Patty Andrews
Died: May 8, 1967 (at age 55)
The Andrews Sisters were an American close harmony singing group of the swing and boogie-woogie eras. The group consisted of three sisters: contralto LaVerne Sophia (July 6, 1911 - May 8, 1967), soprano Maxine Angelyn "Maxene" (January 3, 1916 - October 21, 1995), and mezzo-soprano Patricia Marie "Patty" (February 16, 1918 - January 30, 2013). Throughout their long career, the sisters sold well over 75 million records (the last official count released by MCA Records in the mid-1970s). Their 1941 hit "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" can be considered an early example of rhythm and blues or jump blues.
The Andrews Sisters' harmonies and songs are still influential today, and have been covered by entertainers such as Bette Midler, Christina Aguilera, and others. The group was inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 1998. Writing for Bloomberg, Mark Schoifet said the sisters became the most popular female vocal group of the first half of the 20th century. They are still widely acclaimed today for their famous close harmonies.
Early life
The sisters were born to Peter Andreos (anglicized to "Andrews" upon arriving in the US) and Olga (née Sollie); their father was a Greek and their mother a Norwegian of the Lutheran faith. Patty, the youngest and the lead singer of the group, was only 7 when the group was formed, and only 12 when they won first prize at a talent contest at the local Orpheum Theatre in Minneapolis, where LaVerne played piano accompaniment for the silent film showings in exchange for free dancing lessons for herself and her sisters. Following the collapse of their father's Minneapolis restaurant, the sisters went on the road to support the family.
Career
They started their career as imitators of an earlier successful singing group, the Boswell Sisters who were popular in the 1930s. After singing with various dance bands and touring in vaudeville with the likes of Leon Belasco (and his orchestra), and comic bandleader Larry Rich, they first came to national attention with their recordings and radio broadcasts in 1937, most notably via their major Decca record hit, "Bei Mir Bist Du Schön" (translation: "To Me, You Are Beautiful"), originally a Yiddish tune, the lyrics of which Sammy Cahn had translated to English and "which the girls harmonized to perfection." They followed this success with a string of best-selling records over the next two years and they became a household name by the 1940s.
Instrumental to the sisters' success over the years were their parents (Olga and Peter), their orchestra leader and musical arranger, Vic Schoen (1916-2000), and Jack and David Kapp, who founded Decca Records.
World War II
During World War II they entertained the Allied forces extensively in America, Africa and Italy, visiting Army, Navy, Marine and Coast Guard bases, war zones, hospitals, and munitions factories. They encouraged U.S. citizens to purchase war bonds with their rendition of Irving Berlin's song Any Bonds Today?. They also helped actress Bette Davis and actor John Garfield found California's famous Hollywood Canteen, a welcome retreat for servicemen where the trio often performed, volunteering their personal time to sing and dance for the soldiers, sailors and marines (they did the same at New York City's Stage Door Canteen during the war). While touring, they often treated three random servicemen to dinner when they were dining out. They recorded a series of Victory Discs (V-Discs) for distribution to Allied fighting forces only, again volunteering their time for studio sessions for the Music Branch, Special Service Division of the Army Service Forces, and they were dubbed the "Sweethearts of the Armed Forces Radio Service" for their many appearances on shows such as "Command Performance", "Mail Call", and "G.I. Journal."
Career interruption
In the 1950s, Patty Andrews decided to break away from the act to be a soloist. She had married the trio's pianist, Walter Weschler, who then became the group's manager and demanded more money for Patty. When Maxene and LaVerne learned of Patty's decision from newspaper gossip columns rather than from their own sister, it caused a bitter two-year separation, especially when Patty sued LaVerne for a larger share of their parents' estate. Patty attributed the breakup to the deaths of their parents: "We had been together nearly all our lives," Patty explained in 1971. "Then in one year our dream world ended. Our mother died (in 1948) and then our father (in 1949). All three of us were upset, and we were at each other's throats all the time." In 1951, they recorded The Windmill Song which is an adaptation of the French song Maître Pierre written in 1949 hy Henri Betti (music) and Jacques Plante (lyrics). The English lyrics were written by Mitchell Parish. The Andrews Sisters formally broke up in 1953.
Maxene and LaVerne tried to continue the act as a duo and met with good press during a 10-day tour of Australia, but a reported suicide attempt by Maxene in December 1954 put a halt to any further tours (Maxene spent a short time in the hospital after swallowing 18 sleeping pills, an occurrence that LaVerne told reporters was an accident). Maxene and LaVerne did appear together on The Red Skelton Show on October 26th 1954 singing the humorous "Why Do They Give The Solos To Patty" as well as lip-synching "Beer Barrel Polka" with Skelton in drag filling in for Patty. The sisters' private relationship was often troubled and Patty blamed it on Maxene: "Ever since I was born, Maxene has been a problem," she said.
The trio reunited in 1956 and signed a new recording deal with Capitol Records, for whom Patty was already a featured soloist. By this point however, rock-and-roll and doo-wop were dominating the charts and older artists were being pushed by the wayside. The sisters recorded a dozen singles through 1959, some of which attempted to keep up with the times by incorporating rock sounds. None of these achieved any major success. In addition, they produced three hi-fi albums, including a vibrant LP of songs from the dancing 1920s with Billy May's orchestra. In 1962, they signed with Dot Records and recorded a series of stereo albums until 1964, both re-recordings of earlier hits which incorporated up-to-date production techniques, as well as new material, including "I Left My Heart In San Francisco", "Still", "The End of the World", "Puff the Magic Dragon", "Sailor", "Satin Doll", "Mr. Bass Man", the theme from Come September, and the theme from A Man and a Woman. They toured extensively during the 1960s, favoring top nightclubs in Las Vegas, Nevada, California, and London, England.
Eldest sister LaVerne died in 1967 at the age of 55 after a year-long bout with cancer during which she was replaced by singer Joyce DeYoung. DeYoung fulfilled concert appearances including an appearance on The Dean Martin Show on November 30, 1967, but she never recorded with Patty and Maxene. LaVerne had founded the original group, and often acted as the peacemaker among the three during the sisters' lives, more often siding with her parents, to whom the girls were extremely devoted, than with either of her sisters. Their last appearance together as a trio was on The Dean Martin Show on September 29, 1966.
After LaVerne died, Maxene and Patty continued to perform periodically until 1968, when Maxene decided she would become the Dean of Women at Tahoe Paradise College, teaching acting, drama and speech at a Lake Tahoe college and working with troubled teens, and Patty was once again eager to be a soloist.
In 1969, Patty appeared in Lucille Ball's third series Here's Lucy, in the sixth episode of the second season, titled "Lucy and the Andrews Sisters", and played a cameo along with many other stars in the 1970 film The Phynx. Performing with Patty for the Andrews Sisters Fan Club reunion, Lucy played Laverne, Kim (Lucie Arnaz) played Maxine, and Craig (Desi Arnaz, Jr.) played Bing Crosby.
Comeback
Patty and Maxene's careers experienced a resurgence when Bette Midler covered "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" in 1973. The next year, the pair debuted on Broadway in the Sherman Brothers' nostalgic World War II musical: Over Here! which premiered at the Shubert Theatre to rave reviews. This was a follow-up to Patty's success in Victory Canteen, a 1971 California revue. Over Here! starred Maxene and Patty (with Janie Sell filling in for LaVerne and winning a Tony Award for her performance) and was written with both sisters in mind for the leads. It launched the careers of many now notable theater, film, and television stars, including John Travolta, Marilu Henner, Treat Williams and Ann Reinking. It was the last major hurrah for the sisters and was cut short owing to a conflict with the show's producers initiated by Patty's husband and a lawsuit he filed against the show's composers, the Sherman Brothers, squashing an extensively scheduled road tour. Over Here! lasted only a year, and its end marked the last time the sisters would ever sing together.
Patty continually distanced herself from Maxene, until her death, would not explain Patty's motives regarding the separation, although people close to both sisters, including family members believed that Patty's husband, Wally Weschler was to blame. Maxene appealed to Patty for a reunion, personally if not professionally, both in public and in private, but to no avail. Maxene suffered a serious heart attack while performing in Illinois in 1982 and underwent quadruple bypass surgery, from which she successfully recovered. Patty visited her sister while she was hospitalized. Now sometimes appearing as "Patti" (but still signing autographs as "Patty") she re-emerged in the late 1970s as a regular panelist on The Gong Show. Maxene had a very successful comeback as a cabaret soloist in 1979 and toured worldwide for the next 15 years, recording a solo album in 1985 entitled "Maxene: An Andrews Sister" for Bainbridge Records. Patty started her own solo act in 1980, but did not receive the critical acclaim her sister had for her performances, even though Patty was considered to be the "star" of the group for years. The critics' major complaint was that Patty's show concentrated too much on Andrews Sisters material, which did not allow Patty's own talents as an expressive and bluesy vocalist to shine through.
The two sisters did reunite, albeit briefly, on October 1, 1987, when they received a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame, even singing a few bars of "Beer Barrel Polka" for the Entertainment Tonight cameras. An earthquake shook the area that very morning and the ceremony was nearly cancelled, which caused Patty to joke, "Some people said that earthquake this morning was LaVerne because she couldn't be here, but really it was just Maxene and me on the telephone." Besides this, and a few brief private encounters, they remained somewhat estranged for the last few years.
Shortly after her Off-Broadway debut in New York City in a show called Swingtime Canteen, Maxene suffered another heart attack and died at Cape Cod Hospital on October 21, 1995, making Patty the last surviving Andrews Sister. Not long before she died, Maxene told music historian William Ruhlmann, "I have nothing to regret. We got on the carousel and we each got the ring and I was satisfied with that. There's nothing I would do to change things if I could...Yes, I would. I wish I had the ability and the power to bridge the gap between my relationship with my sister, Patty." Upon hearing the news of her sister's death, Patty became very distraught. Several days later, Patty's husband Wally fell down a flight of stairs and broke both wrists. Patty did not attend her sister's memorial services in New York, nor in California. Said Bob Hope of Maxene's passing, "She was more than part of The Andrews Sisters, much more than a singer. She was a warm and wonderful lady who shared her talent and wisdom with others."
Marriages, family, and deaths
LaVerne Andrews married Lou Rogers, a trumpet player in Vic Schoen's band, in 1948, and remained with him until her death on May 8, 1967, from cancer (he died in 1995). The ashes of LaVerne and Maxene Andrews are interred in the Columbarium of Memory of the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California, close to the ashes of their parents.
Maxene Andrews married music publisher Lou Levy in 1941. They separated in 1949. Levy was the sisters' manager from 1937 to 1951. She died on October 21, 1995, from a heart attack while on Cape Cod.
Patty Andrews married agent Marty Melcher in 1947 and left him in 1949, when he pursued a romantic relationship with Doris Day. She then married Walter Wechsler, the trio's pianist, in 1951. Patty died of natural causes at her home in Northridge, California, on January 30, 2013 at the age of 94. Wechsler, her husband of nearly 60 years, had died on August 28, 2010, at the age of 88. Patty was cremated and her ashes were interred at Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery with the ashes of her husband. She is survived by her foster daughter Pam DuBois .
Joyce DeYoung Murray (born May 24, 1926), who briefly replaced LaVerne in the late 60's, died on March 6, 2014 at the age of 87.
Legacy
The sisters were the most imitated of all female singing groups and influenced many artists, including Mel Tormé, Les Paul and Mary Ford, The Four Freshmen, The McGuire Sisters, The Manhattan Dolls, The Lennon Sisters, The Pointer Sisters, The Manhattan Transfer, Barry Manilow, and Bette Midler. Even Elvis Presley was a fan.
Most of the Andrews Sisters' music has been restored and released in compact disc form, yet over 300 of their original Decca recordings, a good portion of which was hit material, has yet to be released by MCA/Decca in over 50 years. Many of these Decca recordings have been used in such television shows and Hollywood movies as Homefront, ER, Agent Carter, The Brink's Job, National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation, Swing Shift, Raggedy Man, Summer of '42, Slaughterhouse-Five, Maria's Lovers, Harlem Nights, In Dreams, Murder in the First, L.A. Confidential, American Horror Story, Just Shoot Me, Gilmore Girls, Mama's Family, War and Remembrance, Jakob the Liar, Lolita, The Polar Express, The Chronicles of Narnia, Molly: An American Girl on the Home Front, Memoirs of a Geisha, and Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (and Don't Come Back!!). Comical references to the trio in television sitcoms can be found as early as I Love Lucy and as recently as Everybody Loves Raymond. In 2007, their version of "Bei Mir Bist Du Schön" was included in the game BioShock, a first-person shooter that takes place in an alternate history 1960, and later in 2008, their song "Civilization" (with Danny Kaye) was included in the Atomic Age-inspired video game Fallout 3. The 2010 video game Mafia II features numerous Andrews Sisters songs, with "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy", "Strip Polka" and "Rum And Coca-Cola". The 2011 video game L.A. Noire features the song "Pistol Packin' Mama", where the sisters perform a duet with Bing Crosby. The sisters were again featured in a Fallout game in 2015, when their songs 'Pistol Packin' Mama' and 'Civilization' were featured in the game Fallout 4.
Christina Aguilera used the Andrews Sisters' "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" to inspire her song "Candyman" (released as a single in 2007) from her hit album Back to Basics. The song was co-written by Linda Perry. The London-based trio the Puppini Sisters uses their style harmonies on several Andrews Sisters and other hits of the 1940s and 1950s as well as later rock and disco hits. The trio has said their name is a tribute to The Andrews Sisters. The National WW2 Museum's Victory Belles are proud to pay tribute to the Andrews Sisters performing their music daily in the Stage Door Canteen in New Orleans. The Manhattan Dolls, a New York City-based touring group, performs both the popular tunes sung by the Andrews Sisters and some of the more obscure tunes such as "Well Alright" and "South American Way" as well.
In 2008 and 2009, the BBC produced The Andrews Sisters: Queens of the Music Machines, a one-hour documentary on the history of the Andrews Sisters from their upbringing to the present. The American premier of the show was June 21, 2009, in their birthplace of Mound, Minnesota. In 2008, Mound dedicated "The Andrews Sisters Trail". The sisters spent summers in Mound with their uncles Pete and Ed Solie, who had a grocery store there. Maxene Andrews always said that the summers in Mound created a major sense of "normalcy" and "a wonderful childhood" in a life that otherwise centered on the sisters' careers. The Westonka Historical Society has a large collection of Andrews Sisters memorabilia.
Musical innovators
When the sisters burst upon the music scene in the late 1930s, they shook a very solid musical foundation, producing a slick harmonic blend by singing at the top of their lungs while trying—successfully—to emulate the blare of three harmonizing trumpets, with a full big band racing behind them. Some bandleaders of the day, such as Artie Shaw, along with his musicians, resented them for taking the focus away from the band and emphasizing the vocals instead. They were in as high demand as the big bandleaders themselves, many of whom did not want to share the spotlight and play backup to a girl trio.
Nevertheless, they found instant appeal with teenagers and young adults who were engrossed in the swing and jazz idioms, especially when they performed with nearly all of the major big bands, including those led by Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman, Buddy Rich, Tommy Dorsey, Jimmy Dorsey, Gene Krupa, Joe Venuti, Freddie Slack, Eddie Heywood, Bob Crosby (Bing's brother), Desi Arnaz, Guy Lombardo, Les Brown, Bunny Berigan, Xavier Cugat, Paul Whiteman, Ted Lewis, Nelson Riddle and mood-master Gordon Jenkins, whose orchestra and chorus accompanied them on such successful soft and melancholy renditions as "I Can Dream, Can't I?" (which shot to number one on Billboard and remained in the Top 10 for 25 weeks), "I Wanna Be Loved", "There Will Never Be Another You", and the inspirational "The Three Bells", which was an English version of the French 1946 rendition by Édith Piaf & Les Compagnons de la chanson; along with several solo recordings with Patty, including a cover version of Nat King Cole's "Too Young", "It Never Entered My Mind", "If You Go" and "That's How A Love Song Is Born".
"Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" can be considered an early recording of rhythm and blues or jump blues.
Many styles
While the sisters specialized in swing, boogie-woogie, and novelty hits with their trademark lightning-quick vocal syncopations, they also produced major hits in jazz, ballads, folk, country-western, seasonal, and religious titles, being the first Decca artists to record an album of gospel standards in 1950. Their versatility allowed them to pair with many different artists in the recording studios, producing Top 10 hits with the likes of Bing Crosby (the only recording artist of the 1940s to sell more records than The Andrews Sisters), Danny Kaye, Dick Haymes, Carmen Miranda, Al Jolson, Ray McKinley, Burl Ives, Ernest Tubb, Red Foley, Dan Dailey, Alfred Apaka, and Les Paul. In personal appearances, on radio and on television, they sang with everyone from Rudy Vallee, Judy Garland and Nat "King" Cole to Jimmie Rodgers, Andy Williams, and The Supremes. Some of the trio's late-1930s recordings have noticeable Boswell Sisters vocal influences.
Films
Maxene, Patty, and LaVerne appeared in 17 Hollywood films. Their first picture, Argentine Nights, paired them with another enthusiastic trio, the Ritz Brothers. Universal Pictures, always budget-conscious, refused to hire a choreographer, so the Ritzes taught the sisters some eccentric steps. Thus, in Argentine Nights and the sisters' next film, Buck Privates, the Andrews Sisters dance like the Ritz Brothers.
Buck Privates, with Abbott and Costello, featured the Andrews Sisters' best-known song, "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy." This Don Raye-Hughie Prince composition was nominated for Best Song at the 1941 Academy Awards ceremony.
Universal hired the sisters for two more Abbott and Costello comedies and then promoted them to full-fledged stardom in B musicals. What's Cookin', Private Buckaroo, and Give Out, Sisters (the latter portraying the sisters as old women) were among the team's popular full-length films.
The Andrews Sisters sing the title song as the opening credits roll and also perform two specialty numbers in the all-star revue Hollywood Canteen (1944). They can be seen singing "You Don't Have to Know the Language" with Bing Crosby in Paramount's Road to Rio with Bob Hope, that year's highest-grossing movie. Their singing voices are heard in two full-length Walt Disney features: "Make Mine Music" in a segment which featured animated characters Johnny Fedora and Alice Blue Bonnet; and "Melody Time", in the segment Little Toot, both of which are available on DVD today).
Stage and radio shows
The Andrews Sisters were the most sought-after entertainment property in theater shows worldwide during the 1940s and early 1950s, always topping previous house averages. The trio headlined at the London Palladium in 1948 and 1951. They hosted their own radio shows for ABC and CBS from 1944 to 1951, singing specially written commercial jingles for such products as Wrigley's chewing gum, Dole pineapples, Nash motor cars, Kelvinator home appliances, Campbell's soups, and Franco-American food products. The western-themed "The Andrews Sisters' Show" (subtitled "Eight-to-the-Bar Ranch"), co-hosted by Gabby Hayes, began in 1944 and featured a special guest every week.
Setting records
They recorded 47 songs with crooner Bing Crosby, 23 of which charted on Billboard, thus making the team one of the most successful pairings of acts in a recording studio in show business history. Their million-sellers with Crosby included "Pistol Packin' Mama", "Don't Fence Me In", "South America, Take It Away", and "Jingle Bells".
The sisters' popularity was such that after the war they discovered that some of their records had actually been smuggled into Germany after the labels had been changed to read "Hitler's Marching Songs". Their recording of Bei Mir Bist Du Schön became a favorite of the Nazis, until it was discovered that the song's composers were of Jewish descent. Still, it did not stop concentration camp inmates from secretly singing it, this being most likely since the song was originally a Yiddish song "Bei Mir Bistu Shein", and had been popularized within the Jewish community before it was recorded as a more successful "cover" version by the Andrews sisters.
Edward Habib in the CD program notes for "Songs That Won the War Vol. 2 The Hollywood Canteen" states that the Andrews Sisters' radio transcription of Elmer's Tune was "so popular it even played on German radio," noting that "the opposition embraced the Andrews Sisters and their songs in the same way the Allied Forces adopted Lili Marlene."
Along with Bing Crosby, separately and jointly, The Andrews Sisters were among the performers who incorporated ethnic music styles into America's Hit Parade, popularizing or enhancing the popularity of songs with melodies originating in Brazil, Czechoslovakia, France, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Mexico, Russia, Spain, Sweden and Trinidad, many of which their manager chose for them.
The Andrews Sisters became the most popular female vocal group of the first half of the 20th century.
- 75-100 million records sold from a little over 600 recorded tunes
- 113 charted Billboard hits, 46 reaching Top 10 status (more than Elvis Presley or The Beatles)
- 17 Hollywood films (more than any other singing group in motion picture history)
- record-breaking theater and cabaret runs all across America and Europe;
- countless appearances on radio shows from 1935 to 1960 (including their own)
- guest spots on every major television show of the 1950s and 1960s, including those hosted by Ed Sullivan, Milton Berle, Perry Como, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis, Jr., Johnny Carson, Joey Bishop, Art Linkletter and Jimmy Dean.
Early comparative female close harmony trios were the Boswell Sisters, the Pickens Sisters, and the Three X Sisters.
Repertoire
Discography (hit records)
Year | Single | Chart positions | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
US | US R&B |
US Country | ||
1938 | "Bei Mir Bist Du Schön (Means That You're Grand)" | 1 | - | - |
"Nice Work If You Can Get It" | 12 | - | - | |
"Joseph, Joseph" | 18 | - | - | |
"Ti-Pi-Tin" | 12 | - | - | |
"Shortenin' Bread" | 16 | - | - | |
"Says My Heart" | 10 | - | - | |
"Tu-li-Tulip Time" | 9 | - | - | |
"Sha-Sha" | 17 | - | - | |
"Lullaby To a Jitterbug" | 10 | - | - | |
1939 | "Pross-Tchai (Goodbye)" | 15 | - | - |
"Hold Tight, Hold Tight" | 2 | - | - | |
"You Don't Know How Much You Can Suffer" | 14 | - | - | |
"Beer Barrel Polka (Roll Out the Barrel)" | 4 | - | - | |
"Well All Right (Tonight's the Night)" | 5 | - | - | |
"Ciribiribin (They're So In Love)" | 13 | - | - | |
"Yodelin' Jive" | 4 | - | - | |
"Chico's Love Song" | 11 | - | - | |
1940 | "Say Si Si (Para Vigo Me Voy)" | 4 | - | - |
"The Woodpecker Song" | 6 | - | - | |
"Down By the O-Hi-O" | 21 | - | - | |
"Rhumboogie" | 11 | - | - | |
"Ferryboat Serenade" | 1 | - | - | |
"Hit the Road" | 27 | - | - | |
"Beat Me Daddy, Eight to the Bar" | 2 | - | - | |
1941 | "Scrub Me, Mama, With a Boogie Beat" | 10 | - | - |
"Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" | 6 | - | - | |
"I Yi, Yi, Yi, Yi (I Like You Very Much)" | 11 | - | - | |
"(I'll Be With You) In Apple Blossom Time" | 5 | - | - | |
"Aurora" | 10 | - | - | |
"Sonny Boy" | 22 | - | - | |
"The Nickel Serenade" | 22 | - | - | |
"Sleepy Serenade" | 22 | - | - | |
"I Wish I Had a Dime (For Every Time I Missed You)" | 20 | - | - | |
"Jealous" | 12 | - | - | |
1942 | "The Shrine of St. Cecilia" | 3 | - | - |
"I'll Pray For You" | 22 | - | - | |
"Three Little Sisters" | 8 | - | - | |
"Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree" | 16 | - | - | |
"Pennsylvania Polka" | 17 | - | - | |
"That's the Moon, My Son" | 18 | - | - | |
"Mister Five By Five" | 14 | - | - | |
"Strip Polka" | 6 | - | - | |
"Here Comes the Navy" | 17 | - | - | |
1943 | "East of the Rockies" | 18 | - | - |
"Hot Time in the Town of Berlin" | 11 | - | - | |
"Pistol Packin' Mama" | 2 | 3 | 1 | |
"Victory Polka" | 5 | - | - | |
"Jingle Bells" | 19 | - | - | |
"Shoo-Shoo Baby" | 1 | - | - | |
1944 | "Down In the Valley" | 20 | - | - |
"Straighten Up and Fly Right" | 8 | - | - | |
"Tico Tico" | 24 | - | - | |
"Sing a Tropical Song" | 24 | - | - | |
"Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby" | 2 | - | - | |
"A Hot Time In the Town of Berlin" | 1 | - | - | |
"Don't Fence Me In" | 1 | 9 | - | |
1945 | "Rum and Coca Cola" | 1 | 3 | - |
"Accentuate the Positive" | 2 | - | - | |
"The Three Caballeros" | 8 | - | - | |
"One Meat Ball" | 15 | - | - | |
"Corns For My Country" | 21 | - | - | |
"Along the Navajo Trail" | 2 | - | - | |
"The Blond Sailor" | 8 | - | - | |
1946 | "Money Is the Root of All Evil" | 9 | - | - |
"Patience and Fortitude" | 12 | - | - | |
"Coax Me a Little Bit" | 24 | - | - | |
"South America, Take It Away" | 2 | - | - | |
"Get Your Kicks On Route 66" | 14 | - | - | |
"I Don't Know Why" | 17 | - | - | |
"House of Blue Lights" | 15 | - | - | |
"Rumors Are Flying" | 4 | - | - | |
"Winter Wonderland" | 22 | - | - | |
"Christmas Island" | 7 | - | - | |
1947 | "Tallahassee" | 10 | - | - |
"There's No Business Like Show Business" | 25 | - | - | |
"On the Avenue" | 21 | - | - | |
"Near You" | 2 | - | - | |
"The Lady From 29 Palms" | 7 | - | - | |
"The Freedom Train" | 21 | - | - | |
"Civilization (Bongo, Bongo, Bongo)" | 3 | - | - | |
"Jingle Bells" | 21 | - | - | |
"Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town" | 22 | - | - | |
"Christmas Island"(with Guy Lombardo) | 20 | - | - | |
"Your Red Wagon" | 24 | - | - | |
"How Lucky You Are" | 22 | - | - | |
1948 | "You Don't Have To Know the Language" | 21 | - | - |
"Teresa" | 21 | - | - | |
"Toolie Oolie Doolie (The Yodel Polka)" | 3 | - | - | |
"I Hate To Lose You" | 14 | - | - | |
"Heartbreaker" | 21 | - | - | |
"Sabre Dance" | 20 | - | - | |
"Woody Woodpecker" | 18 | - | - | |
"Blue Tail Fly" | 24 | - | - | |
"Underneath the Arches" | 5 | - | - | |
"You Call Everybody Darling" | 8 | - | - | |
"Cuanto La Gusta" | 12 | - | - | |
"160 Acres" | 23 | - | - | |
"Bella Bella Marie" | 23 | - | - | |
1949 | "Christmas Island" | 26 | - | - |
"The Pussy Cat Song (Nyow! Nyot! Nyow!)" | 12 | - | - | |
"More Beer!" | 30 | - | - | |
"I'm Bitin' My Fingernails and Thinking of You" | 30 | - | 2 | |
"Don't Rob Another Man's Castle" | - | - | 6 | |
"I Can Dream, Can't I?" | 1 | - | - | |
"The Wedding of Lili Marlene" | 20 | - | - | |
"She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" | 22 | - | - | |
"Charley, My Boy" | 15 | - | - | |
1950 | "Merry Christmas Polka" | 18 | - | - |
"Have I Told You Lately That I Love You" | 24 | - | - | |
"Quicksilver" | 6 | - | - | |
"The Wedding Samba" | 23 | - | - | |
"I Wanna Be Loved" | 1 | - | - | |
"Can't We Talk It Over" | 22 | - | - | |
"A Bushel and a Peck" | 22 | - | - | |
"Mele Kalikimaka" | - | - | - | |
1951 | "A Penny a Kiss, a Penny a Hug" | 17 | - | - |
"Sparrow in the Tree Top" | 8 | - | - | |
"Too Young" | 19 | - | - | |
1955 | "Suddenly There's a Valley" | 69 | - | - |
Other songs
Highest chart positions on Billboard; with Vic Schoen and his orchestra, unless otherwise noted:
- "A Bushel and a Peck" (1950) (#22)
- "A Hundred and Sixty Acres" (with Bing Crosby) (1948) (#23)
- "A Penny a Kiss-A Penny a Hug" (1950) (#17)
- "Aurora" (1941) (#10)
- "Bella Bella Marie" (1948) (#23)
- "Can't We Talk it Over?" (with Gordon Jenkins and his orchestra and chorus) (1950) (#22)
- "Charley, My Boy" (with Russ Morgan and his orchestra) (1949) (#15)
- "Chico's Love Song" (1939) (#11)
- "Christmas Island" (with Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians) (1946: #7; 1947: #20; 1949: #26)
- "Ciribiribin (They're So in Love)" (with Bing Crosby & Joe Venuti and his orchestra) (1939) (#13)
- "Coax Me a Little Bit" (1946) (#24)
- "Corns for My Country" (1945) (#21)
- "Cuanto La Gusta" (with Carmen Miranda) (1948) (#12)
- "Down By the O-HI-O" (1940) (#21)
- "Down in the Valley (Hear that Train Blow)" (1944) (#20)
- "East of the Rockies" (1943) (#18)
- "(Everytime They Play the) Sabre Dance" (with The Harmonica Gentlemen) (1948) (#20)
- "Heartbreaker" (with The Harmonica Gentlemen) (1948) (#21)
- "Here Comes the Navy" (1942) (#17)
- "Hit the Road" (1940) (#27)
- "How Lucky You Are" (1947) (#22)
- "I Don't Know Why (I Just Do)" (1946) (#17)
- "I Hate to Lose You" (1948) (#14)
- "Have I Told You Lately That I Love You?" (with Bing Crosby) (1950) (#24)
- "I'll Pray For You" (1942) (#22)
- "I'm Biting My Fingernails and Thinking of You" (with Ernest Tubb and The Texas Troubadors directed by Vic Schoen) (1949) (#30)
- "I Wish I Had a Dime (For Ev'rytime I Missed You)" (1941) (#20)
- "I Yi, Yi, Yi, Yi (I Like You Very Much)" (1941) (#11)
- "Jealous" (1941) (#12)
- "The Blue Tail Fly (Jimmy Crack Corn)" (with Burl Ives, vocal and guitar accompaniment) (1948) (#24)
- "Joseph! Joseph!" (1938) (#18)
- "Lullaby to a Jitterbug" (1938) (#10)
- "Merry Christmas Polka" (with Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians) (1950) (#18)
- "Mister Five By Five" (1942) (#14)
- "Money Is the Root of All Evil (Take it Away, Take it Away, Take it Away)" (with Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians) (1946) (#9)
- "More Beer!" (1949) (#30)
- "On the Avenue" (with Carmen Cavallaro at the piano), Decca 24102 A (1947) (#21)
- "One Meat Ball" (1945) (#15)
- "Patience and Fortitude" (1946) (#12)
- "Pennsylvania Polka" (1942) (#17)
- "Pross Tchai (Goodbye-Goodbye)" (1939) (#15)
- "Quicksilver" (with Bing Crosby) (1950) (#6)
- "Rhumboogie" (1940) (#11)
- "Get Your Kicks on Route 66" (with Bing Crosby) (1946) (#14)
- "Says My Heart" (1938) (#10)
- "Scrub Me Mama with a Boogie Beat" (1940) (#10)
- "Sha-Sha" (with Jimmy Dorsey and his orchestra)(1938) (#17)
- "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" (with Russ Morgan and his orchestra) (1949) (#22)
- "Shortenin' Bread" (1938) (#16)
- "Sing a Tropical Song" (1944) (#24)
- "Sleepy Serenade" (1941) (#22)
- "Sleigh Ride" (1950)
- "Sonny Boy" (1941) (#22)
- "Sparrow in the Treetop" (with Bing Crosby) (1951) (#8)
- "Straighten Up and Fly Right" (1944) (#8)
- "Strip Polka" (1942) (#6)
- "Sweet Marie" (with Carmen Cavallaro at the piano, Decca 24102 B (maybe 1947?) (#?)
- "Tallahassee" (with Bing Crosby) (1947) (#10)
- "Teresa" (with Dick Haymes) (1948) (#21)
- "That's the Moon, My Son" (1942) (#18)
- "The Blond Sailor" (1945) (#8)
- "The Freedom Train" (1947) (#21)
- "The House of Blue Lights" (with Eddie Heywood and his orchestra) (1946) (#15)
- "The Lady from 29 Palms" (1947) (#7)
- "The Nickel Serenade" (1941) (#22)
- "The Pussy Cat Song (Nyow! Nyot Nyow!)" (Patty Andrews and Bob Crosby) (1949) (#12)
- "The Three Caballeros" (with Bing Crosby) (1945) (#8)
- "The Wedding of Lili Marlene" (with Gordon Jenkins and his orchestra and chorus) (1949) (#20)
- "The Wedding Samba" (with Carmen Miranda) (1950) (#23)
- "The Windmill Song" (with Gordon Jenkins and his orchestra) (1951) (#?)
- "The Woodpecker Song" (1940) (#6)
- "There's No Business Like Show Business" (with Bing Crosby and Dick Haymes) (1947) (#25)
- "Three Little Sisters" (1942) (#8)
- "Tico-Tico no Fubá" (1944) (#24)
- "Ti-Pi-Tin" (1938) (#12)
- "Too Young" (Patty Andrews with Victor Young and his orchestra) (1951) (#19)
- "Torero" Capitol F 3965 (recorded on March 31, 1958)
- "Tu-Li-Tulip Time" (with Jimmy Dorsey and his orchestra) (1938) (#9)
- "Winter Wonderland" (with Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians) (1946) (#22)
- "The Woody Woodpecker Song" (with Danny Kaye and The Harmonica Gentlemen) (1948) (#18)
- "You Call Everybody Darling" (recorded in London with Billy Ternant and his orchestra) (1948) (#8)
- "You Don't Have to Know the Language" (with Bing Crosby) (1948) (#21)
- "You Don't Know How Much You Can Suffer" (1939) (#14)
- "Your Red Wagon" (1947) (#24)
Albums
- Don't Fence Me In (with Bing Crosby) (1946, Decca)
- The Andrews Sisters (1946, Decca)
- A Collection of Tropical Songs (1947, Decca)
- Selections from Road to Rio (with Bing Crosby) (1948, Decca)
- Irving Berlin Songs (1948, Decca)
- The Andrews Sisters in Hi-Fi (1957, Capitol)
- Fresh and Fancy Free (1957, Capitol)
- The Andrews Sisters Sing the Dancing '20s (1958, Capitol)
- Greatest Hits (1961, Dot)
- Great Golden Hits (1962, Dot)
- The Andrews Sisters Present (1963, Dot)
- Greatest Hits Vol. 2 (1963, Dot)
- Great Country Hits (1964, Dot)
- The Andrews Sisters Go Hawaiian (1965, Dot)
- Favorite Hymns (1965, Hamilton)
- The Andrews Sisters - Great Performers (1967, Dot)
- Boogie Woogie Bugle Girls (1973, Paramount)
- The Andrews Sisters in Over Here! (1974, Columbia)
- In The Mood (Famous Twinset Series) (1974, Paramount)
- Sixteen Great Performances (1980, MCA Records)
Film, theatre, and television
(partial list)
Filmography
- Argentine Nights (Universal Pictures, 1940)
- Buck Privates (Universal Pictures, 1941)
- In the Navy (Universal Pictures, 1941)
- Hold That Ghost (Universal Pictures, 1941)
- What's Cookin'? (Universal Pictures, 1942)
- Private Buckaroo (Universal Pictures, 1942)
- Give Out, Sisters (Universal Pictures, 1942)
- How's About It (Universal Pictures, 1943)
- Always a Bridesmaid (Universal Pictures, 1943)
- Swingtime Johnny (Universal Pictures, 1943)
- Moonlight and Cactus (Universal Pictures, 1944)
- Follow the Boys (Universal Pictures, 1944)
- Hollywood Canteen (Warner Brothers, 1944)
- Her Lucky Night (Universal Pictures, 1945)
- Make Mine Music (Walt Disney Studios, 1946)
- Road to Rio (Paramount Pictures, 1947)
- Melody Time (Walt Disney Studios, 1948)
- Brother, Can You Spare a Dime? (1975)
Soundtracks
- Breach (background music) (2007)
- Land of the Lost (2009)
- Fallout 3 (2006) (Civilization)
- Fallout 4 (2015) (Civilization)
Broadway
- Over Here! (1974; Shubert Theater, New York City, 9 months)
Dance
- Company B (1991; Choreographed by Paul Taylor, Performed by Paul Taylor Dance Company, American Ballet Theatre, and Miami City Ballet)
Television
- Appearance on The Joey Bishop Show
- They were parodied on Sesame Street as the Androoze Sisters (Muppets), named Mayeeme (Audrey Smith), Pattiz (Maeretha Stewart), and Lavoorrnee (Kevin Clash).