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  1. Larry Mowry (b. March 2, 1977) is an American Emmy Award-winning meteorologist and news personality currently working as a weather anchor and reporter on WLS-TV, Channel 7, which is an ABC affiliate television station in Chicago, Illinois, United States. He joined ABC7 Eyewitness News station in 2004.

  2. film ( Larry Morey) Larry Morey. American lyricist and screenwriter (1905-1971) Wikipedia. Date of birth. 26 March 1905. Los Angeles. Date of death. 8 May 1971.

  3. 21 de feb. de 2017 · Listen to music from Larry Morey like Sleepy Morning In The Woods/The Young Prince/Learning to Walk - From "Bambi"/Score, The Meadow / Bambi Sees Faline / Bambi Gets Annoyed - From "Bambi"/Score & more. Find the latest tracks, albums, and images from Larry Morey.

  4. Frank Edwin Churchill was an American composer of popular music for films. He wrote most of the music for Disney's 1937 movie Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, including "Whistle While You Work" and "Someday My Prince Will Come". The latter (without the Larry Morey lyrics) became a jazz standard covered by various jazz greats, including Oscar Peterson, Miles Davis, and Dave Brubeck. Churchill ...

  5. music.youtube.com › channel › UCb3HiwfXoZ-2OpmxPfJGKZwLarry Morey - YouTube Music

    Lawrence L. Morey was an American lyricist and screenwriter. He co-wrote some of the most successful songs in Disney films of the 1930s and 1940s, including "Heigh-Ho ...

  6. The song Lavender Blue (Dilly Dilly) was written by Eliot Daniel, Larry Morey and [Traditional] and was first recorded and released by Dinah Shore - Orchestra under the direction of Harry Zimmerman in 1948. It was adapted from Lavender Blue (Eliot Daniel, Larry Morey and [Traditional]). It was covered by Russ Conway, John Arpin, Ray Walston and His Favorite Children's Chorus, Hans Wahlgren ...

  7. Larry was born with a skeletal limb abnormality. His left arm was not fully formed and caused his mother to reject him at birth, saying "he would never amount to anything." She abandoned him to the care of his father, George T. Morey, a traveling musical ventriloquist.