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Annie Get Your Gun is a 1950 American musical Technicolor comedy film loosely based on the life of sharpshooter Annie Oakley.The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer release, with music and lyrics by Irving Berlin and a screenplay by Sidney Sheldon based on the 1946 stage musical of the same name, was directed by George Sidney.
The cast recorded an album, Annie Get Your Gun - 1986 London Cast [29] and Quatro's songs "I Got Lost in His Arms"/"You Can't Get a Man with a Gun" were released as a single. [27] Since then "I Got Lost in His Arms" has also been included in the compilation albums The Divas Collection (2003) [ 30 ] and Songs from the Greatest Musicals (2008).
She appeared in regional theatre roles in musicals including South Pacific (1955, 1963), The Pajama Game (1958), and Annie Get Your Gun (1961), and in nightclubs in the 1950s and 1960s. [2] [3] She also appeared at a benefit in Carnegie Hall. [1]
Bernadette Peters - included in Annie Get Your Gun [1999 Broadway Revival Cast] (1999). [8] Suzi Quatro – starred as Annie Oakley in the 1986 West End (London) production of Annie Get Your Gun. She sings the song in the album Annie Get Your Gun – 1986 London Cast (1986), [9] and the associated single "I Got Lost in His Arms" (1986). [10]
When a show meets an untimely demise, all we can do is hope for the best and brace for the worst. That state of mind is one that Beth Boland, Ruby Hill and Annie Marks are very familiar with after ...
Howard Keel in the 1950 MGM film of Annie Get Your Gun, also released on record. [5] John Raitt in a 1957 TV production with Mary Martin, recorded on Capitol Records. [6] Robert Goulet in the album Annie Get Your Gun (1963) [7] Bruce Yarnell in the 1966 production at Lincoln Centre, with Ethel Merman, recorded on RCA Records. [8]
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Her breakthrough role came in Preston Sturges's The Miracle of Morgan's Creek (1944), and she went on to receive further notice for her lead role as Annie Oakley in the musical Annie Get Your Gun (1950), and for Cecil B. DeMille's epic The Greatest Show on Earth (1952). She made her final feature film appearance in Spring Reunion (1957).