Frogtoon Music

Moon River by Eartha Kitt

Artist Biography For Eartha Kitt

Eartha Mae Kitt January 17 1927 - December 25 2008 Was An American Actress Singer And Cabaret Star. She Was Perhaps Best Known For Her 1953 Christmas Song Santa Baby. Orson Welles Once Called Her The "most Exciting Woman In The World". She Took On The Role Of Catwoman For The Fourth Season Of The 1960s Batman TV Series Replacing Julie Newmar Who Was Unavailable For The Final Series. Born In Tiny North South Carolina To Mamie Kitt Who Was Of Cherokee And African-American Descent And An American Father Surname Kitt Of German And Dutch Descent She Was Raised By Her Maternal Aunt Anna Mae Riley Whom She Believed Was Her Mother Up Until After Riley's Death When She Was Sent To Live In New York City With Her Real Mother. Kitt Began Her Career As A Member Of The Katherine Dunham Company And Made Her Film Debut With Them In Casbah 1948 . A Talented Singer With A Distinctive Voice Her Hits Include Let's Do It C'est Si Bon It's So Good Just An Old Fashioned Girl Monotonous Love For Sale I'd Rather Be Burned As A Witch Uska Dara Mink Schmink Under The Bridges Of Paris And Arguably Her Most Recognizable Hit The Sexily Sung Christmas Song Santa Baby. She Sang Quite A Few Songs In French A Language She Picked Up During Her Years Performing In Europe But She Never Lost Her American Accent Which Made Her French Songs Sound Rather Amusing To Native French Speakers. She Dabbled In Other Languages As Well Which She Demonstrated In Many Of The Live Recordings Of Her Cabaret Performances. In 1950 Orson Welles Gave Her Her First Starring Role As Helen Of Troy In His Staging Of Dr. Faustus. A Few Years Later She Was Cast In The Revue New Faces Of 1952 Introducing "Monotonous" "C'est Si Bon" And "Santa Baby" Three Songs With Which She Continues To Be Identified. During Her Run 20th Century Fox Filmed A Version Of The Play. Welles And Kitt Allegedly Had A Torrid Affair During Her Run In Shinbone Alley Which Earned Her The Nickname By Welles As "the Most Exciting Woman In The World". In 1958 Kitt Made Her Feature Film Debut Opposite Sidney Poitier In The Mark Of The Hawk. Throughout The Rest Of The 1950s And Early 1960s Kitt Would Work On And Off In Film Television And On Nightclub Stages. In The Late 1960s Television Series Batman She Played Catwoman After Julie Newmar Left The Role. This Was The Role For Which She Would Best Be Remembered Owing To Her Purring Feline Drawl. In 1968 However Kitt Encountered A Substantial Professional Setback After She Made Anti-War Statements During A White House Luncheon That Reportedly Made First Lady Lady Bird Johnson Weep Uncontrollably. Professionally Exiled From The U.S. She Devoted Her Energies To Overseas Performances Before Returning To New York In A Triumphant Turn In The Broadway Spectacle Timbuktu! A Version Of The Perennial Kismet Set In Africa In 1978. In The Musical One Song Gives A 'recipe' For Mahoun A Preparation Of Cannabis In Which Her Sultry Purring Rendition Of The Refrain "constantly Stirring With A Long Wooden Spoon" Was Distinctive. In 1984 She Returned To Hit Music With A Dance Song Where Is My Man The First Certified Gold Record Of Her Career. Kitt Found New Audiences In Nightclubs Across The Country Including A Whole New Generation Of Gay Male Fans And She Responded By Frequently Giving Benefit Performances In Support Of HIV/AIDS Organizations. In 2000 Kitt Again Returned To Broadway In The Short But Notable Run Of The Revival Of The 1920s-Themed The Wild Party Opposite Mandy Patinkin And Toni Collette. In 2003 She Replaced Chita Rivera In Nine. In Recent Years She Had Also Appeared As The Wicked Witch In The North American National Touring Company Of The Wizard Of Oz. One Of Her More Unusual Roles Was As Kaa The Python In A 1994 BBC Radio Adaptation Of The Jungle Book. Kitt Lent Her Distinctive Voice To The Role Of Yzma In Disney's The Emperor's New Groove And Also Did Other Voiceover Work Such As The Voice Of Queen Vexus On The Animated TV Series My Life As A Teenage Robot. She Continued Her Role As Yzma On The Spin-Off TV Series Of The Emperor's New Groove The Emperor's New School. In Recent Years Kitt's Annual Appearances In New York Made Her A Fixture Of The Manhattan Cabaret Scene. She Took The Stage At Venues Such As The Ballroom And More Recently The Café Carlyle To Explore And Define Her Highly Stylized Image Alternating Between Signature Songs Such As "Old Fashioned Millionaire" Which Emphasized A Witty Mercenary World-Weariness And Less Familiar Repertoire Much Of Which She Performed With An Unexpected Ferocity And Bite That Presented Her As A Survivor With A Seemingly Bottomless Reservoir Of Resilience - Her Version Of Here's To Life Frequently Used As A Closing Number Was A Sterling Example Of The Latter. This Side Of Her Later Performances Is Reflected In At Least One Of Her Recordings Thinking Jazz Which Preserves A Series Of Performances With A Small Jazz Combo That Took Place In The Early 1990s In Germany And Which Includes Both Standards Smoke Gets In Your Eyes And Numbers Such As Something May Go Wrong That Seem More Specifically Tailored To Her Talents One Version Of The CD Includes As Bonus Performances A Fierce Angry Yesterdays And A Live Take Of "C'est Si Bon" That Good-Humoredly Satirizes Her Sex-Kitten Persona. Personal Life
Kitt Was Married To John William McDonald An Associate Of A Real-Estate Investment Company From 1960 To 1965. They Had One Child A Daughter Kitt B. 1962 Married Charles Lawrence Shapiro And Two Grandchildren Jason And Rachel Shapiro. Eartha Kitt Died Of Colon Cancer On Christmas Day December 25 2008.

Frogtoon Music - Song Info: Moon River

"Moon River" Is A Song Composed By Johnny Mercer Lyrics And Henry Mancini Music In 1961 For Whom It Won That Year's Academy Award For Best Original Song. It Is Most Well-Known For Being Sung In The Movie Breakfast At Tiffany's By Audrey Hepburn Although It Has Been Covered By Many Other Artists. It Became The Theme Song For Andy Williams Who First Recorded The Song In 1961 And Performed It At The Academy Awards Ceremonies In 1962. He Sang The First Eight Bars Of The Song At The Beginning Of His Television Show He Also Named His Production Company And Venue In Branson Missouri After Moon River. Williams' Version Was Vetoed By Cadence President Archie Bleyer Who Believed It Had Little Or No Appeal To Teenagers. Williams' Famous Version Never Charted Except As An LP Track Which He Recorded For Columbia In A Hit Album Of 1962. The Success Of The Song Was Responsible For Relaunching Mercer's Career As A Songwriter Which Had Stalled In The Mid-1950s Because Rock And Roll Replaced Jazz Standards As The Popular Music Of The Time. An Inlet Near Savannah Georgia Johnny Mercer's Hometown Was Named Moon River In Honor Of Him And This Song. The Popularity Of The Song Is Such That It Has Been Used As A Test Sample In A Study On People's Memories Of Popular Songs. The Original Version
Mercer And Mancini Wrote The Song For Audrey Hepburn To Fit Her Vocal Range. Initially The Lyrics Started "I'm Holly Like I Want To Be / Like Holly On A Tree Back Home..." However They Were Later Changed To Fit The Theme To The Movie Breakfast At Tiffany's. Although An Instrumental Version Is Played Over The Film's Opening Titles The Lyrics Are First Heard In A Scene Where Paul 'Fred' Varjak George Peppard Discovers Holly Golightly Hepburn Singing Them Accompanied By Her Guitar On The Fire-Escape Outside Their Apartments. There Was Much Behind-The-Scenes Consternation Which Erupted When A Paramount Pictures Executive Suggested Deleting The Song From The Film Immediately After A Very Successful San Francisco Preview. Hepburn's Reaction Has Been Described By Mancini And Others In Degrees Varying From Her Saying "over My Dead Body" To Her Using Somewhat More Colorful Language To Make The Same Point. Hepburn's Version Was Not Included In The Original Score Album To Breakfast At Tiffany's. Instead An Album Version Recorded By Mancini And His Chorus Was Released As A Single And Became A #11 Hit. In Different Versions Joel Whitburn's "Top Adult Contemporary Songs" Reported The Song As A #3 Or #1 Easy Listening Hit Due To Unpublished Charts In Billboard. Only Months After Hepburn's Death In 1993 Her Version Was Released On An Album Entitled Music From The Films Of Audrey Hepburn. Other Recordings
"Moon River" Was Released By South African Singer Danny Williams And Reached #1 In The UK. Shortly Thereafter Andy Williams Recorded The Song And Made It His Theme Song. It Was A Hit For Jerry Butler In 1961 Reaching #11 In The Billboard Charts. Other Artists That Have Covered The Song Are The Afghan Whigs Benny Anderssons Orkester Paul Anka Blake Louis Armstrong Vince Guaraldi Beru Revue Mary Black Sarah Brightman Liz Callaway Perry Como Ray Conniff Bobby Darin Ania Dąbrowska Dr. John Dump Billy Eckstine The Four Freshmen Connie Francis Bill Frisell Instrumental Emi Fujita Judy Garland Karel Gott Grant Green Instrumental Patty Griffin The Innocence Mission Although This Version Is Sometimes Incorrectly Cited As Being Performed By Milla Jovovich Bradley Joseph Instrumental Kim Yoo-Jin James Last Joey McIntyre Johnny Mathis Brad Mehldau Jane Monheit Morrissey Patsy Ann Noble Jim Reeves John Barrowman R.E.M. Mia Riddle Andrea Ross Frank Sinatra Barbra Streisand Sarah Vaughan Nan Vernon Kid Koala Westlife Victoria Williams The Divine Comedy And Tata Young. Mercer Himself Recorded The Song In 1974 For His Album Appropriately Named My Huckleberry Friend.

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