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In Lisa Stansfield's 1990 music video for her cover of Cole Porter's "Down in the Depths (On the Ninetieth Floor)", the beginning and ending are both references to the song. The video begins with her disembodied head zooming in, while singing the opening to the song, and ends with it zooming out, while singing the outro.
Lullaby of Broadway is a 1951 American musical romantic comedy film released by Warner Bros. starring Doris Day and Gene Nelson, and directed by David Butler. Gladys George, S.Z. Sakall, Billy De Wolfe, Florence Bates, and Anne Triola appear in support. Songs from the film were released in an album of the same name.
She is best remembered for introducing the song "Lullaby of Broadway" in the musical film Gold Diggers of 1935 (1935). [2] Shaw's only recording, with Dick Jurgens and His Orchestra, was "Lullaby of Broadway" and "I'm Goin' Shoppin' with You". Both songs were from the film, and the recording was made on February 28, 1935.
She also worked for other studios during this time: 20th Century Fox, in Tin Pan Alley (1940), Call Me Mister (1951); Warner Bros, in Tea for Two (1950) and Lullaby of Broadway (1951); and Columbia Pictures, where she danced with Marilyn Monroe in Ladies of the Chorus (1948). Tuttle’s training as a ballet dancer made her adaptable to the ...
Gold Diggers of 1935 is an American Warner Bros. musical film directed and choreographed by Busby Berkeley, his directorial debut.It stars Dick Powell, Adolphe Menjou, Gloria Stuart, Alice Brady, Hugh Herbert, Glenda Farrell, and Frank McHugh, and features Joseph Cawthorn, Grant Mitchell, Dorothy Dare, and Winifred Shaw.
Lullaby of Broadway can refer to: "Lullaby of Broadway" (song) , a popular song with music by Harry Warren and lyrics by Al Dubin, published in 1935 Lullaby of Broadway (film) , a 1951 movie with Doris Day, in which she sings the song
Today's NYT Connections puzzle for Friday, December 13, 2024The New York Times
Warren won the Academy Award for Best Song three times, collaborating with three different lyricists: "Lullaby of Broadway" with Al Dubin in 1935, "You'll Never Know" with Mack Gordon in 1943, and "On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe" with Johnny Mercer in 1946. He was nominated for eleven Oscars. [2]