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Joi lansing
Joi lansing





joi lansing

On April 30, 1962, the songs recorded were "Feel So Young" (which was probably " You Make Me Feel So Young"), " Dream (1944 song)", "Masquerade", and "All Of You". The songs recorded on February 23, 1962, were "Masquerade Is Over", "All of You" (Cole Porter), "The One I Love" (which was most likely " The One I Love (Belongs to Somebody Else)", and "Who Cares?" (George and Ira Gershwin). Both acetates list the same identifying number of #4-8351. It is unknown whether these tracks were released on an album.

joi lansing

These turned up at auction and were acetates of four songs each (with two songs duplicated on the second acetate). In 1962, she recorded six to eight sides at Que Recorders in Los Angeles. single on the small REO record label in 1957: "Love Me/What's It Gonna Be" (REO #1007). Apparently, while starring on Love That Bob, she recorded a 45 r.p.m. She performed with the Xavier Cugat orchestra and briefly toured with Les Paul, but little is known about the songs she actually recorded. Lansing started singing in nightclubs in the early 1960s, and her performances are documented in several trade magazines. She turned down the chance to replace Jayne Mansfield in The Ice House (a 1969 horror film), and instead appeared opposite Basil Rathbone (in his last film appearance) and John Carradine in Hillbillys in a Haunted House (1967), as Mamie Van Doren's replacement. Lansing previously had appeared in Sinatra's drama A Hole in the Head (1959) and in Martin's comedy Who Was That Lady? (1960). Lansing played "Lola" in the romantic comedy Marriage on the Rocks (1965), with a cast that included Frank Sinatra, Deborah Kerr, and Dean Martin. In 1964, producer Stanley Todd discussed a film project with Lansing, tentatively titled Project 22, with location shooting planned in Yugoslavia, and with George Hamilton and Geraldine Chaplin named to the cast. Her songs included "The Web of Love" and "The Silencer". During the 1960s, she starred in short musical films for the Scopitone video-jukebox system. She had a brief role as an astronaut's girlfriend in sci-fi parody Queen of Outer Space (1958) and had fourth billing in the science fiction feature The Atomic Submarine (1959). In the famous opening sequence of Orson Welles's Touch of Evil (1958), she appeared as Zita, the dancer who dies in a car explosion at the end of the extended tracking shot after exclaiming to a border guard "I keep hearing this ticking noise inside my head!" She received top billing in Hot Cars (1956), a crime drama involving a stolen-car racket. Lansing's film career began in 1948, and in 1952 she played an uncredited role in MGM's Singin' in the Rain. ( January 2016) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message)

joi lansing

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Joi lansing