Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Something to Live For is a 1952 American drama film starring Joan Fontaine, Ray Milland, and Teresa Wright, directed by George Stevens, [1] and released by Paramount Pictures. The screenplay by Dwight Taylor was the first to focus on the Alcoholics Anonymous program as a means of overcoming an addiction to liquor.
"Something to Live For" is a 1939 jazz composition by Billy Strayhorn. It was the first collaboration between Strayhorn and Duke Ellington and became the first of many Strayhorn compositions to be recorded by Ellington's orchestra. [1] The song was based on a poem Strayhorn had written as a teenager. [2]
The album was recorded at Mushroom Studios in Vancouver, British Columbia between December 1987 and March 1988, and was published by Epic Records and CBS Records in 1988. [2] The song "Something to Live For" became a number one hit in Canada, the band's first top-ten single.
Something to Live For: A Billy Strayhorn Songbook is an album by the pianist John Hicks, recorded in 1997 and released on the HighNote label. [1] The album contains ten compositions by Billy Strayhorn , along with two by Hicks.
"Something to Live For" (song), a 1939 jazz standard by Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn; Something to Live For (John O'Callaghan album), 2007; Something to Live For (Phyno album), 2021; Something to Live For: The Music of Billy Strayhorn, an album by Art Farmer, 1987; Something to Live For: A Billy Strayhorn Songbook, an album by John Hicks ...
Something to Live for is television in its Social Worker Mode, which is not a form I sneer at. TV's been downright heroic in the plague years and may be all the conscience we've got. And Ali's presentable in prime time for the same reason she's presentable in junior high schools: She is young, gifted, white, female, cute, equally innocent of ...
Something to Live For: The Music of Billy Strayhorn is an album by Art Farmer recorded in New York in 1987 and originally released on the Contemporary label. [1]
Others use different terms for this construct or very similar constructs. Especially popular—perhaps more popular than "empathic concern"—are sympathy, compassion, or pity. [4] Other terms include the tender emotion and sympathetic distress. [5] People are strongly motivated to be connected to others. [6]