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      Gary Cooper and Grace Kelly

      • This was the title tune for the movie High Noon, released in 1952 and starring Gary Cooper and Grace Kelly.
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  1. It is the theme song of the 1952 multiple Academy Award -winning movie High Noon (and titled onscreen as such in the film's opening credits as sung by popular country music singer and actor Tex Ritter ), with its tune repeated throughout the film.

  2. 6.3K. 692K views 7 years ago. The Ballad of High Noon - Do not forsake me, oh, my darling Tex Ritter (original soundtrack High Noon; Dimitri Tiomkin, composer) It was...

    • Oct 5, 2016
    • 691.8K
    • Walter Benjamin
  3. Jan 26, 2012 · Enjoy "Do Not Forsake Me, Oh My Darlin" sung by Tex Ritter from the great western movie "High Noon".Photos from the movie accompanied by this wonderful song.

    • Jan 26, 2012
    • 915.2K
    • Mark Kerr
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › High_NoonHigh Noon - Wikipedia

    High Noon is a 1952 American Western film produced by Stanley Kramer from a screenplay by Carl Foreman, directed by Fred Zinnemann, and starring Gary Cooper.The plot, which occurs in real time, centers on a town marshal whose sense of duty is tested when he must decide to either face a gang of killers alone, or leave town with his new wife.

  5. The song “The Ballad of High Noon” by Dimitri Tiomkin serves as the opening credits for the 1952 Western film High Noon. It sets the tone and outlines the moral dilemma faced by Sheriff Will Kane, played by Gary Cooper, as he confronts the threat of an outlaw gang led by Frank Miller. Table of Contents.

  6. This was the title tune for the movie High Noon, released in 1952 and starring Gary Cooper and Grace Kelly. In the film, Cooper plays a marshal who finds out that a man he put in prison has been released, and is arriving at high noon (with his posse) to kill him.

  7. Oct 5, 2003 · High Noon was by no means the first film to be cross-marketed with a song or musical score. Although the first film soundtrack album, The Jungle Book , was not released until 1942, merchandising of film songs either as short-play records or sheet music had already been common practice for some years (1) .

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