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Three Blind Mice and Other Stories is a collection of short stories written by Agatha Christie, first published in the US by Dodd, Mead and Company in 1950. [1] The first edition retailed at $2.50. [ 1 ]
Three Blind Mice is a 1938 American romantic comedy film directed by William A. Seiter and starring Loretta Young, Joel McCrea, and David Niven. [1] [2] It was based on a play by Stephen Powys.
[a] Fox had acquired the American rights to the play in 1937, [10] first making a non-musical 1938 movie (also called Three Blind Mice). [b] It was adapted as the movie musical Moon Over Miami in 1941 before being tapped again five years later as the basis for Three Little Girls in Blue. [13]
He played the saxophone in a jazz trio known as the "Three Blind Mice" and still plays the instrument today. He famously performed Elvis Presley's "Heartbreak Hotel" on "The Arsenio Hall Show." 4.
Robert Schumann's Kreisleriana #7, which is arguably about a cat (Murr), appears to be based upon "Three Blind Mice", but in a predominantly minor key. "Three Blind Mice" is to be found in the fugue which is the centerpiece of #7. [citation needed] Joseph Holbrooke (1878–1958) composed his Symphonic Variations, opus 37, based on Three Blind Mice.
Three Blind Mice (radio play and short story), by Agatha Christie; Three Blind Mice and Other Stories, a book of short stories by Agatha Christie; Three Blind Mice: How the TV Networks Lost Their Way, a book by Ken Auletta; Three Blind Mice, a variant of the patience/solitaire card game Scorpion
Old King Cole summons various Mother Goose characters for his entertainment, including the Three Blind Mice as his "fiddlers three", Miss Muffet, Jack and Jill (who meet Simple Simon atop the hill), Humpty Dumpty (whom Mother Goose's goose knocks off of his wall), Jack Horner (his Christmas pie also containing the four and twenty blackbirds), Bo Peep (Boy Blue brings the sheep home, one of ...
This was previously adapted into a 1938 film titled Three Blind Mice directed by William A. Seiter and starring Loretta Young, Joel McCrea and David Niven. It was one of Haley's last appearances in a major, large-budgeted film; after 1943, he made mostly B-pictures. The film's original songs were written by Leo Robin and Ralph Rainger.