Home / Tag Archives: 1964 in Hollywood

Tag Archives: 1964 in Hollywood

Buddy Cole

It looks like the very last thing needed at a Nat Ruler Cole recording program will be another pianist named Cole; which “having coals to Newcastle” groaner within somewhere to be certain. But that’s just what occurred in Cole’s past due profession when the clean balladeer began focusing on his …

Read More »

Sam H. Stept

Pop composer Sam H. Stept published hits such as for example “Comes Like” and “Don’t Sit Beneath the Apple Tree,” from your past due ’20s through the first ’50s, a lot of which became favorites of jazz vocalists and big rings. Created in 1897, in Odessa, Russia, Stept found the …

Read More »

Eddie Cantor

No additional entertainer proved effective in as much areas as Eddie Cantor through the 1920s and ’30s. Nicknamed “Banjo Eye” and “the Apostle of Pep” for his limitless reserves of energy and showmanship (he’d literally jump round the stage while carrying out his favorite figures), he started his profession touring …

Read More »