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Klages, Raymond W. |
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the Cuff"; "Spring Is In the Air"; "Annapolis Farewell." Home: Hollywood, Calif. Address: c/o ASCAP.
Klages, Raymond W., author; b. Baltimore, Md., July 10, 1888; d. Clendale, Calif., Mar. 20, 1947. ASCAP 1923. Educ: Baltimore public schools and City College. As youth sailed around the world several years. In vaudeville, minstrel, and road shows; writing special material. World War I, 108th Field Artillery, Battery A. Became songwriter; joined staff music publishing house, New York. Wrote songs for early motion pictures and musical comedies Sally, Irene and Mary; Passing Slww, 1925; Earl Carroll's Vanities, 1927-28-29-30; Say When; Hollywood Music Box Revue. Songs: "Doin* the Raccoon"; *'Just You, Just Me"; "Once in a Lifetime"; "Blue Shadows"; "Time Will Tell"; "Who'll Take My Place"; "Trail of Dreams"; "What Do I Care"; "Pardon Me, Pretty Baby"; "$21 a Day—Once a Month." Address: Estate, c/o ASCAP.
Klages, Ted, composer; b. Los Angeles, Calif., Jan. 24, 1911. ASCAP 1946. Educ.: Los Angeles High School; studied harmony, composition, orchestration, and conducting with Fannie Charles Dillon, Harry Schoene-feld, and Charles Wakefield Cadman. Violinist and arranger popular orchestras and in radio. World War II, in armed forces, 1944-46, arranger for Special Services Training Group, Alabama; violinist and arranger for Maj. Meredith Willson of Armed Forces Radio Service, Los Angeles; orchestra leader Ream General Hospital orchestra, Palm Beach, Fla.; arranger for Major Harry Salter, N.Y. Works: "When My Baby's By My Side"; "As Mr. Mason Said to Mr. Dixon"; "Gimme Back My Nickel"; "The lip"; "Lightnin "; "The Wishing Well"; hinder the Harvest Moon. |
Home: 3035 Castle St., Los Angeles 39, Calif.
Klauber, Marcy, author; b. Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 19, 1896. ASCAP 1943. Educ.: Columbia School of Journalism, 1917; Natl. Acad, of Music, Budapest, 1919. Since 1930 active in Hollywood writing for motion pictures. Songs: "I'm a Little Nobody that Nobody Loves"; "Goodbye Old Pal, Goodbye"; "I Get the Blues When It Rains"; "O How I Adore You"; "Farewell"; "Gigolette"; "Rhythm of Paree"; "Juanita." Home: Hollywood, Calif. Address: c/o ASCAP.
Klein, Lou, author; b. Albany, N.Y., Oct. 11, 1888; d. Hollywood, Calif., Sept. 7, 1945. ASCAP 1914 (charter member). Educ.: public schools. Sold songs as child, entertaining in streets. Songs: "If I Had My Way"; "Little Good for Nothing"; "Mamas Holiday"; "Now that We're Sweethearts Again"; "Little Shanty in Ypsilanti"; "Honeymoon Express"; "There's Someone More Lonesome than Me"; "A Gay Caballero"; "Pop Corn Man"; "On the Hoko Moko Isle"; "Where's Elmer?"; "My Fraternity Pin"; "Over the Hill"; "Daddy." Address: Estate, c/o ASCAP.
Klein, Manuel, composer, author; b. London, Eng., Dec. 6, 1876; d. New York, June 1, 1919. ASCAP 1914 (charter member). Educ.: London. Musical Director, 1905-14, New York Hippodrome; conductor, Gayety Theatre, 1915, London, Hippodrome, London. N.Y. Hippodrome Productions: Society Circus, Land of the Birds, Auto Race, Battle of the Skies, Neptune's Daughter, America, Round the World, Under Many Flags. Operettas: Mr. Pickwick, Pied Piper, Dick Whittington, Top O' the World, It's Up to You, That Girl C Mine. Songs: "Moon Dear"; "Meet Me When the Lanterns Glow"; "Lucia"; "Home is Where the Heart Is"; "If I Love You"; |
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