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The song was both referenced and featured in a 1996 episode of the medical drama Chicago Hope, in which Dr. Diane Grad (Jayne Brook) mentions that Mitchell's Blue album was a personal favorite of hers while growing up, and that "A Case of You" was her favorite song on the album. Mitchell's recording of the song later played over the episode's ...
"A Case of You" (song), a song by Joni Mitchell; A Case of You, 2013 American film; A Case of You (horse) (foaled 2018) This page was last edited on 5 June ...
A Case of You is a 2013 American romantic comedy film. The film was directed by Kat Coiro and produced by and starring Justin Long , who wrote the script with his brother Christian and Keir O'Donnell , who also stars in the film.
The cover of The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya Character CD vol. 1 Haruhi Suzumiya.. An image song or character song is a song on a tie-in single or album (often called an image album or character album) for an anime, game, dorama, manga, or commercial product that is sometimes sung by the voice actor or actor of a character, in character with harmonies.
The song is sampled on the track "My World Is..", from Blu and Exile's 2007 album Below the Heavens. The track is also sampled on "Catch My Drift", a 1989 song by the British group A.R. Kane. "Blue" also appears in an important scene in the critically acclaimed 2019 film The Last Black Man in San Francisco.
In 1972, actress Goldie Hawn recorded her version of the song for her album Goldie (Warner MS 2061). [13] Kiki Dee issued a live version of the song on her 1995 album Almost Naked. [14] At the televised 2000 tribute concert to Mitchell, held at the Hammerstein Ballroom, New York, the song was performed by Cyndi Lauper. [15]
Dr. Otto von Scratchansniff (voiced by Rob Paulsen) – A WB studio psychiatrist of Austrian descent [a] who attempts to force the Warner siblings to be "less zany". He often loses patience with the Warner kids and has an outburst of frustration—his first chronological interaction with them sees him pulling out his hair until he achieves his characteristic baldness [3] —but then becomes ...
Frank Sinatra recorded both pre-Code and post-Code versions (with and without the cocaine reference): the first in 1953 [2] and the second in 1962. On a recording live in Paris in 1962 (not released until 1994), Sinatra sings the altered version with the first line as "Some like the perfume from Spain".