What's My Line? - Jane Froman (Mar 1, 1953)
With a song in my heart - Jane Froman - Movie Sequence.wmv
Jane Froman Sings "I'll Walk Alone"
With A Song In My Heart - Jane Froman
JANE FROMAN SINGS- I' LL BE SEEING YOU with PAUL WHITEMAN ORCH
Susan Hayward as Jane Froman-America the Beautiful Medley
JANE FROMAN - BLUE MOON
Blue Moon - Jane Froman - 1952
Jane Froman - I Only Have Eyes for You - 1934
Jane Froman - I Wonder - (1955)
Jane Froman - I believe
JANE FROMAN - EMBRACEABLE YOU
Jane Froman -- Blue Moon (VintageMusic.es)
1953 HITS ARCHIVE: I Believe - Jane Froman
Plot
Young 'Jane Froman' (qv) lands a job at a Cincinnati radio station thanks to less-successful singer Don Ross. Managed by Ross, her career soars, but their personal relationship doesn't. World War II arrives and the USO calls Jane to Europe, where a plane crash puts her in the hospital with mangled legs. Will she walk again? Her travails are complicated by a romantic triangle with Ross and airline pilot John Burn...
Keywords: accidental-nudity, entertainer, female-protagonist, nipple-slip, singer, world-war-two
What's My Line? - Jane Froman (Mar 1, 1953)
With a song in my heart - Jane Froman - Movie Sequence.wmv
Jane Froman Sings "I'll Walk Alone"
With A Song In My Heart - Jane Froman
JANE FROMAN SINGS- I' LL BE SEEING YOU with PAUL WHITEMAN ORCH
Susan Hayward as Jane Froman-America the Beautiful Medley
JANE FROMAN - BLUE MOON
Blue Moon - Jane Froman - 1952
Jane Froman - I Only Have Eyes for You - 1934
Jane Froman - I Wonder - (1955)
Jane Froman - I believe
JANE FROMAN - EMBRACEABLE YOU
Jane Froman -- Blue Moon (VintageMusic.es)
1953 HITS ARCHIVE: I Believe - Jane Froman
JANE FROMAN - I'll Walk Alone
JANE FROMAN - TEA FOR TWO
Jane Froman - Deep Purple
Jane Froman -- It's A Good Day (VintageMusic.es)
JANE FROMAN - Wish You Were Here
1952 HITS ARCHIVE: With A Song In My Heart - Jane Froman
Jane Froman
JANE FROMAN - AN AMERICAN MEDLEY
1930's Ladies of Song #2 - Mildred Bailey - Jane Froman - Annette Hanshaw - Dolly Dawn
Jane Froman - I'll Walk Alone
Jane Froman ~ Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered
JANE FROMAN - THAT OLD FEELING
That Old Feeling - Jane Froman - 1952
TEXACO STAR THEATER 18 03 1945 with LAWRENCE TIBBETT & JANE FROMAN
Jane Froman -- Tea For Two (VintageMusic.es)
They're Either Too Young Or Too Old - Jane Froman - 1952.wmv
I'm Thru With Love - Jane Froman - 1952
Jane Froman: My Shining Hour
JANE FROMAN SINGS -THE WORLD IS MINE TONIGHT- 1936 RADIO SHOW
JANE FROMAN SINGS - SMOKE GETS IN YOUR EYES 1942 RADIO SHOW
With A Song In My Heart Movie Opening Production - It's A Good Day - Jane Froman-1952
Jane Froman - City Called Heaven
DOROTHY KILLGALEN INTERVIEWS JANE FROMAN 1937
JANE FROMAN SINGS-MORE THAN YOU KNOW-1838 TEXACO RADIO SHOW
JANE FROMAN SINGS-HES HOME FOR A LITTLE WHILE- 1945 RADIO SHOW
JANE FROMAN - You Go To My Head
Jane Froman Memorial Cabaret
TEXACO STAR THEATER 13 01 1946 with JANE FROMAN & JAMES MELTON
Jane Froman - Tea For Two 1952
JANE FROMAN - GET HAPPY
V-Disc 668 Jane Froman, Nino Martini
JANE FROMAN SINGS -JEANETTE MACDONALD SONG
JANE FROMAN SINGS-ACCENTUATE THE POSITIVE-1945 RADIO SHOW
Bob Hope's First National Radio Appearance 'The Intimate Revue'
LIONEL BARRYMORE INTRODUCES JANE FROMAN
Jane Froman - I Only Have Eyes for You - 1934.mpg
USTR's Michael Froman, interviewed following end of TPP Ministerial meeting in Singapore
NRANews.com Interview with NRA Past President Sandy Froman
What's My Line? - Jane Fonda; Martin Gabel [panel; Polly Bergen [panel] (Apr 3, 1960)
A Tribute to Frankie Laine
Female Singers of the Past & Present Part 1
Ferris Bueller's Day Off #3 Movie CLIP - The Sausage King of Chicago (1986) HD
Robson and Jerome - I Believe (1995)
TEXACO STAR THEATER 10 09 1944 with JANE FROMAN & JAMES MELTON
TEXACO STAR THEATER 05 07 1942 with JANE FROMAN and BOB HANNON
TEXACO STAR THEATER 19 07 1942 with JANE FROMAN AND BOB HANNON
TEXACO STAR THEATER 23 08 1942 with JANE FROMAN AND BOB HANNON
TEXACO STAR THEATER 30 08 1942 with JANE FROMAN AND BOB HANNON
TEXACO STAR THEATER 27 09 1938 with JANE FROMAN & KENNY BAKER
Jane Froman Radio Show part 1
Divas Of Jazz 2013
ROBYN ARCHER -- A STAR IS TORN part 2 -- Billie Holiday / Piaf / Marie Lloyd / Froman / Garland
Command Performance - Christmas Special (1942 12 24)
What's My Line? - Joseph L. Mankiewicz; Jane Russell; Steve Allen [panel] (Nov 18, 1962)
What's My Line? - Jane Wyman; Anthony Perkins [panel] (May 29, 1960)
What's My Line? - Jayne Meadows (Aug 1, 1954)
C Jane Run - Sounding Board, Time Warner, Albany NY 2000
Royal Wedding (1951) - Fred Astaire, Jane Powell
TEXACO STAR THEATER 06 08 1944 with JAMES MELTON AND JANE POWELL
Abu Dhabi Big Band - A Night Of Gershwin 1
Jane Froman (November 10, 1907 – April 22, 1980) was an American singer and actress. During her thirty-year career, Froman performed on stage, radio and television despite chronic injuries that she sustained from a 1943 plane crash. The 1952 film, With a Song in My Heart, is based on her life.
Froman was born in University City, Missouri, the daughter of Elmer Ellsworth Froman and Anna T. Barcafer. Her childhood and adolescence was spent in the small Missouri town of Clinton. She attended Columbia College (Missouri) in the city of Columbia, which she considered her hometown. Her father left her mother when Jane was about 5 years old. She developed a stutter around this time, which plagued her all of her life, except when she sang.
Although she had classical voice training, early in her career she was drawn to the songs of the era's songwriters, George and Ira Gershwin, Cole Porter, and Irving Berlin, who were inspiring a resurgence in popular music. She met vaudeville performer Don Ross when they auditioned for the same job at WLW radio station in Cincinnati. There, she joined Henry Thies' orchestra and was featured vocal on a number of Thies' Victor recordings. Convinced she was star material, Ross became her unofficial manager and persuaded her to move to Chicago where he worked for NBC radio. In 1933 Froman moved to New York City where she appeared on Chesterfield's "Music that Satisfies" radio program with Bing Crosby. She married Don Ross in September 1933. She joined the Ziegfeld Follies the same year where she befriended Fannie Brice. In 1934, at age 27, she became the top-polled "girl singer." The famous composer and producer, Billy Rose, when asked to name the top ten female singers, is reported to have replied, "Jane Froman and nine others."
Song In (in hangul 송인, in hanja 宋仁) was a civil official in the mid-Goryeo era who became the intermediary founder of the Jincheon Song clan. His highest post was munha pyeongjangsa (문하 평장사). This was the highest government position in the period. Song In was responsible for administration, judicial affairs and economy in the district.
As he performed meritorious deeds during the King, he was conferred with Chanhwagongsin and Jincheonbaek. Baek was a position of politicians who were responsible for administration, judicial affairs and economy in the district. As the government created him Jincheonbaek, his family started regarding Jincheon as their origin. Hence, the family origin became Jincheon Song.
When he was in the position of Sangsanbaek, he tried to be just and fair in all the administrative affairs and strived to enhance the welfare of his people. He also focused on education for the youth and courtesy for people, which made his district famous for most excellent behaviors in the nation. After that, the people have long paid tribute to his feats.
Paul Samuel Whiteman (March 28, 1890 – December 29, 1967) was an American bandleader and orchestral director.
Leader of the most popular dance bands in the United States during the 1920s, Whiteman produced recordings that were immensely successful, and press notices often referred to him as the "King of Jazz". Using a large ensemble and exploring many styles of music, Whiteman is perhaps best known for his blending of symphonic music and jazz, as typified by his 1924 commissioning and debut of George Gershwin's jazz-influenced "Rhapsody In Blue". Whiteman recorded many jazz and pop standards during his career, including "Wang Wang Blues", "Mississippi Mud", "Rhapsody in Blue", "Wonderful One", "Hot Lips", "Mississippi Suite", and "Grand Canyon Suite". His popularity faded in the swing music era of the 1930s, and by the 1940s Whiteman was semi-retired from music.
Whiteman's place in the history of early jazz is somewhat controversial. Detractors suggest that Whiteman's ornately-orchestrated music was jazz in name only (lacking the genre's improvisational and emotional depth), and co-opted the innovations of black musicians. Defenders note that Whiteman's fondness for jazz was genuine (he worked with black musicians as much as was feasible during an era of racial segregation), that his bands included many of the era's most esteemed white jazz musicians, and argue that Whiteman's groups handled jazz admirably as part of a larger repertoire. In his autobiography, Duke Ellington declared, "Paul Whiteman was known as the King of Jazz, and no one as yet has come near carrying that title with more certainty and dignity."
Susan Hayward (June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress.
After working as a fashion model in New York, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937 when open auditions were held for the leading role in Gone with the Wind (1939). Although she was not selected, she secured a film contract, and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in Smash-Up, the Story of a Woman (1947). Her career continued successfully through the 1950s and she won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her portrayal of death row inmate Barbara Graham in I Want to Live! (1958).
Hayward married and lived in Georgia and following her Oscar-winning performance, her film appearances became infrequent, although she continued acting in film and television until 1972. She died in 1975 of brain cancer.
Mildred Rinker Bailey (February 27, 1907 – December 12, 1951) was a popular and influential American jazz singer during the 1930s, known as "The Queen of Swing", "The Rockin' Chair Lady" and "Mrs. Swing". Her number one hits were "Please Be Kind", "Darn That Dream", "Rockin' Chair" and "Says My Heart".
Born Mildred Rinker in Tekoa,Washington, her mother, Josephine, was an enrolled member of the Coeur d'Alene Tribe and a devout Roman Catholic. Her father, Charles, played fiddle and called square dances. Her mother played piano every evening after supper and taught Mildred to play and sing. Her brothers were the vocalist and composer Al Rinker, and the lyricist Charles Rinker.
At the age of seventeen, Bailey moved to Seattle and worked as a sheet music demonstrator at Woolworth's. She married and divorced Ted Bailey, keeping his last name because she thought it sounded more American than Rinker. With the help of her second husband, Benny Stafford, she became an established blues and jazz singer on the West Coast. According to Gary Giddins' book Bing Crosby – A Pocketful of Dreams – The Early Years 1903-1940, in 1925 she secured work for her brother, Al Rinker, and his partner Bing Crosby. Giddins further states that Crosby first heard of Louis Armstrong and other Chicago black jazz records from Bailey's own record collection. Crosby helped Bailey in turn by introducing her to Paul Whiteman. She sang with Paul Whiteman's band from 1929 to 1933 (Whiteman had a popular radio program and when Bailey debuted with her version of "Moaning Low" in 1929, public reaction was immediate, although she did not start recording with Whiteman until late 1931).
With a song in my heart
I behold your adorable face.
Just a song at the start
But it soon is a hymn to your grace.
When the music swells
I'm touching your hand
It tells me you're standing near, and...
At the sound of your voice
Heaven opens it's portals to me.
Can I help but rejoice
That a song such as ours came to be?
But I always knew
I would live life through
[Humming]
Red sails in the sunset
'Way out on the sea
Oh carry my loved one
Home safely to me
He sailed at the dawning
All day I've been blue
Red sails in the sunset
I'm trusting in you
Swift wings you must borrow.
Make straight for the shore
We marry tomorrow
And he goes sailing no more
Red sails in the sunset.
'Way out on the sea
Oh, carry my loved one
Home safely to me.
[ guitar ]
Swift wings you must borrrw
Make straight for the shore
We marry tomorrow
And he goes sailing no more
Red sails in the sunset
'Way out on the sea
Oh carry my loved one
home safely to me
Oh carry my loved one
I'll walk alone because, to tell you the truth, I'll be
lonely
I don't mind being lonely
When my heart tells me you are lonely, too
I'll walk alone, they'll ask me why and I'll tell them
I'd rather
There are dreams I must gather
Dreams we fashioned the night you held me tight
I'll always be near you wherever you are each night
In every prayer
If you call I'll hear you, no matter how far
Just close your eyes and I'll be there
Please walk alone and send your love and your kisses to
guide me
Till you're walking beside me, I'll walk alone
I'll always be near you wherever you are each night
In every prayer
If you call I'll hear you, no matter how far
Just close your eyes and I'll be there
Please walk alone and send your love and your kisses to
guide me
Till you're walking beside me, I'll walk alone
I believe for every drop of rain that falls
A flower grows
I believe that somewhere in the darkest night
A candle glows
I believe for everyone that goes astray
Someone will come to show the way
I believe
I believe
I believe above the storm the smallest prayer
Will still be heard
I believe that someone in the great somewhere
Hears every word
Every time I hear a newborn baby cry
Or touch a leaf
Or see the sky
Then I know why I believe
Thanks for asking,
I'm discontented with homes that are rented
So I have invented my own
Darling, this place is a lover's oasis
Where lights where we chase is unknown
Far from the cry of the city
Where flowers pretty caress the stream
Cozy to hide in, to live side by side in
Don't let it abide in my dream
Picture you upon my knee
Just tea for two and two for tea
Just me for you and you for me alone
Nobody near us to see us or hear us
No friends or relations
Or weekend vacations
We won't have it known, dear
That we own a telephone, dear
They will brake and you'll awake
And start to bake a sugar cake
For me to take for all the boys to see
We will raise a family
A boy for you and a girl for me
Can't you see how happy we will be?
I believe for every drop of rain that falls
A flower grows
I believe that somewhere in the darkest night
A candle glows
I believe for everyone that goes astray
Someone will come to show the way
I believe
I believe
I believe above the storm the smallest prayer
Will still be heard
I believe that someone in the great somewhere
Hears every word
Every time I hear a newborn baby cry
Or touch a leaf
Or see the sky
Then I know why I believe
Thanks for asking,
Lou
[Humming]
Red sails in the sunset
'Way out on the sea
Oh carry my loved one
Home safely to me
He sailed at the dawning
All day I've been blue
Red sails in the sunset
I'm trusting in you
Swift wings you must borrow.
Make straight for the shore
We marry tomorrow
And he goes sailing no more
Red sails in the sunset.
'Way out on the sea
Oh, carry my loved one
Home safely to me.
[ guitar ]
Swift wings you must borrrw
Make straight for the shore
We marry tomorrow
And he goes sailing no more
Red sails in the sunset
'Way out on the sea
Oh carry my loved one
home safely to me
Oh carry my loved one
home safely to me