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- Ann_Moray abstract "Ann Moray (1909 – 1981) was a Welsh singer and novelist. While biographical information is difficult to find, according to liner notes on her recording, “The Love Songs of Robert Burns” (Spoken Arts #754), she studied music in Vienna. During World War II, she worked with the U.S. Army Chaplains, singing unaccompanied in battlefield hospitals, where the soldiers knew her as “Scottie”. Maxine Andrews told a story about a soldier who was afraid he was near death, who asked Moray to sing “Abide With Me” at his funeral. Moray assured him that he was not going to die anytime soon, but promised to sing. That night the soldier did die, and “two days later, Ann Moray stood in the rain next to his freshly dug grave on the beachhead at Anzio and sang.” Moray recounted when a field hospital physician had cautioned her against informing a soldier that he had been blinded. This soldier asked her to sing \"Smilin' Through\" from a 1941 motion picture. The song contains repeated references to \"eyes of blue,\" and the soldier asked her if his eyes \"are blue\" or \"were blue.\" Moray answered, \"were\".After World War II, she continued to study music, and in 1952 gave her first recital at the Town Hall in New York. She developed a serious interest in the folklore of her homeland, and at a town hall recital in 1954, devoted the second half of the program to songs and legends of Ireland and the Western Isles. Later in life Ann Moray turned to writing, and is the author of three published novels and a book of short stories. Moray’s papers are in the Howard Gotleib Archival Research Center at Boston University.".
- Ann_Moray wikiPageExternalLink abstract.html?res=F1081EF93B5C147A93C0A91789D85F408685F9.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageID "13359426".
- Ann_Moray wikiPageLength "4767".
- Ann_Moray wikiPageOutDegree "17".
- Ann_Moray wikiPageRevisionID "706429377".
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Category:1909_births.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Category:1981_deaths.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_British_singers.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_women_writers.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Category:Date_of_birth_missing.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Category:Date_of_death_missing.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Category:University_of_Music_and_Performing_Arts,_Vienna_alumni.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Category:Welsh_female_singers.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Category:Welsh_women_writers.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Field_hospital.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Novelist.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Burns.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Singing.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Smilin_Through_(song).
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink The_Andrews_Sisters.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink The_New_York_Times.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLink Welsh_people.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ann Moray".
- Ann_Moray wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cn.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Fraction.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Ann_Moray wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:When.
- Ann_Moray subject Category:1909_births.
- Ann_Moray subject Category:1981_deaths.
- Ann_Moray subject Category:20th-century_British_singers.
- Ann_Moray subject Category:20th-century_women_writers.
- Ann_Moray subject Category:Date_of_birth_missing.
- Ann_Moray subject Category:Date_of_death_missing.
- Ann_Moray subject Category:University_of_Music_and_Performing_Arts,_Vienna_alumni.
- Ann_Moray subject Category:Welsh_female_singers.
- Ann_Moray subject Category:Welsh_women_writers.
- Ann_Moray hypernym Singer.
- Ann_Moray type MusicalArtist.
- Ann_Moray type Singer.
- Ann_Moray type Writer.
- Ann_Moray type Singer.
- Ann_Moray type Writer.
- Ann_Moray type Thing.
- Ann_Moray comment "Ann Moray (1909 – 1981) was a Welsh singer and novelist. While biographical information is difficult to find, according to liner notes on her recording, “The Love Songs of Robert Burns” (Spoken Arts #754), she studied music in Vienna. During World War II, she worked with the U.S. Army Chaplains, singing unaccompanied in battlefield hospitals, where the soldiers knew her as “Scottie”.".
- Ann_Moray label "Ann Moray".
- Ann_Moray sameAs Q4766577.
- Ann_Moray sameAs m.03c2v7p.
- Ann_Moray sameAs Q4766577.
- Ann_Moray wasDerivedFrom Ann_Moray?oldid=706429377.
- Ann_Moray isPrimaryTopicOf Ann_Moray.