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The Woman in Red: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the second soundtrack album released by American musician Stevie Wonder on the Motown label. Also featuring Dionne Warwick , the album was released in 1984 for the film of the same name (starring Gene Wilder ).
"The Lady in Red" is a song by British-Irish singer-songwriter Chris de Burgh. It was released on 20 June 1986 as the second single from the album Into the Light. Charting at number one in several countries and reaching the top three in the United States, the song was responsible for introducing de Burgh's music to a mainstream audience worldwide.
The Woman in Red is a 1984 American romantic comedy film directed by and starring Gene Wilder. Wilder also wrote the script, adapting it from the Yves Robert film Pardon Mon Affaire (Sorry My Affair) ( Un éléphant ça trompe énormément (An Elephant Can Be Extremely Deceptive) ).
He sings the Al Dubin-Harry Warren song, "Sweet Music" from the 1935 Warner Bros. film of the same name, The scene shifts to a rendition of the title song by a cockroach chorus. They are performing as the background singers to a lady cockroach, who performs as dancer. Her "red velvet gown" consists of a scarlet meat frill.
The Woman in Red is a 1935 American drama film directed by Robert Florey and starring Barbara Stanwyck and Gene Raymond. Based on the novel North Shore by Wallace Irwin, the film is about a woman equestrian who meets and falls in love with a traveling polo player from a once wealthy family. After they are married, she is persuaded to entertain ...
Lady in Red (ghost), a type of female ghost attributed to a prostitute or jilted lover; Lady in Red (painting), a 1928 painting by Sri Lankan artist A. C. G. S. Amarasekara; Carmen Sandiego, a fictional character nicknamed The Lady in Red; Jean Hill (1931–2000), witness to the Kennedy assassination known as the Lady in Red
First Lady of Song: United States [126] [127] Queen of Jazz [128] Renata Flores: Queen of Quechua Pop: Perú [129] Queen of Quechua Rap [130] Lita Ford: Queen of Heavy Metal: United States [131] Zucchero Fornaciari: Father of Italian Blues: Italy [132] Stephen Foster: Father of American Music: United States [133] Aretha Franklin: Queen of Soul ...
[3] [4] The film's soundtrack was released in two separate versions; one for the 19 popular artists songs used in the film, and another separate release for the original score composed for the film by Danny Elfman. [5] Two of Elfman's themes were also included on the popular artists version of the soundtrack release.