Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dumbo is a 1941 American animated fantasy drama film produced by Walt Disney Productions and released by RKO Radio Pictures. ... "Song of the Roustabouts"
"Baby Mine" is a song from the 1941 Disney animated feature Dumbo. The music is by Frank Churchill, with lyrics by Ned Washington. Betty Noyes recorded the vocals for the original film version. In the film, Dumbo's mother, Mrs. Jumbo, an elephant locked in a circus wagon, cradles her baby Dumbo with her trunk while this lullaby is sung. It is ...
Dumbo (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack to the 2019 film Dumbo directed by Tim Burton, which is a live-action adaptation and reimagining of Walt Disney's 1941 film of the same name. The film's soundtrack featured musical score composed by Danny Elfman and songs from the original film. The album was released through Walt ...
"Baby Mine", a popular song published in 1901 "Baby Mine" (song), a song from the 1941 Disney film Dumbo and also in the 2019 Tim Burton remake "Baby Mine", a version of traditional blues song "Crawdad Song" from the 1963 album Bill Henderson with the Oscar Peterson Trio
Roustabout was a 1964 musical movie starring Elvis Presley, Barbara Stanwyck, and Joan Freeman, in a story set in a traveling carnival — for which Presley recorded the song titled "Roustabout". Farley Granger 's character, Arthur "Bowie" Bowers, in Nicholas Ray 's 1948 film noir They Live By Night , tells Catherine "Keeetchie" Mobley ( Cathy ...
The hammer sound from Roustabouts (a song from Disney's 1941 film Dumbo) can be heard when Donald and the Aracuan Bird are hammering a nail. When Donald goes insane and starts acting like the Aracuan Bird at the very end, he breaks the fourth wall by walking along the black iris and shrinking with it.
Dumbo (1941) uncredited as singer of "Baby Mine" I Married an Angel (1942) uncredited specialty bit in Paris Honeymoon sequence; Singin' in the Rain (1952) uncredited as the singing voice of Debbie Reynolds on "Would You" [5] and "You Are My Lucky Star." [3] Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954) singing voice of Ruta Kilmonis (later known as ...
The Lopez songwriting duo explained that the song "has origins in a type of song used in past Disney films, like the 'Song of the Roustabouts' from Dumbo and 'Fathoms Below' from The Little Mermaid". Kristen said, "I guess we were in a meeting, and I kept saying: ‘if we could just have a song which basically said the ice is beautiful and ...