Beautiful Girl (Bing Crosby song)

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Published1933 by Robbins Music Corp.
RecordedSeptember 27, 1933 (1933-09-27)[1]
Length3:20
"Beautiful Girl"
Song by Bing Crosby with
Lennie Hayton and his Orchestra
Published1933 by Robbins Music Corp.
RecordedSeptember 27, 1933 (1933-09-27)[1]
Genre
Length3:20
LabelBrunswick 6694
Composer(s)Nacio Herb Brown
Lyricist(s)Arthur Freed

"Beautiful Girl" is a song with music by Nacio Herb Brown and lyrics by Arthur Freed, first published in 1933. It was originally written for the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film Stage Mother (1933) and appeared the same year in another MGM production – Going Hollywood (1933), where it was sung by Bing Crosby, whose rendition charted in the US at number 11 for 3 weeks.[2][3]

"Beautiful Girl" was introduced by a vaudeville singer and actor Sam Ash in a pre-Code Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer motion picture Stage Mother (1933). It appeared in a show sequence, where it was danced to by Maureen O'Sullivan.[4] The original arrangement and orchestration of the song was made by Jack Virgil and was conducted by Lou Silvers.[5] The master recording of Ash's version was on August 7, 1933.[a]

The first commercial recording of "Beautiful Girl" however, was made by Freddy Martin and his Orchestra on September 20, 1933.[1] A version recorded a week later by Bing Crosby with Lennie Hayton's Orchestra became a hit, charting at number 11 on Billboard for 3 weeks.[2] Released in December the same year Going Hollywood (1933) contained another interpretation of the song by Crosby, in a different key.[3]

According to the labels on shellac records, the target dance for "Beautiful Girl" is the foxtrot.[3]

Re-arranged by Roger Edens and Conrad Salinger, the song appeared in a musical film Singin' in the Rain (1952).[6] Under the direction of returning Lennie Hayton, it was sung by Jimmie Thompson during the "Beautiful Girl Montage" segment.[5]

Renditions

Date Main recording artist Vocalist Notes Ref.
August 7, 1933Sam AshSoundtrack recording for Stage Mother (1933).[a][5]
September 20, 1933Freddy Martin and his OrchestraTerry StandFirst commercial recording of the song.[1]
September 26, 1933Harry Reser and his EskimosJimmy Brierly[7]
September 27, 1933Bing CrosbyFeaturing Lennie Hayton and his Orchestra.[1]
October 3, 1933Bernie Cummins and his New YorkersWalter Cummins[8]
October 4, 1933Ozzie Nelson and his OrchestraOzzie Nelson[7]
October 11, 1933Don Bestor and his OrchestraNeil Buckley[8]
January 4, 1934Paul Whiteman and his OrchestraBob LawrenceLive recording for the Kraft Music Hall radio program.[9]
June 8, 1951Jimmie ThompsonSoundtrack recording for Singin' in the Rain (1952).[5]

Charts

Notes

References

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