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- Music Department
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Songwriter ("I Love You Truly", "A Perfect Day"), composer, author and publisher who sang at the White House for President Theodore Roosevelt. She formed The Bond Shop in 1894 to publish her music. She appeared in vaudeville, and gave concerts in Army Camps during WW I. In 1941, she was selected by the General Federation of Women Composers as one of two composers who represented the progress of women over the previous half-century. Her autobiography is titled "The Roads of Melody". Joining ASCAP in 1925, her song compositions include "Just A-Wearyin' For You", "God Remembers When the World Forgets", "I've Done My Work", "His Lullaby", "Roses Are in Bloom", "A Little Pink Rose", "A Little Bit O' Honey", and "Because of the Light".- Writer
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Lyricist ("Song of the Vagabonds", "Only a Rose"), author and educator, educated at Yale University (BA, MA), and who became the assistant professor of English at Columbia University between 1903 and 1905, a rhetoric instructor at Yale University between 1905 and 1909, and a lecturer at the Columbia extension. He was literary editor at the New York Sun in 1917. His Broadway stage scores include "The Vagabond King", "June Love", and "Marjolaine", and he was the librettist for "Through the Years". He was a member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters. Joining ASCAP in 1923, his chief musical collaborators included Rudolf Friml and Hugo Felix, and his other popular-song compositions include "Give Me One Hour", "Huguette Waltz", "Love Me Tonight", "Regimental Song", "Some Day", and "Tomorrow".- Music Department
- Composer
- Actor
Francis Salabert was born on 27 July 1884 in Paris, France. He was a composer and actor, known for Beauty Cult (1930), Prix de beauté (Miss Europe) (1930) and End of the World (1931). He died on 28 December 1946 in Shannon Airport, Shannon, County Clare, Munster, Ireland.