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  1. Oct 15, 2000 · Cole Porter’s Secret Life. By PATRICK PACHECO. Oct. 15, 2000 12 AM PT. Patrick Pacheco is a regular contributor to Calendar. The Cole Porter song “I Loved Him, but He Didn’t Love Me” is ...

  2. The Cole Porter Songbook. (1956) Bird on 52nd St. (1957) The Cole Porter Songbook, also released as Charlie Parker Plays Cole Porter, is the last recorded studio album by alto saxophonist Charlie Parker. Recorded in New York City in March and December 1954, [1] all the tunes recorded for the sessions featured Parker's renditions of Cole Porter ...

  3. Swing. Length. 3:22. Label. Bluebird B-7746. Composer (s) Cole Porter; arranged by Artie Shaw and Jerry Gray. " Begin the Beguine " is a popular song written by Cole Porter. Porter composed the song during a 1935 Pacific cruise aboard the Cunard ocean liner Franconia from Kalabahi, Indonesia, to Fiji. [4]

  4. Cole Porter, Linda Lee Thomas, Bernard Berenson, and Howard Sturges in gondola, 1923. Linda died from emphysema in 1954. aged 70, in the couple's apartment in the Waldorf Towers. She left an estate of over $1.5 million (over $17 million today) in which Cole inherited a lifetime interest. Her jewelry collection included pieces by Paul Flato. [5]

  5. True Love (Cole Porter song) "Well, Did You Evah!" " True Love " is a popular song written by American songwriter Cole Porter, published in 1956. The song was introduced by Bing Crosby and Grace Kelly in the musical film High Society. [2] ". True Love" was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song.

  6. All Through the Night (Cole Porter song) " All Through the Night " is a 1934 popular song written by Cole Porter for his 1934 musical Anything Goes. The melody's distinguishing characteristic is a descending chromatic scale, starting on the third, interrupted by an octave leap after four bars. It was introduced by William Gaxton and Betina Hume.

  7. I Love You (Cole Porter song) "I Love You" is a song written by Cole Porter in 1944 for his stage musical Mexican Hayride. The New York Times reviewed the show, saying, among other things: "Of Mr. Porter's score, the best number bears the title almost startling in its forthrightness, "I Love You," and is the property of Mr. Evans" [1] ( Wilbur ...

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