They sang THIS hit in 1958. When I hear it 60 years later? Oh, the memories.

Bring me a dream, Mr. Sandman. Make him the most adorable thing I’ve ever seen. It is 1958. President Eisenhower is in office, and the modern form of rock & roll is beginning to emerge. Don’t tell the Chordettes that, though. The mostly a cappella performances of “Mr. Sandman” and “Lollipop” by the Sheboygan harmonizing girls—Janet, Alice, Lynn, and Jinny—wowed the radio.

In this live TV performance, the Chordettes, who are frequently likened to a barbershop quartet, show off their skills. Do you recall all of the song’s “bum-bum-bums”? You’ll be astounded to learn that each member of the group sings a single “bum” in rapid succession. How did they accomplish that without a hitch?

Even as the racially explicit lyrics beg Mr. Sandman to bring them a handsome man to bed with, these women’s charm and long, proper gowns evoke a sense of past properness.

In a humorous scene created specifically for this performance, Mr. Sandman himself shows up on screen to take their call, and he’s incredibly attractive and youthful. Even as you swoon to the sound of the iconic “Mr. Sandman,” you’ll laugh at this insert shot.

 

Related Posts

“Make my daughter walk again and I’ll adopt you…” the rich man had promised. But what the orphan did…

The night the sirens faded into the distance and the hospital doors closed behind him, Michael Turner understood that his life had divided itself into a before…

My Kids Tried To Take My Secret Montana Cabin With a Locksmith – So I Called the Law and a Lawyer Instead-qii

The first sound was the crunch of tires on frozen gravel, sharp and wrong in the quiet I’d grown used to. I was standing at the kitchen…

Growing Older With Grace: The Quiet Habits That Push People Away — And How to Rebuild Connection at Any Age

Growing older is one of life’s greatest privileges. It is not simply the accumulation of years, but the accumulation of perspective—earned slowly, often painfully, through moments of…

My daughter abandoned her autistic son 11 years ago. I raised him alone. At 16, he created an app worth $3.2 million. Then his mother came back, with her lawyer, demanding her son’s money. I panicked. Our lawyer said, “We could lose.” But my nephew calmly whispered… “Let her talk.”

My daughter abandoned her autistic son 11 years ago. I raised him alone. At 16, he created an app worth $3.2 million. Then his mother came back,…

He Hadn’t Seen Sunlight in a Year. When Cops Found the 9-Year-Old Boy in the Cellar, He Weighed Only 55 Lbs. But the Real Fight Began the Next Day.

The snow wasn’t just falling; it was suffocating. It buried Caldridge, Montana, in a thick, white hush that felt heavier than peace. It was the kind of…

My Rich Grandpa Found Out I Was Living In My Car, Working Two Jobs To Pay For College. My Family Thought I’d Stay Broken. They Were Wrong.

They Thought I’d Stay Broken, Sleeping In My Car While They Spent My $100,000 Trust Fund.They Didn’t Know My Rich Grandfather—Who Hadn’t Seen Me In Ten Years—Was…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *