There's No Business Like Show Business
Show Details
- Music
- Irving Berlin (710)
- Lyrics
- Irving Berlin (710)
- Book
- Henry Ephron (5), Phoebe Ephron (5)
- Type
- Musical
- Premiere
- December 16, 1954
Recordings
Audio Recordings
There's No Business Like Show Business - 1954 Film Soundtrack | ||
There's No Business Like Show Business - 1954 Marilyn Monroe | ||
There's No Business Like Show Business - 2000 Dutch Cast |
Video Recordings
There's No Business Like Show Business - 1954 Film |
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Songs also appear on these recordings (6)
Songs
- After You Get What You Want (You Don't Want It)
- All Alone
- Ev'rybody's Doin' It Now (3)
- If You Believe
- Lazy
- A Man Chases a Girl (Until She Catches Him)
- Play a Simple Melody (2)
- A Sailor's Not a Sailor ('Til a Sailor's Been Tattooed)
- Shaking the Blues Away
- Steppin' Out With My Baby
- When I Lost You (4)
- You'd Be Surprised
Cut Song
- But I Ain't Got a Man
- Cut song, written for Marilyn Monroe.
Songs used from other shows
- Blue Skies (32) from Betsy
- Change Partners (15) from Carefree
- Cheek to Cheek (44) from Top Hat
- Count Your Blessings Instead of Sheep (15) from White Christmas
- Heat Wave (23) from As Thousands Cheer
- I Got the Sun in the Morning (41) from Annie Get Your Gun
- I Love a Piano (12) from Stop! Look! Listen!
- Let Me Sing and I'm Happy (12) from Mammy
- Let Yourself Go (3) from Follow the Fleet
- Let's Face the Music and Dance (36) from Follow the Fleet
- Oh, How I Hate to Get up in the Morning (9) from Yip Yip Yaphank
- Play A Simple Melody (5) from Watch Your Step
- Puttin' On the Ritz (26) from Puttin' On the Ritz
- Shakin' the Blues Away (9) from Ziegfeld Follies of 1927
- Supper Time (11) from As Thousands Cheer
- There's No Business Like Show Business (53) from Annie Get Your Gun
- What'll I Do? (28) from The Music Box Revue of 1923
- You Can't Get a Man with a Gun (28) from Annie Get Your Gun
Non-Show Song Standards Used
- Alexander's Ragtime Band (19) -- Popular song written by Berlin in 1911
- How Deep Is the Ocean? (31) -- Independent song published in 1932. The song was developed from an earlier Berlin song, "To My Mammy," which was sung by Al Jolson in his film [i]Mammy[/i] (1930).
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