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Kay Thompson

Kay Thompson (born Catherine Louise Fink; November 9, 1909[1] – July 2, 1998) was an American author, singer, vocal arranger, vocal coach, composer, musician, dancer, actress, and choreographer. She became famous for creating the Eloise children's books and for her role in the movie Funny Face.[2]

Kay Thompson
Born
Catherine Louise Fink

(1909-11-09)November 9, 1909
DiedJuly 2, 1998(1998-07-02) (aged 88)
New York City, U.S.
Occupations
  • Author
  • composer
  • musician
  • actress
  • singer
Works Eloise book series
Spouses
(m. 1937; div. 1939)
(m. 1942; div. 1947)
Hilary Knight's 1996 portrait of Kay Thompson for Vanity Fair

Early life and family edit

Thompson was born Catherine Louise Fink in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1909, the second of the four children of Leo George Fink, a Jewish, Austrian-born pawnbroker and jeweler, and his American-born wife, Harriet Adelaide "Hattie" Tetrick, a Christian. Thompson's parents were married on November 29, 1905, in East St. Louis, St. Clair County, Illinois.[3][4]

Thompson's siblings were Blanche Margaret Hurd, George "Bud" Fink, Jr., and Marian Antoinette Doenges.[3]

Radio work edit

Thompson began her career in the 1930s as a singer and choral director for radio. Her first big break was as a regular singer on the Bing Crosby-Woodbury Show Bing Crosby Entertains (CBS, 1933–34). This led to a regular spot on The Fred Waring-Ford Dealers Show (NBC, 1934–35) and then, with conductor Lennie Hayton, she co-founded The Lucky Strike Hit Parade (CBS, 1935) where she met (and later married) trombonist Jack Jenney. Thompson and Her Rhythm Singers joined André Kostelanetz and His Orchestra for the hit series The Chesterfield Radio Program (CBS, 1936), followed by It's Chesterfield Time (CBS, 1937) for which Thompson and her large choir were teamed with Hal Kemp and His Orchestra.[5][6][7][8]

For her motion picture debut, Thompson and her choir performed two songs in the Republic Pictures musical Manhattan Merry-Go-Round (1937). In 1939, she reunited with André Kostelanetz for Tune-Up Time (CBS), a show that was produced by radio legend William Spier (who later married Thompson in 1942). On an installment of Tune-Up Time in April 1939, 16-year-old Judy Garland was a guest. It was at this time that Thompson first met and worked with Garland, developing a close personal friendship and professional association that lasted the rest of Garland's life.[9]

Hollywood edit

 
Guest stars for the 1961 premiere episode of The Dick Powell Show, "Who Killed Julie Greer?". Standing, from left: Ronald Reagan, Nick Adams, Lloyd Bridges, Mickey Rooney, Edgar Bergen, Jack Carson, Ralph Bellamy, Kay Thompson, Dean Jones. Seated, from left, Carolyn Jones and Dick Powell.

In 1943, Thompson signed an exclusive contract with MGM to become the studio's top vocal arranger, vocal coach, and choral director. She served as main vocal arranger for many of producer Arthur Freed's MGM musicals and as vocal coach to such stars as Judy Garland, Lena Horne, Frank Sinatra, and June Allyson. Some of the many MGM musicals Thompson was the vocal arranger for include Ziegfeld Follies (1945), The Harvey Girls (1946), Till the Clouds Roll By (1946), Good News (1947), and The Pirate (1948).

As a film actress, Thompson only played one major role: that of fashion editor Maggie Prescott in the musical Funny Face (1957) for Paramount Pictures. Reunited with producer and songwriter Roger Edens and director Stanley Donen, her colleagues from MGM, Thompson garnered critical praise for her stylish turn as an editor based on real-life Harper's Bazaar editor Diana Vreeland, opening the film with her splashy "Think Pink!" and performing duets with Astaire and Hepburn.[10]

In a December 6, 2006, interview on Turner Classic Movies, Donen said that Funny Face was made at Paramount with a primarily MGM crew, including Donen, Edens and Thompson, because Paramount Pictures would not release Hepburn for any film except one made at Paramount. Thompson only acted in one additional feature film, 1970's Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon, because, according to its star Liza Minnelli, Thompson disliked the slow speed of movie production.[10]

Night club act edit

Thompson left MGM in 1947 after working on The Pirate to create the night club act "Kay Thompson and the Williams Brothers", with the four Williams men as her backup singers and dancers. They made their debut in Las Vegas in 1947 and became an overnight sensation. Within a year, they were the highest-paid nightclub act in the world, breaking records wherever they appeared. She wrote the songs, and Robert Alton did the original choreography for the act.[11]

Eloise edit

Thompson, who lived at the Plaza Hotel in New York City, became most notable as the author of the Eloise series of children's books. The Eloise character was developed by the author based on her childhood imaginary friend and alter ego, with a voice in which Thompson spoke throughout her life, according to her biographer, filmmaker Sam Irvin.[12] Thompson's goddaughter, Liza Minnelli, was often speculated as a possible model for Eloise.[13]

The four books in the series, each illustrated by Hilary Knight, are Eloise (Simon & Schuster, 1955), Eloise in Paris (Simon & Schuster, 1957), Eloise at Christmastime (Random House, 1958) and Eloise in Moscow (Simon & Schuster, 1959). They follow the adventures of a precocious six-year-old girl who lives at The Plaza. All were bestsellers upon release and have been adapted into television projects. Thompson composed and performed a Top 40 hit song, "Eloise" (Cadence Records, 1956).[14][15][16]

A fifth book, Eloise Takes a Bawth, was posthumously published by Simon & Schuster in 2002, culled from Thompson's original manuscripts once slated for 1964 publication by Harper & Row. However, by 1964 Thompson was burned out on Eloise; she blocked publication and took all but the first book out of print.[17]

Recordings edit

As a singer, Thompson made very few records, starting with one side, "Take a Number from One to Ten", on a 1934 session by the Tom Coakley band. In 1935, she recorded four sides for Brunswick ("You Hit The Spot", "You Let Me Down," "Don't Mention Love To Me," and "Out of Sight, Out of Mind"), and another four sides for Victor. The 4 Brunswick sides are excellent examples of mid-1930s sophisticated New York cabaret singing. She later recorded for Capitol, Columbia, Decca, and, most importantly, for MGM Records, which issued her only complete album of songs, in 1954. In February 1956, Thompson wrote and recorded the song "Eloise" at Cadence Records with an orchestra conducted by Archie Bleyer. The song debuted on March 10, 1956, and became a Top 40 hit, selling over 100,000 copies.

Throughout the 1950s and early 1960s, Thompson mentored the solo career of the young Andy Williams. She helped land him a regular singing spot on NBC-TV's new late-night series, The Tonight Show, hosted by Steve Allen. She got her friend Archie Bleyer to add Williams to the roster of artists on his label Cadence Records where she wrote many of the songs he recorded, including the 1958 Top 20 hit "Promise Me, Love". In 1963, Thompson paired the Christmas song "Holiday Season"—a song she had written and first performed in 1945—with the 1942 Irving Berlin Christmas song Happy Holiday, and gave it to Williams to sing.[18][19] This medley arrangement and recording became a very popular hit and has since been covered by many artists.[20] Although it had been denied for decades, Williams admitted in his 2009 memoir, Moon River and Me (Viking Press), that he and Thompson had been secret lovers for several years, despite the age gap between them.

Thompson later recorded a spoken-word album for Signature Records, Let's Talk About Russia, which detailed her adventures in Moscow. Signature released a single of two songs by Thompson, "Dasvidanya" and "Moscow Cha Cha". She served as an adviser to Patti Page's 1957 television series, The Big Record. [citation needed]

Thompson kept busy with nightclub and television performances, as well as overseeing her successful "Eloise" franchise. She returned to live in New York in 1969. Immediately following the death of Judy Garland in 1969, Thompson appeared with goddaughter Liza Minnelli in Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon (1970). In 1974, Thompson directed a fashion show at the Palace of Versailles, featuring a performance by Minnelli and the collections of Halston, Bill Blass, Oscar de la Renta, and Anne Klein.[3]

Death edit

Thompson eventually moved into Minnelli's Upper East Side penthouse. On July 2, 1998, she was found unconscious in bed and rushed to Lenox Hill Hospital, where she was officially pronounced dead, aged 88.

Personal life edit

Thompson was married twice:

After her second marriage failed, Thompson began a secret affair with Andy Williams (who was half her age) from 1947 to 1961.[21][22] In December 1961 Williams married Claudine Longet. Thompson moved to Rome and never remarried.[citation needed]

Legacy edit

  • The original soundtrack to Funny Face has been remastered and reissued as an expanded 60th anniversary edition, with eight alternate tracks, including four featuring Thompson. Most of her work for MGM has been preserved and released on Rhino/Turner Classic Movies original soundtrack series, including little-known contributions she did for films such as Meet the People (1944) and Abbott and Costello in Hollywood (1945). Her 1930s recordings are available on the CD "Kay Thompson: Queen of Swing Vocal & Her Rhythm Singers" (Baldwin Street Records), produced and annotated by Ted Ono. The rest of her recording career is compiled on the 3-CD box set "Think Pink! A Kay Thompson Party" (Sepia Records), produced and annotated by Thompson biographer Sam Irvin.
  • In 2003 Thompson was posthumously inducted into the St. Louis Walk of Fame.[23]
  • Minnelli recreated Thompson's nightclub act for her 2009 Tony Award-winning Broadway event, Liza's at the Palace. A CD cast recording, a PBS television special, and a DVD followed. Liza's at the Palace opened at New York's Palace theater, an affectionate salute to Thompson, her godmother. Supported by a quartet of singer-dancers standing in for the original Williams Brothers, Minnelli performed songs (with the original vocal arrangements) from Thompson's act, including "Clap Yo' Hands"[24][25] and "Hello, Hello".[26][27][28]
  • There is an exhaustively-researched list of all of Thompson's hundreds of credits for radio, TV, movies, stage, books, and music at the "Kayographies" tab at Kay Thompson Website. Featuring over 300 pages of endnotes, sidebars, letters, credits, etc., the website includes exclusive comprehensive extras about Thompson, which, due to space considerations, could not be included in Kay Thompson: From Funny Face to Eloise by Sam Irvin (published by Simon & Schuster).[29]
  • Thompson's sister Blanche Hurd was designated as her literary heir and was the commanding interest in the Eloise franchise beginning in 1998. After Hurd's death in 2002, the estate passed to Hurd's two children, Julie Hurd Szende and John Hurd.

Filmography edit

References edit

  1. ^ "In the St. Louis Registry of Births, in the volume covering the period July 1909 – January 1910, on page 85, is the following entry: "Catherine Louise Fink, November 9, 1909."
    Kay Thompson official website August 31, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, kaythompsonwebsite.com; accessed July 26, 2015.
  2. ^ Pace, Eric (July 7, 1998). "Kay Thompson, Author of 'Eloise' Books, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved September 8, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c Biographical endnotes from Sam Irvin's biography of Thompson, Kay Thompson: From Funny Face to Eloise, published 2010 by Simon & Schuster; accessed May 15, 2014.
  4. ^ Kay Thompson biography at eloisewebsite.com; accessed May 15, 2014.
  5. ^ "kaythompsonwebsite.com" August 31, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, page 67~73.
  6. ^ "Kay Thompson - "All Over Nothing at All" (1937) - YouTube"
  7. ^ "1937 Kay Thompson - Carelessly - YouTube"
  8. ^ "1937 Kay Thompson - There's A Lull In My Life - YouTube"
  9. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 31, 2017. Retrieved May 1, 2014.
  10. ^ a b Robert Osborne: "Why didn't she do more movies?" Liza Minnelli: "She didn't like it [filmmaking]... It was too slow", Private Screenings, TCM, December 11, 2010; accessed May 15, 2014.
  11. ^ Kay Thompson at IMDb
  12. ^ "Eloise At 55: The Legacy Of Kay Thompson". NPR. December 10, 2010. Retrieved August 8, 2019.
  13. ^ Amy Benfer (June 1, 1999). . Salon. Archived from the original on September 10, 2006.
  14. ^ "kaythompsonwebsite.com" August 31, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, page 337~339. Whitburn, Joel. The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits, 3rd ed. New York: Billboard Publications, 1987, page 304.
  15. ^ "Kay Thompson sings - YouTube"
  16. ^ "RARE Novlety Record "Eloise" by Kay Thompson - YouTube"
  17. ^ Amy Benfer. "Will the real Eloise please stand up?", salon.com, June 1, 1999.
  18. ^ . PBS.org. Intellectual Reserve, Inc. Archived from the original on December 4, 2019. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  19. ^ Irvin, Sam (Kay Thompson Biographer). . Kaythompsonwebsite.com. Sam Irvin. Archived from the original on December 4, 2019. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  20. ^ "Allmusic.com search: "Happy Holiday/Holiday Season"". Allmusic.com. Archived from the original on December 4, 2019. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  21. ^ Sam Irwin, Kay Thompson: From Funny Face to Eloise (NY: Simon & Schuster, 2011),167-323. [1947-61] ISBN 9781439176542; and Andy Williams, Moon River and Me (NY: Penguin, 2009), ISBN 9781101148730
  22. ^ "Who Knew? The Story of Kay Thompson & Andy Williams".
  23. ^ St. Louis Walk of Fame. . stlouiswalkoffame.org. Archived from the original on October 31, 2012. Retrieved April 25, 2013.
  24. ^ "Kay Thompson & Fred Astaire - Clap Yo' Hands - Song from Funny Face (9 of 10) - YouTube"
  25. ^ "Liza's At The Palace - Clap Yo' Hands - YouTube"
  26. ^ "Kay Thompson Website"
  27. ^ "kaythompsonwebsite.com" August 31, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, page 244, 311.
  28. ^ "Liza's At The Palace - Hello, Hello - YouTube"
  29. ^ Kay Thompson: From Funny Face to Eloise, by Sam Irvin, published in November 2010 by Simon & Schuster

External links edit

thompson, figure, skater, thomson, confused, with, klay, thompson, born, catherine, louise, fink, november, 1909, july, 1998, american, author, singer, vocal, arranger, vocal, coach, composer, musician, dancer, actress, choreographer, became, famous, creating,. For the figure skater see Kay Thomson Not to be confused with Klay Thompson Kay Thompson born Catherine Louise Fink November 9 1909 1 July 2 1998 was an American author singer vocal arranger vocal coach composer musician dancer actress and choreographer She became famous for creating the Eloise children s books and for her role in the movie Funny Face 2 Kay ThompsonBornCatherine Louise Fink 1909 11 09 November 9 1909St Louis Missouri U S DiedJuly 2 1998 1998 07 02 aged 88 New York City U S OccupationsAuthor composer musician actress singerWorksEloise book seriesSpousesJack Jenney m 1937 div 1939 wbr William Spier m 1942 div 1947 wbr Hilary Knight s 1996 portrait of Kay Thompson for Vanity Fair Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Radio work 3 Hollywood 4 Night club act 5 Eloise 6 Recordings 7 Death 8 Personal life 9 Legacy 10 Filmography 11 References 12 External linksEarly life and family editThompson was born Catherine Louise Fink in St Louis Missouri in 1909 the second of the four children of Leo George Fink a Jewish Austrian born pawnbroker and jeweler and his American born wife Harriet Adelaide Hattie Tetrick a Christian Thompson s parents were married on November 29 1905 in East St Louis St Clair County Illinois 3 4 Thompson s siblings were Blanche Margaret Hurd George Bud Fink Jr and Marian Antoinette Doenges 3 Radio work editThompson began her career in the 1930s as a singer and choral director for radio Her first big break was as a regular singer on the Bing Crosby Woodbury Show Bing Crosby Entertains CBS 1933 34 This led to a regular spot on The Fred Waring Ford Dealers Show NBC 1934 35 and then with conductor Lennie Hayton she co founded The Lucky Strike Hit Parade CBS 1935 where she met and later married trombonist Jack Jenney Thompson and Her Rhythm Singers joined Andre Kostelanetz and His Orchestra for the hit series The Chesterfield Radio Program CBS 1936 followed by It s Chesterfield Time CBS 1937 for which Thompson and her large choir were teamed with Hal Kemp and His Orchestra 5 6 7 8 For her motion picture debut Thompson and her choir performed two songs in the Republic Pictures musical Manhattan Merry Go Round 1937 In 1939 she reunited with Andre Kostelanetz for Tune Up Time CBS a show that was produced by radio legend William Spier who later married Thompson in 1942 On an installment of Tune Up Time in April 1939 16 year old Judy Garland was a guest It was at this time that Thompson first met and worked with Garland developing a close personal friendship and professional association that lasted the rest of Garland s life 9 Hollywood edit nbsp Guest stars for the 1961 premiere episode of The Dick Powell Show Who Killed Julie Greer Standing from left Ronald Reagan Nick Adams Lloyd Bridges Mickey Rooney Edgar Bergen Jack Carson Ralph Bellamy Kay Thompson Dean Jones Seated from left Carolyn Jones and Dick Powell In 1943 Thompson signed an exclusive contract with MGM to become the studio s top vocal arranger vocal coach and choral director She served as main vocal arranger for many of producer Arthur Freed s MGM musicals and as vocal coach to such stars as Judy Garland Lena Horne Frank Sinatra and June Allyson Some of the many MGM musicals Thompson was the vocal arranger for include Ziegfeld Follies 1945 The Harvey Girls 1946 Till the Clouds Roll By 1946 Good News 1947 and The Pirate 1948 As a film actress Thompson only played one major role that of fashion editor Maggie Prescott in the musical Funny Face 1957 for Paramount Pictures Reunited with producer and songwriter Roger Edens and director Stanley Donen her colleagues from MGM Thompson garnered critical praise for her stylish turn as an editor based on real life Harper s Bazaar editor Diana Vreeland opening the film with her splashy Think Pink and performing duets with Astaire and Hepburn 10 In a December 6 2006 interview on Turner Classic Movies Donen said that Funny Face was made at Paramount with a primarily MGM crew including Donen Edens and Thompson because Paramount Pictures would not release Hepburn for any film except one made at Paramount Thompson only acted in one additional feature film 1970 s Tell Me That You Love Me Junie Moon because according to its star Liza Minnelli Thompson disliked the slow speed of movie production 10 Night club act editThompson left MGM in 1947 after working on The Pirate to create the night club act Kay Thompson and the Williams Brothers with the four Williams men as her backup singers and dancers They made their debut in Las Vegas in 1947 and became an overnight sensation Within a year they were the highest paid nightclub act in the world breaking records wherever they appeared She wrote the songs and Robert Alton did the original choreography for the act 11 Eloise editMain article Eloise books Thompson who lived at the Plaza Hotel in New York City became most notable as the author of the Eloise series of children s books The Eloise character was developed by the author based on her childhood imaginary friend and alter ego with a voice in which Thompson spoke throughout her life according to her biographer filmmaker Sam Irvin 12 Thompson s goddaughter Liza Minnelli was often speculated as a possible model for Eloise 13 The four books in the series each illustrated by Hilary Knight are Eloise Simon amp Schuster 1955 Eloise in Paris Simon amp Schuster 1957 Eloise at Christmastime Random House 1958 and Eloise in Moscow Simon amp Schuster 1959 They follow the adventures of a precocious six year old girl who lives at The Plaza All were bestsellers upon release and have been adapted into television projects Thompson composed and performed a Top 40 hit song Eloise Cadence Records 1956 14 15 16 A fifth book Eloise Takes a Bawth was posthumously published by Simon amp Schuster in 2002 culled from Thompson s original manuscripts once slated for 1964 publication by Harper amp Row However by 1964 Thompson was burned out on Eloise she blocked publication and took all but the first book out of print 17 Recordings editAs a singer Thompson made very few records starting with one side Take a Number from One to Ten on a 1934 session by the Tom Coakley band In 1935 she recorded four sides for Brunswick You Hit The Spot You Let Me Down Don t Mention Love To Me and Out of Sight Out of Mind and another four sides for Victor The 4 Brunswick sides are excellent examples of mid 1930s sophisticated New York cabaret singing She later recorded for Capitol Columbia Decca and most importantly for MGM Records which issued her only complete album of songs in 1954 In February 1956 Thompson wrote and recorded the song Eloise at Cadence Records with an orchestra conducted by Archie Bleyer The song debuted on March 10 1956 and became a Top 40 hit selling over 100 000 copies Throughout the 1950s and early 1960s Thompson mentored the solo career of the young Andy Williams She helped land him a regular singing spot on NBC TV s new late night series The Tonight Show hosted by Steve Allen She got her friend Archie Bleyer to add Williams to the roster of artists on his label Cadence Records where she wrote many of the songs he recorded including the 1958 Top 20 hit Promise Me Love In 1963 Thompson paired the Christmas song Holiday Season a song she had written and first performed in 1945 with the 1942 Irving Berlin Christmas song Happy Holiday and gave it to Williams to sing 18 19 This medley arrangement and recording became a very popular hit and has since been covered by many artists 20 Although it had been denied for decades Williams admitted in his 2009 memoir Moon River and Me Viking Press that he and Thompson had been secret lovers for several years despite the age gap between them Thompson later recorded a spoken word album for Signature Records Let s Talk About Russia which detailed her adventures in Moscow Signature released a single of two songs by Thompson Dasvidanya and Moscow Cha Cha She served as an adviser to Patti Page s 1957 television series The Big Record citation needed Thompson kept busy with nightclub and television performances as well as overseeing her successful Eloise franchise She returned to live in New York in 1969 Immediately following the death of Judy Garland in 1969 Thompson appeared with goddaughter Liza Minnelli in Tell Me That You Love Me Junie Moon 1970 In 1974 Thompson directed a fashion show at the Palace of Versailles featuring a performance by Minnelli and the collections of Halston Bill Blass Oscar de la Renta and Anne Klein 3 Death editThompson eventually moved into Minnelli s Upper East Side penthouse On July 2 1998 she was found unconscious in bed and rushed to Lenox Hill Hospital where she was officially pronounced dead aged 88 Personal life editThompson was married twice Jack Jenney trombonist and bandleader married 1937 divorced 1939 citation needed William Spier radio producer married 1942 divorced 1947 citation needed After her second marriage failed Thompson began a secret affair with Andy Williams who was half her age from 1947 to 1961 21 22 In December 1961 Williams married Claudine Longet Thompson moved to Rome and never remarried citation needed Legacy editThe original soundtrack to Funny Face has been remastered and reissued as an expanded 60th anniversary edition with eight alternate tracks including four featuring Thompson Most of her work for MGM has been preserved and released on Rhino Turner Classic Movies original soundtrack series including little known contributions she did for films such as Meet the People 1944 and Abbott and Costello in Hollywood 1945 Her 1930s recordings are available on the CD Kay Thompson Queen of Swing Vocal amp Her Rhythm Singers Baldwin Street Records produced and annotated by Ted Ono The rest of her recording career is compiled on the 3 CD box set Think Pink A Kay Thompson Party Sepia Records produced and annotated by Thompson biographer Sam Irvin In 2003 Thompson was posthumously inducted into the St Louis Walk of Fame 23 Minnelli recreated Thompson s nightclub act for her 2009 Tony Award winning Broadway event Liza s at the Palace A CD cast recording a PBS television special and a DVD followed Liza s at the Palace opened at New York s Palace theater an affectionate salute to Thompson her godmother Supported by a quartet of singer dancers standing in for the original Williams Brothers Minnelli performed songs with the original vocal arrangements from Thompson s act including Clap Yo Hands 24 25 and Hello Hello 26 27 28 There is an exhaustively researched list of all of Thompson s hundreds of credits for radio TV movies stage books and music at the Kayographies tab at Kay Thompson Website Featuring over 300 pages of endnotes sidebars letters credits etc the website includes exclusive comprehensive extras about Thompson which due to space considerations could not be included in Kay Thompson From Funny Face to Eloise by Sam Irvin published by Simon amp Schuster 29 Thompson s sister Blanche Hurd was designated as her literary heir and was the commanding interest in the Eloise franchise beginning in 1998 After Hurd s death in 2002 the estate passed to Hurd s two children Julie Hurd Szende and John Hurd Filmography editI Dood It night club patron uncredited 1943 Lost in a Harem singer uncredited 1944 Broadway Rhythm vocal arranger 1944 Two Girls and a Sailor Vocal Arranger 1944 Meet the People Vocal Arranger 1944 Meet Me in St Louis Vocal Arranger uncredited 1944 Weekend at the Waldorf Choral Arrangements Thrill of a Romance Hotel Guest Uncredited Till the Clouds Roll By vocal arranger audience member uncredited 1946 No Leave No Love vocal arranger glamorous woman uncredited 1946 The Kid from Brooklyn 1946 The Harvey Girls as Vocal Arranger 1946 Ziegfeld Follies Writer A Great Lady Has an Interview 1945 Good News Matron Vocal Arranger 1947 The Pirate as Vocal Arranger 1948 Lady Possessed As Nurse 1952 Funny Face 1957 as Maggie Prescot Tell Me That You Love Me Junie Moon 1970 as Gregory References edit In the St Louis Registry of Births in the volume covering the period July 1909 January 1910 on page 85 is the following entry Catherine Louise Fink November 9 1909 Kay Thompson official website Archived August 31 2017 at the Wayback Machine kaythompsonwebsite com accessed July 26 2015 Pace Eric July 7 1998 Kay Thompson Author of Eloise Books Dies The New York Times Retrieved September 8 2019 a b c Biographical endnotes from Sam Irvin s biography of Thompson Kay Thompson From Funny Face to Eloise published 2010 by Simon amp Schuster accessed May 15 2014 Kay Thompson biography at eloisewebsite com accessed May 15 2014 kaythompsonwebsite com Archived August 31 2017 at the Wayback Machine page 67 73 Kay Thompson All Over Nothing at All 1937 YouTube 1937 Kay Thompson Carelessly YouTube 1937 Kay Thompson There s A Lull In My Life YouTube kaythompsonwebsite com PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 31 2017 Retrieved May 1 2014 a b Robert Osborne Why didn t she do more movies Liza Minnelli She didn t like it filmmaking It was too slow Private Screenings TCM December 11 2010 accessed May 15 2014 Kay Thompson at IMDb Eloise At 55 The Legacy Of Kay Thompson NPR December 10 2010 Retrieved August 8 2019 Amy Benfer June 1 1999 Will the real Eloise please stand up Salon Archived from the original on September 10 2006 kaythompsonwebsite com Archived August 31 2017 at the Wayback Machine page 337 339 Whitburn Joel The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits 3rd ed New York Billboard Publications 1987 page 304 Kay Thompson sings YouTube RARE Novlety Record Eloise by Kay Thompson YouTube Amy Benfer Will the real Eloise please stand up salon com June 1 1999 A Golden Age of Christmas PBS org Intellectual Reserve Inc Archived from the original on December 4 2019 Retrieved December 4 2019 Irvin Sam Kay Thompson Biographer Part Three The Music Compositions Kaythompsonwebsite com Sam Irvin Archived from the original on December 4 2019 Retrieved December 4 2019 Allmusic com search Happy Holiday Holiday Season Allmusic com Archived from the original on December 4 2019 Retrieved December 4 2019 Sam Irwin Kay Thompson From Funny Face to Eloise NY Simon amp Schuster 2011 167 323 1947 61 ISBN 9781439176542 and Andy Williams Moon River and Me NY Penguin 2009 ISBN 9781101148730 Who Knew The Story of Kay Thompson amp Andy Williams St Louis Walk of Fame St Louis Walk of Fame Inductees stlouiswalkoffame org Archived from the original on October 31 2012 Retrieved April 25 2013 Kay Thompson amp Fred Astaire Clap Yo Hands Song from Funny Face 9 of 10 YouTube Liza s At The Palace Clap Yo Hands YouTube Kay Thompson Website kaythompsonwebsite com Archived August 31 2017 at the Wayback Machine page 244 311 Liza s At The Palace Hello Hello YouTube Kay Thompson From Funny Face to Eloise by Sam Irvin published in November 2010 by Simon amp SchusterExternal links edit nbsp Theatre portal nbsp Film portal nbsp Children s literature portal Kay Thompson at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Kay Thompson at IMDb Kay Thompson Archived January 21 2019 at the Wayback Machine at St Louis Walk of Fame Kay Thompson at Library of Congress with 43 library catalog records Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kay Thompson amp oldid 1219772011, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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