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Happily Ever After is the second single released from American R&B singer Case's second studio album Personal Conversation. The single reached number 3 on the Billboard R&B chart and number 15 on the Hot 100 chart. The song stayed on the Hot 100 charts for a total of twenty weeks.
Personal Conversation is the second studio album by American R&B singer Case. It was released by the Def Soul subsidiary of Def Jam Recordings on April 20, 1999. It features the hit single "Happily Ever After". The album was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). [1]
Case Woodard is an American singer, songwriter, record producer and actor. He is best known for the 1990s hits "Touch Me, Tease Me", "Happily Ever After" and "The Best Man I Can Be" with Ginuwine, R.L. and Tyrese, as well as the early 2000s hits "Missing You" and "Livin' It Up" with Ja Rule. The latter two earned him two Grammy Award nominations.
A newly discovered Hans Christian Andersen letter reveals the fairy tale writer never got to have his own "happily ever after." The emotional letter, believed to be written in 1832 when Andersen ...
This fact is at odds with modern critiques of fairy tales; that "Happily ever after" often involves a man saving a helpless woman; that Disney princesses and their Grimm-penned counterparts are tame and silent compared with their princely other halves; that the stories embrace violence but never mention the more feminine grittiness of pregnancy ...
There are times when you watch a movie and immediately wish it had a different ending. Maybe it’s a romcom where the hero tragically dies, but you can’t help imagining a happily-ever-after. Or ...
Soul Food "The Best R&B of 2000"/"Happily Ever After" Case Composer, producer [8] 1999 Personal Conversation/"Happily Ever After" Case: Composer, producer Awards ...
The only reason my mother-in-law ever even got this house (that's 100% my husband's now as it should be) is because of some program for low-income mothers of high-risk infants.