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  1. A. "Abraham Lincoln Had Just One Country" - donated by Kern to the country (1941) for the Defense Bonds campaign [3] "All in Fun" (1939) - lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II - from the musical Very Warm for May [4] "All the Things You Are" (1939) - lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II - from Very Warm for May [5] "All Through the Day" [6] - lyrics by ...

  2. Artie Shaw. Soundtrack: The Rocketeer. Artie Shaw played ukulele at ten and began as an alto saxophonist at the age of twelve. While still in his teens he formed his first band, the Bellevue Ramblers which performed at local gigs. He took up the clarinet in 1926 and spent several years honing his talent playing for various local bands in Florida and Ohio, often doubling up as an arranger and...

  3. 31 de dic. de 2020 · Jerome Kern (1885-1945) wrote “They Didn’t Believe Me” for a Broadway show called The Girl from Utah in 1914. The song consisted of sixteen bars, half the length of the standards to come. But Kern’s melody and its harmonic and rhythmical possibilities made it the prototype of the modern ballad. “No one had begun writing real songs in ...

  4. 5 de abr. de 1996 · Jerome Kern 1885 – 1945. Eva Leale ... memorial page for Elizabeth Jane “Betty” Kern Miller (16 Dec 1918–5 Apr 1996), Find a Grave Memorial ID ...

  5. 27 de feb. de 2022 · Betty Kern an Jerome Kern's daughter,date of birth January 1 1913,age 111,Died 1996,Parents Eva Leale,Grandparents Henry Kern,Children Steven Kern,Spouse Jack

  6. "Make Believe" is a show tune from the 1927 Broadway musical Show Boat with music by Jerome Kern and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. Background [ edit ] In the show, it is first sung as a duet by the characters Gaylord Ravenal , a handsome riverboat gambler, and the teenage Magnolia Hawks, an aspiring performer and daughter of the show boat captain, soon after their meeting in Act I.

  7. Jerome Kern began his career as a songwriter in theaters in London and New York City. Success came quickly. By the early nineteen twenties, Kern was a successful young composer for Broadway musical comedies. In one three-year period alone, he wrote music for nineteen shows. Other people wrote the words for Kern's songs. Kern wrote only the music.