Happy Talk (song)

1949 show tune from the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical South Pacific From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Happy Talk (song)

"Happy Talk" is a show tune from the 1949 Rodgers and Hammerstein musical South Pacific. It is sung by Bloody Mary to the American lieutenant Joe Cable, about having a happy life, after he begins romancing her daughter Liat. Liat performs the song with hand gestures as Mary sings.

Quick Facts Song, Published ...
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From top: Juanita Hall as Bloody Mary singing "Happy Talk", Betta St. John as Liat, and William Tabbert as Lt. Cable in the original Broadway cast of South Pacific (1950).

Ella Fitzgerald recorded this song with Gordon Jenkins and his orchestra for Decca and it was included on her 1955 album Miss Ella Fitzgerald & Mr Gordon Jenkins Invite You to Listen and Relax.

Captain Sensible version

Quick Facts Single by Captain Sensible, from the album Women and Captains First ...
"Happy Talk"
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Single by Captain Sensible
from the album Women and Captains First
Released26 June 1982 (1982-06-26)
GenreSynthpop, new wave[1]
Length3:24
LabelA&M
Composer(s)Richard Rodgers
Lyricist(s)Oscar Hammerstein II
Producer(s)Tony Mansfield
Captain Sensible singles chronology
"Jet Boy, Jet Girl"
(1977)
"Happy Talk"
(1982)
"Wot"
(1982)
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In July 1982, The Damned's guitarist Captain Sensible reached the No. 1 position on the UK Singles Chart for two weeks with his version of the song,[2] featuring backing vocals by the band Dolly Mixture. This version also peaked at number 35 in Australia.[3]

Other cover versions

Samples

  • In 2004, UK grime MC Dizzee Rascal sampled Captain Sensible's version on the single "Dream", which reached No. 14 on the UK Singles Chart.[5]

Film

  • A brief clip of the song, played on an organ, can be heard in The Wrong Trousers, in a sequence where Gromit is unable to sleep because of loud music.
  • The Don Shirley Trio plays the song during a concert scene in Green Book (2018).
  • The 2014 movie Welcome to Me opens with this song.[6]

Games

  • An interpolation of the song was used as the main theme of the educational Commodore 64 game Rekenwonder (1984).[7]

See also

References

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