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Lullaby of Broadway (song)

"Lullaby of Broadway" is a popular song with music written by Harry Warren and lyrics by Al Dubin, published in 1935.[1] The lyrics salute the nightlife of Broadway and its denizens, who "don't sleep tight until the dawn."

"Lullaby of Broadway"

The song was introduced by Wini Shaw in the musical film Gold Diggers of 1935,[1] and, in an unusual move, it was used as background music in a sequence in the Bette Davis film Special Agent that same year. Furthermore, again that year, it was sung by Jeane Cowan in a night club scene in the James Cagney film G Men. In three Warner Bros. films, it won the 1935 Academy Award for Best Original Song.[1]

Lyrics[edit]

Unlike the song "Manhattan" and many others, "Lullaby of Broadway" does not name-check any Broadway locations. The line, "The daffydils who entertain / At Angelo's and Maxie's" references a fictitious place (or places), presumably within the context of the film. "Daffydils" — often sung as "daffodils" — was a slang term for chorus girls (or indeed boys, depending on the venue).[2] Since the song was written, several real establishments have opened on or around Broadway, adopting the name from the song, rather than vice versa.

Orchestra (vocal by Bob Crosby)

The Dorsey Brothers

Little Jack Little

Reginald Foresythe

(vocal: Bob Allen)

Hal Kemp

Chick Bullock

Hit versions in 1935 were by:[3]


Other versions have been recorded by:

1935 ,[1]

Gold Diggers of 1935

1935

Special Agent

1935

G Men

1935 (Merrie Melodies cartoon), based on a Dubin-Warren song, the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra version served as part of the background music.

Page Miss Glory

1951 , sung by Doris Day.

Lullaby of Broadway

1980 , season 2, episode 24 "Fantasy Borough: Part 2" .

Taxi (TV series)

1993 [10]

Life With Mikey

In popular culture[edit]

It is also featured in an episode of Taxi (performed by Marilu Henner) and the Broadway musical 42nd Street, originated by Jerry Orbach playing Julian Marsh in the 1980 original cast.


In 1976, Wini Shaw's original recorded version of the song was released as a 45rpm single and made No. 42 in the UK Charts.[11] Subsequently, the BBC interviewed Wini Shaw O'Malley in New York about her new success with it. She could not believe it.


The song was used in a commercial for the Milford Plaza Hotel, where it was called the "Lullabuy of Broadway".


The song was performed by a group of Muppet eskimos in the Gilda Radner episode of The Muppet Show.


In Lisa Stansfield's 1990 music video for her cover of Cole Porter's Down in the Depths, the beginning and ending are both references to the song. The video begins with her disembodied head zooming in, while singing the opening to the song, and ends with it zooming out, while singing the outro.


Linda Lavin and Martha Raye sang this song in the 1970s TV show Alice in the episode [Sharples vs Sharples]


In 2005, Idina Menzel recorded a pop/hip-hop version of the song for the end credits of ShowBusiness: The Road to Broadway.


The song appears on the dancing game Dance on Broadway.