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  1. 1928 Broadway. Paris is a musical with the book by Martin Brown, and music and lyrics by Cole Porter, as well as Walter Kollo and Louis Alter (music) and E. Ray Goetz and Roy Turk (lyrics). The musical, which premiered on Broadway in 1928, was Porter's first Broadway hit. The musical introduced the song "Let's Do It, Let's Fall in Love" sung by ...

  2. Download: £ 7.00. CD: £ 11.00. Our selection of the greatest songs and lyrics from the remarkable Cole Porter. 22 superb tracks, the great stars of this generation salute Cole Porter – performing his best loved numbers in superlative style. The Words & Music of Cole Porter also includes two tracks sung by the man himself.

  3. Yale University Press, Nov 25, 2019 - Literary Collections - 672 pages. The first comprehensive collection of the letters of one of the most successful American songwriters of the twentieth century. From Anything Goes to Kiss Me, Kate, Cole Porter left a lasting legacy of iconic songs including "You're the Top," "Love For Sale," and "Night and ...

  4. 13. Jan. 2020 · Beneath his smooth, genial, almost inhumanly productive and evasive surface, there were turbulent waters. His very name, for all its air of Ivy League ease, represents a burdened legacy. The ...

  5. It was called Kiss Me Kate. The show was Cole Porter's masterpiece and triumphantly re-established him as one of the greatest of American songwriters. It opened on December 30, 1948, starring Alfred Drake, Patricia Morison, Lisa Kirk, and Harold Lang, and ran on Broadway for 1,077 performances.

  6. 4. Okt. 2005 · Centennial Gala Concert (1991) Stars of the 30's (1991) Cole Porter: A Centennial Celebration (1991) Cole Porter Centennial Tribute (1993) Porter for Sale (1997) Anything Goes: The Songs of Cole Porter (2000) Cole Porter's You Never Know [World Premiere Cast Recor… (2001) Wake Up and Dream: Cole Porter, 1916-1929 (2002)

  7. 27. Juli 2022 · Cole Porter’s success on Broadway earned him the attention of Hollywood. His final production on Broadway in the 1920s was 1929’s Fifty Million Frenchmen, which he wrote twenty-eight songs for, including “You Do Something to Me.” At first, it received mixed reviews until paid advertisements applauding the show turned it into one of the most successful Broadway runs at the time.