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One of these was a new song Life's a Funny Proposition After All, added to the finale in May 1905. [9] Little Johnny Jones was revived twice in 1905 at the New York Theatre, playing successfully for over 200 performances through most of that year, and touring until the next Broadway revival in 1907 for a short run at the Academy of Music. The ...
"With These Hands" is a song written by Benny Davis and Abner Silver and performed by Eddie Fisher featuring Hugo Winterhalter and His Orchestra. It reached number 7 on the U.S. pop chart in 1953. [1] The song ranked number 28 on Billboard magazine's Top 30 singles of 1953. [2]
Pages in category "Songs from Little Johnny Jones" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Little Johnny Jones is a 1929 American black-and-white musical film released in the United States adapted from the musical play of the same name. The film was directed by Mervyn LeRoy , who had acted in the 1923 silent version , and main character Johnny Jones was played by Edward Buzzell .
Z-Cars – Fritz Spiegl and Bridget Fry, adapted from the traditional Liverpool folk song "Johnny Todd" Zig and Zag ("Zig and Zag") – Ricky Wilson and Simon Rix; Zoboomafoo ("Me and You and Zoboomafoo") – Kratt brothers; Zoey 101 ("Follow Me") – Jamie Lynn Spears; The Zoo Gang – Paul and Linda McCartney and performed by Paul McCartney ...
Jones was born in Jackson, Mississippi, United States, in 1924, and was a cousin of Otis Spann. [1] He arrived in Chicago in 1945 in the company of Little Walter and "Baby Face" Leroy Foster and soon replaced pianist Big Maceo Merriweather in Tampa Red's band after Merriweather suffered a stroke paralysing his right hand. [2]
"A Little Chicken Fit for Old Broadway" by Rudolf Friml and Otto Harbach "Little Faith" by The National "Little Kids" by Kings of Convenience "Little Miss Broadway" from Little Miss Broadway "Little Old Dreamy New York" (music by Lee David and Maury Rubens; lyrics by J. Keirn Brennan and Moe Jaffe) "Little Old New York" (from Tenderloin)
The opening line of the 1976 song "The Rubberband Man" from the album Happiness Is Being with the Spinners is "Hand me down my walking cane / Hand me down my hat" (lyrics Linda Creed, music Thom Bell). The 1985 Dire Straits song "Walk of Life" includes the lyric "Here comes Johnny, gonna tell you the story / Hand me down my walkin' shoes".