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Pages in category "Songs from Annie Get Your Gun" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
The cast recorded an album, Annie Get Your Gun - 1986 London Cast [29] and Quatro's songs "I Got Lost in His Arms"/"You Can't Get a Man with a Gun" were released as a single. [27] Since then "I Got Lost in His Arms" has also been included in the compilation albums The Divas Collection (2003) [ 30 ] and Songs from the Greatest Musicals (2008).
Annie Get Your Gun is an album, released on February 11, 1963, by Columbia Records, starring Doris Day and Robert Goulet. It consisted of songs from the musical of the same name . The LP was issued on the Columbia Masterworks label in both mono and stereo (catalog numbers OL-5960 and OS-2360 respectively).
The song was first performed in Annie Get Your Gun by Ethel Merman and Ray Middleton. [ 3 ] During the song, they argue playfully about who can, for example, sing softer, sing higher, sing sweeter, and hold a note for longer, and boast of their abilities and accomplishments, such as opening safes and living on bread and cheese, although Annie ...
Annie Get Your Gun – 1986 London Cast: 1986: A-side of You Can't Get a Man with a Gun: I Got the Sun in the Morning performed by Suzi Quatro, ensemble, orchestra: Irving Berlin: 4.54 Norman Newell, Robert Mackintosh: Annie Get Your Gun – 1986 London Cast: 1986: I May Be Too Young: Nicky Chinn, Mike Chapman: 2.58 Nicky Chinn, Mike Chapman
Bernadette Peters - included in Annie Get Your Gun [1999 Broadway Revival Cast] (1999). [8] Suzi Quatro – starred as Annie Oakley in the 1986 West End (London) production of Annie Get Your Gun. She sings the song in the album Annie Get Your Gun – 1986 London Cast (1986), [9] and the associated single "I Got Lost in His Arms" (1986). [10]
"Annie" isn't just for the kids. This holiday season is filled with family movies, but the new remake of "Annie," which hits theaters December 19, has a decidedly grown up feel.
"There's No Business Like Show Business" is an Irving Berlin song, written for the 1946 musical Annie Get Your Gun and orchestrated by Ted Royal. The song, a slightly tongue-in-cheek salute to the glamour and excitement of a life in show business , is sung in the musical by members of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show in an attempt to persuade ...