Joan Whitney Kramer

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Joan Whitney Kramer (June 26, 1914 — July 12, 1990) was an American singer and songwriter.

She was born as Zoe Parenteau in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She attended Finch College in New York City. In 1934, while playing a showgirl in The Great Waltz on Broadway, she took the stage name Joan Whitney. She studied voice under Alex Kramer, who later collaborated with her on a number of songs including "Candy" and "Far Away Places". Kramer and Whitney married and had a son.

Death

Joan Whitney died on July 12, 1990 in Westport, Connecticut, aged 76, from Alzheimer's disease.

Songs written

with Alex Kramer

  • "Ain't Nobody Here but Us Chickens" (1946)
  • "Behave Yourself"
  • "Deep as the River" (recorded by Harry Belafonte in 1949)
  • "Far Away Places" (1948)
  • "High on a Windy Hill" (1940)
  • "Love Somebody" (1947)
  • "Money Is the Root of All Evil" (1945)
  • "No Man Is an Island"

with Mack David and Alex Kramer

  • "Candy" (1944)
  • "It's Love, Love, Love" (1943)

with Hy Zaret and Alex Kramer

External links

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