Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The song's hook interpolates "Movin' On Up", the theme song of the television sitcom The Jeffersons. [1] The show's star Sherman Hemsley appears in the music video for "Batter Up", [1] initially as a sports announcer and later dancing with members of St. Lunatics.
Cast of The Jeffersons, clockwise from top: Mike Evans, Sherman Hemsley, and Isabel Sanford (1975). During the January 11, 1975 episode of All in the Family, titled "The Jeffersons Move Up", Edith Bunker gave a tearful good-bye to her neighbor Louise Jefferson as her husband George, their son Lionel, and she moved from a working-class section of Queens, New York, into the luxurious Colby East ...
DuBois additionally cowrote and sang the theme song "Movin' On Up" for The Jeffersons, which aired from 1975 until 1985. [9] After beginning her career on the stage in the early 1960s, DuBois appeared on television shows and in films into the mid-2010s.
"The Jeffersons," a spinoff of "All in the Family," premiered in 1975 and ran for 10 years. Earlier in the broadcast, Woody Harrelson and Marisa Tomei tackled "Those Were the Days," the theme to ...
Solid Gold – Theme song performed by Dionne Warwick (Seasons 1 and 4) and Marilyn McCoo (Seasons 2–3, 5–8) Some Mothers Do 'Ave Em – Ronnie Hazlehurst; The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour ("The Beat Goes On") – Sonny Bono and Cher; Sonny with a Chance ("So Far, So Great") – Demi Lovato; The Sooty Show – Alan Braden
Moving on Up or Movin' on Up may refer to: "Moving on Up" (M People song), 1993, also covered by Belgian singer Roselle "Moving on Up (On the Right Side)", a 1996 song by Beverley Knight
She moved on up, but she still made the time to drop in. Marla Gibbs, the last living original core cast member from "The Jeffersons," made a surprise cameo this week during ABC's "Live in Front ...
"Good Shepherd" originated in a very early 19th century hymn written by the Methodist minister Reverend John Adam Granade (1770–1807), "Let Thy Kingdom, Blessed Savior". [1] [2] [3] Granade was a significant figure of the Great Revival in the American West during the 19th century's first decade, as the most important author of camp meeting hymns during that time. [4]