Barbra:The Ultimate Collection is a compilation album released in 2010 by American singer Barbra Streisand.
Barbra Streisand | Ultimate Fighting Championship | The Ultimate Fighter | GNU Compiler Collection | Frick Collection | Royal Collection | Ultimate Spider-Man | Wallace Collection | The Ultimate Warrior | Ultimate Blackjack Tour | The Criterion Collection | Burrell Collection | Ultimate Fallout | Ultimate Nullifier | Ultimate Marvel | Ultimate Fighter | Ultimate Comics: X | Orleans Collection | collection | Arts Council Collection | Ultimate Spider-Man (TV series) | Ultimate Diamond | Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man | The Ultimate Fighter 2 | The Kinks Choral Collection | Shuttleworth Collection | Royal Philatelic Collection | Peggy Guggenheim Collection | Mia's Big Adventure Collection | Waste collection |
She is best known for writing and singing the theme to the TV series The Nanny, writing songs for Barbra Streisand and starring in the Broadway musical Swing!.
Barbra Amesbury (born 1948 in Kirkland Lake, Ontario) is a Canadian philanthropist, singer-songwriter, composer and filmmaker, who had several Top 40 hits in Canada in the 1970s as Bill Amesbury before coming out as a transsexual and pursuing sex reassignment surgery.
Color Me Barbra received Grammy Award nominations for Album of the Year and for Best Female Vocal Performance.
The authors of the Dallas Principles are Juan Ahonen-Jover, Ken Ahonen-Jover, John Bare, Jarrett Barrios, Dana Beyer, Jeffrey H. Campagna, Mandy Carter, Michael Coe, Jimmy Creech, Allison Duncan, Michael Guest, Joanne Herman, Donald Hitchcock, Lane Hudson, Charles Merrill, Dixon Osburn, Lisa Polyak, Barbra Casbar Siperstein, Pam Spaulding, Andy Szekeres, Lisa Turner, Jon Winkleman, and Paul Yandura.
The collection also features Moving Pictures' 1984 contribution to the Footloose soundtrack, "Never," written by lyricist Dean Pitchford and composer Michael Gore.
He worked with George Harrison at his Friar Park recording studio to make Harrison's Thirty-Three & 1/3, and also worked with Barbra Streisand on her ButterFly album.
"Soon It's Gonna Rain" from the musical The Fantasticks; later recorded by Barbra Streisand for The Barbra Streisand Album
The album will be released on August 1, 2012 and includes a physical CD-single of every song featured on their debut album "Hell Frost" as well as a physical CD-single of the unlreleased 12th track "Deathwalker" and two bonus CDs.
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Hell Frost: The Complete Collection is a 14-CD box set by The Unguided.
One of his last being on a musical episode of The Lucy Show, which also guest-starred Mel Torméand a featured performance on Barbra Streisand's 1967 TV special, The Belle of 14th Street, a tribute to the bygone era of vaudeville.
Meet Me in Margaritaville: The Ultimate Collection is a Jimmy Buffett greatest hits compilation album consisting of 2 compact discs and 38 songs.
"Mon Homme", song first sung by Mistinguett, popularized in English as "My Man" by Fanny Brice (and by Barbra Streisand playing Brice in Funny Girl)
The soundtrack consist of songs and theme songs from the incarnations produced from 1969 to 1985, from Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! to The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo.
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Scooby-Doo's Snack Tracks: The Ultimate Collection is the first and only soundtrack to the popular Hanna-Barbera Saturday morning cartoon franchise, Scooby-Doo.
Previously, Mr. Lochmus served as Senior Director at Sony Music Studios, in charge of production, where he directed and produced award-winning videos of every soundtrack recorded by Celine Dion from 1996 to 2008, including her landmark duet with Barbra Streisand, as well as Dion’s “One Year, One Heart” ABC Family TV Special, and two widely acclaimed documentaries, “Let's Talk About Love,” and “Taking Chances,” among others.
Theatre de la Jeune Lune (French for Theater of the New Moon) was founded in France in 1978 by Dominique Serrand, Vincent Gracieux and Barbra Berlovitz, who were later joined by Robert Rosen, all graduates of the École Internationale de Théâtre Jacques Lecoq school in Paris.
Barbra said that Maren had accused her, encouraged by doctor's wife Anne Rhodius, who had been exiled from Oslo to northern Norway with her husband because of conflicts in Oslo, and that the doctor and his wife had pointed out the wife and daughter of one of the members of the court as witches.
On an episode of The Steve Harvey Show, Steve and Lydia performed the song during a teacher/student talent show at the school (with Lydia donning a Barbra Streisand wig).