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Cheaper to Keep Her may refer to: "Cheaper to Keep Her" (Johnnie Taylor song), a 1973 R&B-song performed by Johnnie Taylor, written by Mack Rice and released by Stax Records "Cheaper to Keep Her" (song), a song by Canadian country music artist Aaron Lines; Cheaper to Keep Her, a 1981 comedy film directed by Ken Annakin
William "Bill" Dekker (Davis) is a newly divorced swinger who goes to work for an attorney named K. D. Locke (Feldshuh) as an investigator. His assignments have him tracking down divorced men who have reneged on their alimony and child support payments, a twist of irony considering not only his chauvinistic tendencies, but also the fact that he himself is relying on the money he receives from ...
"Cheaper to Keep Her" is a song by Canadian country music artist Aaron Lines. It is the first single released from his 2007 album Moments That Matter . It reached number one on the Billboard Canada Country chart.
Taylor in 1967. Johnnie Taylor was born in Crawfordsville, Arkansas, United States. [5] He grew up in West Memphis, Arkansas, performing in gospel groups as a youngster.As an adult, he had one release, "Somewhere to Lay My Head", on Chicago's Vee Jay Records label in the 1950s, as part of the gospel group The Highway Q.C.'s, which included a young Sam Cooke. [5]
Moments That Matter is the third studio album by Canadian country music singer Aaron Lines, released on June 12, 2007.It features the single "Cheaper to Keep Her". The song "Let's Get Drunk and Fight" was covered by Joe Nichols on his 2007 album Real Things.
Bonny "Mack" Rice (November 10, 1933 – June 27, 2016), [1] sometimes credited as Sir Mack Rice, was an American songwriter and singer. [2] His best-known composition and biggest hit as a solo performer was "Mustang Sally".
The National Foundation for Jewish Culture honored her with the 2002 Jewish Image Award and the Performing Arts award in 2006. [22] [23] When doing research for her role as Irene Gut Opdyke in the play Irena's Vow, Feldshuh traveled to Borshchiv, Ukraine, and discovered that her own ancestor, Moishe Feldshuh, had lived there in the early 20th ...
Her previously unreleased 1942 version with the Tommy Dorsey orchestra [21] was included in the 1966 Reader's Digest box set The Glenn Miller Years. [22] On October 15, 1943, she recorded it with Johnny Mercer, the Pied Pipers , and Paul Weston 's Orchestra, in a version released as a single (catalog number 10001 [ 23 ] ) and on an album ...