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  1. Marion Harris (born Mary Ellen Harrison; April 4, 1896 – April 23, 1944) was an American popular singer who was most successful in the late 1910s and the 1920s. She was the first widely-known white singer to sing jazz and blues songs.

  2. Mary Ellen Harrison (Indiana, Estados Unidos, 4 de abril de 1896-Nueva York, 23 de abril de 1944), más conocida como Marion Harris, fue una cantante estadounidense que tuvo éxito durante la década de 1920. Harris fue la primera cantante blanca en cantar canciones de género jazz y blues. [1]

    Año
    Canción
    Gráficos [ 7 ] ​ [ Nb 1 ] ​
    1916
    "I'm Gonna Make Hay While the Sun Shines ...
    8
    1917
    "I Ain't Got Nobody Much"
    5
    1917
    "Paradise Blues"
    7
    1917
    "They Go Wild, Simply Wild, Over Me"
    2
  3. Charted at #1 in January 1919. Recorded July 22, 1918. Also a #2 hit for Henry Burr and Albert Campbell in October 1918, #7 for Bessie Smith in 1927, and #15...

    • 3 min
    • 203.5K
    • CatsPjamas1
  4. www.jazzstandards.com › biographies › biography_166Marion Harris Biography

    Marion Harris. Singer, Actress. (1896 - 1944) Marion Harris was a star of vaudeville in the 1920’s and the first white female singer to record jazz and blues, featuring a lot of material by African American composers.

  5. Mary Ellen Harrison (Indiana, Estados Unidos, 4 de abril de 1896-Nueva York, 23 de abril de 1944), más conocida como Marion Harris, fue una cantante estadounidense que tuvo éxito durante la década de 1920. Harris fue la primera cantante blanca en cantar canciones de género jazz y blues. [1]

  6. Marion Harris (born Mary Ellen Harrison, April 4, 1896 – April ... (Columbia) 4/21/1920 New York, New York. Spencer Williams (composer) Roger Graham (lyricist).

    • 3 min
    • 4.6K
    • warholsoup100
  7. www.jazzage1920s.com › marionharris › marionharrisMarion Harris - Jazz Age 1920s

    Marion Harris was married in 1923 to Rush Bissell Hughes, son of Rupert Hughes, the famous novelist and playwright (and uncle of Howard Hughes). Together they had one child Rush, Jr. They divorced in 1928 following allegations in May 1927 involving a sixteen-year-old chorus girl Adele Smith who accused Rush Hughes of attacking her at the Hughes’ home in Long Island.