Fanlight Fanny

1962 single by Clinton Ford From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Fanlight Fanny" is a song written in 1935 by George Formby, Harry Gifford and Fred E. Cliffe, and recorded by Formby in May that year.[5][6] Another notable version was released in 1962 by Clinton Ford.

B-side"Dreamy City Lullaby"[1]
Released1962
Recorded1962
Quick facts Single by Clinton Ford, B-side ...
"Fanlight Fanny"
Single by Clinton Ford
B-side"Dreamy City Lullaby"[1]
Released1962
Recorded1962
GenreTraditional pop
Length2:49[2]
LabelOriole Records - CB 1706[3]
SongwritersGeorge Formby, Harry Gifford and Fred E. Cliffe
ProducerJohn Schroeder[4]
Clinton Ford singles chronology
"Too Many Beautiful Girls"
(1961)
"Fanlight Fanny"
(1962)
"What More Can I Say"
(1962)
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Song information

The original recording by George Formby was released on Decca Records (F5569) on 29 May 1935.[7] The song also appeared in Formby's 1939 film Trouble Brewing,[8] in which it bore an additional verse.[5] It tells the tale of a tawdry, West End-based woman of a certain age, full with alcohol and shoplifted goods, trying to earn a living in a Soho night spot, where she is "Fanlight Fanny the frowsey night-club queen".[9]

The version recorded by Clinton Ford in 1962 had accompaniment by the 'George Chisholm All Stars'.[3] It also, with permission, had added new words written by Ford.[10] "Fanlight Fanny" was Ford's third UK chart hit and his most successful single, reaching No.22 in the UK Singles Chart in March 1962. It spent ten weeks in that chart.[11][12] His album Clinton Ford, also known as Clinton Ford Sings Fanlight Fanny (1962), peaked at number 16 in the UK Albums Chart.[11][13]

Ford later recorded the Wally Lindsay-penned "Fanlight Fanny’s Daughter" (1963),[1] a track also released as a single, albeit with less success.[5] In 1968, on Ford's album Clinton The Clown (re-released in 1970 on Marble Arch Records), the song's character reappeared as "Fan-Dance Fanny", a renaming and re-recording which had a small change in lyrical content.[14] With the passage of six years, Fanny wore "dustbin lids on her chest" rather than her earlier "saucepan lids".[5]

Other uses

Formby's original version was used on the soundtrack to the 2008 horror film Chemical Wedding.[15]

References

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