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A very enjoyable audio presentation by Steyn.
1 posted on 02/14/2022 6:22:37 AM PST by Twotone
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To: Twotone

I sure miss himin the radio occasionally. Does he still appear on FNC? He should have his own program there.


2 posted on 02/14/2022 6:25:20 AM PST by clintonh8r (Truth is hate speech to those who hate the truth)
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To: Twotone

On that you can rely...


3 posted on 02/14/2022 6:26:28 AM PST by shadowlands1960 ("...some day you will be old enough to start reading fairy tales again... " CSL)
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To: Twotone

5 posted on 02/14/2022 6:31:32 AM PST by ShadowAce (Linux - The Ultimate Windows Service Pack )
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To: Twotone

First error of the show. As Time Goes By Was no written for Everybody’s Welcome. Herman Hupfeld had written and sold it to a friend, Beatrice Lillie*, but then had to buy it back from her after he played for the producers of Everybody’s welcome so it could be in the show.

Several years ago I did some research on Herman Hupfeld and “As Time Goes By”. I ended up never doing anything with it, but have had the info on my computer for over 30 years. This is the story of the origins of As Time Goes By directly from Herman Hupfeld:

In 1943 Herman recounted for The New Yorker magazine the early days of this now timeless melody “As Time Goes By”: He took it first to Beatrice Lillie, who told him it wasn’t just her sort of thing but that she liked it so well she’d advance him hundred dollars on it. “Then the most farcical circumstances happened,” he recalled. “I happened to play it for Harold Arlen, and he nearly fainted. He said, ‘Its’s exactly what we need for Frances Williams — we’ve got to, got to, got have it!’ So I rushed back to Bea, and she was sweet as cream. She said, But darling of course take it back.’ So I returned the hundred and the song went into ‘Everbody’s Welcome’ and stopped the show every night. They hollered and screamed. They just simply hollered and screamed, and it stopped the show.

Talk of the Town, The New Yorker (Apr. 24, 1943), at 9, 11.

* He later wrote “Lets Put Out The Light And Go To Sleep” may have been Rudy Vallee sign-off signature on his radio show. Vallee recounts the story that the title originally was suppose to end with the word “bed”. But moments before air time the network censor forced him to change this sexually connotative word to “sleep” to imply that they may be going to bed, but nothing was going to happen between the covers.


9 posted on 02/14/2022 2:11:49 PM PST by Steven Scharf
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