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Wilbur Hatch (May 24, 1902 – December 22, 1969), was an American music composer who worked primarily in radio and television. He was born in Mokena, Illinois , and died in Studio City, California .
Theme music [composed by Marlin Skiles, conducted by Wilbur Hatch] LeMond: Yes, it's the new gay family series starring Lucille Ball with Richard Denning, brought to you by the Jell-O family of desserts: Singers: J-E-L-L-O! The big red letters stand for the Jell-O family, Oh, the big red letters stand for the Jell-O family, That's Jell-O! Yum ...
Wilbur Hatch: Composers: Jerry Goldsmith Wilbur Hatch Lucien Moraweck Carl Brandt: Country of origin: United States: Original language: English: No. of seasons: 2: No. of episodes: 72: Production; Executive producer: Parke Levy (1961–1962) Producers: Parke Levy (1960–1961) Devery Freeman (1961–1962) Camera setup: Single-camera: Running ...
Wilbur Hatch: Composers: Wilbur Hatch (1968–1969) Marl Young (1969–1974) Country of origin: United States: No. of seasons: 6: No. of episodes: 144 (list of episodes) Production; Executive producer: Gary Morton: Producers: Tommy Thompson (season 1) Cleo Smith (seasons 2–6) Running time: 25 minutes: Production companies: Lucille Ball ...
Wilbur Hatch - "Theme from The Lucy Show", "Theme from Here's Lucy" Isaac Hayes - "Theme from Shaft" Neal Hefti - "Theme from Batman", "Themes from The Odd Couple and The New Odd Couple" Paul Henning - "The Ballad of Jed Clampett" (Theme from The Beverly Hillbillies), "Theme from Petticoat Junction" (with Curt Massey)
The theme music was composed by Wilbur Hatch, who was the show's musical director, a role he also performed on Ball's previous series I Love Lucy. Episodes Season ...
Danny Clover narrated the tales of the Great White Way to the accompaniment of music by Wilbur Hatch and Alexander Courage, and the recreation of Manhattan's aural tapestry required the talents of three sound effects technicians (David Light, Ralph Cummings, Ross Murray). Bill Anders was the show's announcer, as was Joe Walters.
Earlier, Time had commented that Fargé "triumphantly resists being merely Lucille Ball with a French accent. She is easily the brightest newcomer to situation comedy—small, pert, winsome, and somehow giving the impression of being attractively feathered."