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However, Sharp records that "a form of this song, 'Green grow the rushes, O' is known at Eton", that it was printed in English County Songs, and that Arthur Sullivan had included a version in the Savoy opera The Yeomen of the Guard.
Green Grow the Rushes (re-released in 1954 as Brandy Ashore [2]) is a 1951 British comedy film directed by Derek N. Twist and starring Roger Livesey, Richard Burton and Honor Blackman. [3] It was written by Twist and Howard Clewes adapted from the 1949 novel of the same title by Clewes.
Green Grow the Rushes is a 1949 comedy novel by the British writer Howard Clewes.The title refers to the traditional folk song "Green Grow the Rushes, O".It revolves around a group of officials from a Whitehall government department who travel to the Kent coast for an investigation, only to find themselves encountering a community entirely committed to smuggling.
Green Grow the Rushes may refer to: "Green Grow the Rushes, O", a folksong; Green Grow the Rushes, a 1949 novel by Howard Clewes; Green Grow the Rushes, a 1951 film based on the novel "Green Grow the Rushes", a song by R.E.M. from the 1985 album Fables of the Reconstruction
Green Grow the Rushes (1951), based on his 1949 novel of the same name; The Long Memory (1953), based on his 1951 novel of the same name; The Steel Bayonet (1957) The One That Got Away (1957) The Day They Robbed the Bank of England (1960) Up from the Beach (1965) That Man in Istanbul (1965) The Three Musketeers (1974)
Green Grow the Rushes (1964) Echo Valley (1965) The Dream Hunters (1966, Ian and Sovra No. 7) [20] Strangers at the Door (1967, Ian and Sovra No. 8) [20] The Day That Got Lost (1968) The Wishing Pool (1970) The King of Grey Corrie (1975, Ian and Sovra No. 9, about their children) The Floodmakers (1976, Ian and Sovra No. 10, about their children ...
In 2010, Vanderslice released a free EP called Green Grow The Rushes. [22] A full album, White Wilderness, was released on January 25, 2011, on Dead Oceans. Here, Vanderslice forwent his usual meticulous process of manipulating and heavily over-dubbing tracks in the recording studio, in favor a pared-down production style. [23]
There are 16 novels in this series, the last twelve of which bear titles based on the lyrics to the traditional English folk song Green Grow the Rushes, O. The second series features 'Rona Parish', a biographer and freelance journalist. Anthea Fraser served as secretary of the Crime Writers' Association from 1986 to 1996.