusic called Strays Don't Sleep "a small gem of an album." [2] The Skinny wrote: "It's a nice enough collection of songs, drawing on every last trick from the melancholy-acoustic textbook, the only trouble is that not one of the nine songs on offer raises the stakes beyond average."