Ruth Wallis
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Ruth Wallis (5 January 1920 – 22 December 2007) was a novelty cabaret singer. Born in Brooklyn, New York, Wallis began her career singing jazz and cabaret standards, but gained fame in the 1940s and 1950s for her risqué, satirical songs, rife with double entendre that she wrote herself. She did have a mainstream hit with "Dear Mr. Godfrey," a song about his public firing of Julius La Rosa.
She sang with a studio orchestra and often took on an accent for songs about characters from other countries. Her music was occasionally featured on the Doctor Demento show in the 1970s.
She started singing in lounges and cocktail bars, where she met her husband Hy Pastman. Eventually it became clear that her novelty songs, which relied mostly upon double entendres, were the most popular. These songs discussed a number of topics that were taboo in fifties America, such as homosexuality and infidelity. For this reason, her songs were banned from Boston radio stations. She often had difficulty securing distribution for her works, so she started her own record label, Wallis Original Recordings. When she arrived in Australia for a tour customs agents seized her records. Rather than ruin her career, this only brought out crowds.
Wallis retired in the 1970s to spend more time with her husband and two children, but continued to work on material for Broadway shows. Some of her most famous songs were collected and turned into a theater production called BOOBS! The Musical: The World According to Ruth Wallis. BOOBS! opened at the Triad Theater in New York City on May 19, 2003; by closing date it had played nearly 300 performances. It has had subsequent runs in New Orleans and Wichita.
In March 2007 Wallis was honored by the National Archives of Australia. Memorabilia of hers was included in 'Memory of a Nation', a permanent exhibition opening in Canberra.
Wallis died on December 22, 2007, in South Killingly, Connecticut, from complications of Alzheimer's Disease.
[edit] Track listing for Ruth Wallis' Greatest Hits - Boobs
- "Queer Things"
- "Boobs"
- "Drill 'Em All"
- "Ubangi"
- "The Pistol Song"
- "He'd Rather Be A Girl"
- "Follies Bergere"
- "Admiral's Daughter"
- "Pizza"
- "De Gay Young Lad"
- "The Pop-Up Song"
- "Cape Canaveral Blues"
- "The Army Gave My Husband Back"
- "The Dinghy Song"
- "Freddie The Fisherman's Song"
- "Hawaiian Lei Song"
- "The Same Little Yo-Yo"
- "Marriage Jewish Style"
- "The Bell Song"
[edit] Sources and external links
- Obituary in the New York Times
- Boobs! the Musical
- Ruth Wallis: Return of the Saucy Chanteuse, an article originally published in Goldmine magazine, written by Chuck Miller