Alice, Where Art Thou?
"Alice, Where Art Thou?" | |
---|---|
Song | |
Released | 1861 |
Songwriter(s) | Wellington Guernsey |
Composer(s) | Joseph Ascher |
Alice, Where Art Thou? is a popular British parlour song of the Victorian era. It was composed by Joseph Ascher.[1] The text was by Wellington Guernsey, although it is sometimes attributed to Alfred Bunn, who is best known for "I Dreamt I Dwelt in Marble Halls".[2] It become a popular song, selling many copies of sheet music and featuring regularly as a standard in the music halls.
Usage
[edit]The phrase passed into popular usage for many decades.[3] In the 1954 British film Svengali, it is heard several times as the song Trilby O'Ferrall sings badly before she is mesmerised by the title character into performing as a brilliant opera singer. The 1980s British television series Open All Hours features a brass band version of the tune as its title music.
References
[edit]Bibliography
[edit]- Roy Newsome: Brass Roots: A Hundred Years of Brass Bands and Their Music, 1836-1936 (London: Routledge, 2019).
- Eric Partridge: A Dictionary of Catch Phrases (London: Routledge, 2003).