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David Precious named 2008 William F Harrigan Award... dentistry.dal.ca | Vidya and books by Joan Shivarpita Harrigan... kundalinicare.com | The Labyrinth Walk by Joan Harrigan ayurveda-florida.com |
"Harrigan" is a song written by George M. Cohan for the 1907 Broadway musical, Fifty Miles From Boston. It celebrates, and to some extent mocks, his own Irish heritage. The song was performed by James Cagney and Joan Leslie in the 1942 film Yankee Doodle Dandy, a biopic of Cohan's life. In that film it was portrayed as an early work of Cohan's that he was shopping around. In real life, by 1907 he had already scored some major Broadway hits and had little need to try to sell individual songs to producers. Contemporary Irish-American singer Billy Murray made a popular recording of the song. In his version, the answer "Harrigan!" to each question is shouted by a background group. [edit] Lyrics
In his New York gubernatorial campaigns in 1954 and 1958, as well as his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1956, Averell Harriman used a variation of the song, which sang of "H, A, double-R, I, M, A, N". And in 1960, John F. Kennedy's campaign released a recording of Frank Sinatra singing a version of the song, but with lyrics written specifically for "K, E, double-N, E, D and Y". The term "divil" is an Irish expression that often found its way into Irish songs of that era. It essentially means "nary" or "hardly". Allan Sherman's short medley of Cohan song parodies included this tune, reworked to sing about pianist Vladimir Horowitz. |
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