Music Composers, Authors & Songs

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223
Heath, Bobby
"Can You Ever Forgive Me?". Home: Brooklyn, N.Y. Address: c/o ASCAP.
Hayes, Charles R. (Charlie), com­poser, author; b. Shreveport, La., Feb. 2, 1914. ASCAP 1950. Educ: high school, Fort Smith, Ark.; Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, Okla. To Hol­lywood, actor, director motion pic­tures, nine years. Songs: "Hollywood Square Dance"; "Makin' Love Ukulele Style"; "A Little Too Fer"; "Youthful Fountain"; "What Fer Did-Ja?", "With Men Who Know Tobacco Best." Home: 6337 Bluebell Ave., No. Hol­lywood, Calif.
Hays, Billy Silas, composei, author, ladio and recording artist; b. Phila­delphia, Pa., June 13, 1898. ASCAP 1942. Educ.: Temple Univ., Phila­delphia. Organized own orchestra 1925. Started songwriting playing and singing own songs with orchestra. Songs: "Nine O'clock Sal"; "Dream Buddy"; "Pretty Face", "My Sugar and Me"; "Looney Little Tooney"; "Why Do I Love You Like I Do?"; "Can't Get Enough of You", "Sweet Virginia Rose"; "Do You Believe?"; "Lazy Silvery Moon"; "It Always Will Be You"; "Mary, the Prairie and I"; "From the Bottom of My Heart"; "Every Day of My Life", "Curly Head", "I'm Always Smiling"; "Back Again with that Old Girl of Mine"; "What Can I Do?"; "Somewhere There's Some Girl"; "Love Me While the Music Plays"; "You Danced Your Way Into My Heart"; "Refugee"; "You Gave Your Love to Somebody Else." Home: Philadelphia, Pa. Ad­dress: c/o ASCAP.
Hazzard, John Edward, author, libret­tist, actor; b. New York, N.Y., Feb. 22, 1881; d. Great Neck, L.I., N.Y., Dec. 2, 1935. ASCAP 1914 (charter member). Educ.: New York public schools. Debut as actor in The Man from Mexico, 1901; played in The Two Orphans; The Hurdy Gurdy
Girl; The Candy Shop; The Duchess; Miss Princess; The Echo; The Red Rose; Tlie Gypsy; The Lilac Domino; Greenwich Village Follies (1922) and others. Author: Poetry and Rot 1906; The Four Flusher 1908; Verse and Worse 1911. Co-author with Winchell Smith: Turn to the Right (drama). Author of musical, The Houseboat on the Styx. Songs: "Queenie Was There with Her Hair in a Braid"; "Beauti­ful Lady"; "Ain't It Awful, Mabel?"; "Travel Along"; "Put on Your Slip­pers." Also special material, playlets, etc., for vaudeville performers. Ad­dress: Estate, c/o ASCAP.
Heagney, William H., composer, author, director, vaudeville and radio artist; b. Clinton, Mass., July 11, 1882. ASCAP 1926. Educ.: Clinton, Mass., public schools. Largely self-educated in music. Organized juvenile fife and drum corps when still a schoolboy, then own orchestra, dance hall attraction, New England. Staff composer, New York music publish­ing houses, several seasons musical director light opera companies; pian­ist several two-men vaudeville acts on tour. Left vaudeville; returned to New York music publishing houses in professional post. Musical revues: Dilly Dally; There You Are. Songs: "Roll Along, Kentucky Moon"; "Ev'ry Little While"; "Bell of Hawaii"; "Close to Your Heart"; "Tipperary Rose"; "The Belle of the Blue Ridge"; "Shadows in the Cane-brake"; "Moon Over London"; "I Envy the Rose"; "Just an Old Birth­day Present." Home: Bellaire, N.Y. Address: c/o ASCAP.
Heath, Bobby, composer, author, pianist; b. Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 1, 1889; d. Philadelphia, Pa., Mar. 3, 1952. ASCAP 1943. A pianist in vaudeville, first as accompanist, then producer of own vaudeville revues. Songs: "My Pony Boy"; "You Never Can Be Too Sure About the Girls";