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  1. "Stormy Weather" is a 1933 torch song written by Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler. Ethel Waters first sang it at The Cotton Club night club in Harlem in 1933 and recorded it with the Dorsey Brothers' Orchestra under Brunswick Records that year, and in the same year it was sung in London by Elisabeth Welch and recorded by Frances Langford.Also in 1933, for the first time the entire floor revue from ...

  2. Answers for 'stormy weather' singer crossword clue, 4 letters. Search for crossword clues found in the Daily Celebrity, NY Times, Daily Mirror, Telegraph and major publications. Find clues for 'stormy weather' singer or most any crossword answer or clues for crossword answers.

  3. Dec 1, 2015 · "Stormy Weather" is a 1933 song written by Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler. Ethel Waters first sang it at The Cotton Club night club in Harlem in 1933 and recor...

  4. "Stormy Weather" was written by Harold Arlen (1905-1986) and Ted Koehler (1894-1973), in 1933. It was first sang by Ethel Waters (1896-1977) at a club, and t...

  5. Lena Horne in Stormy Weather 1943 full song.

  6. Jun 7, 2020 · Harold Arlen once heard a New York taxi driver whistling “Stormy Weather” and asked for the songwriter’s name. “Sure — Irving Berlin,” came the reply.

  7. Oct 21, 2011 · All-TIME 100 Songs. Our critics pick the most extraordinary English-language popular recordings since the beginning of TIME magazine in 1923. Here are 100 (unranked) songs of enduring beauty, power and inventiveness

  8. Initially, Arlen wrote 'Stormy Weather' for Cab Calloway, who in February 1931 had replaced Duke Ellington at the Cotton Club in New York. But before Cotton Club Parade premiered, Calloway left the venue and returned to Ellington. A star was needed to play the song and it so happened that Ethel Waters, who had just recently divorced, had moved from Chicago to New York.

  9. Lena Horne sings "Stormy Weather" with the Twentieth Century Fox Orchestra, featuring Katherine Dunham and her dancers (in a truncated version of their ballet) in the 1943 movie, Stormy Weather. For a complete discussion of the song and and its performance history see the chapter on "Stormy Weather" in Will Friedwald's indispensable book Stardust Melodies: A biography of 12 of America's Most ...

  10. Lena Horne's version of the song is probably the best-known recording of this standard and became her signature tune. She originally sang it in 1941 for RCA Victor, but in 1943 the African American singer re-recorded it for the soundtrack of Stormy Weather, a movie musical loosely based on a life of its main star, the dancer Bill "Bojangles" Robinson.

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