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・ Burlington (provincial electoral district)
・ Burlington (town), Wisconsin
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Burlington Bertie
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・ Burlington Carnegie Free Library (Burlington, Kansas)
・ Burlington Cars
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・ Burlington Center Mall
・ Burlington Central High School
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・ Burlington City High School
・ Burlington Coat Factory
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Burlington Bertie : ウィキペディア英語版
Burlington Bertie

"Burlington Bertie" is a music hall song composed by Harry B. Norris in 1900 and sung by Vesta Tilley. It concerns an aristocratic young idler who pursues a life of leisure in the West End of London. Burlington is an upmarket London shopping area associated with luxury goods.
This song was parodied in the now-much-better-known "Burlington Bertie from Bow" (1915) credited to William Hargreaves and sung by his wife, Ella Shields, who performed the song whilst dressed in male attire as the sort of character known as a 'broken down swell'. Unlike the original song, Bertie's pretensions to gentility are belied by his residence in Bow, in the poverty-stricken East End of London, though his status as an idler ironically links him to the leisured aristocratic class, who reside in the West End.〔Pegler, Martin, ''Soldiers' Songs and Slang of the Great War'' Osprey Publishing, 2014, ISBN 9781427804150, page 256.〕
Betty Grable in the part of vaudevillian Myrtle McKinley Burt performed the song in the musical film ''Mother Wore Tights'' (1947).〔(IMDB )〕
Julie Andrews, also dressed in male attire, gave another rendition of the song in the film ''Star!'' (1968).
It was sung on episode 201 of ''The Muppet Show'' by a custom Bertie Muppet performed by Jerry Nelson.
It was referenced in the song "My Town" by the Canadian band Glass Tiger.
At the Royal Variety Performance in 1981, it was performed in the customary male evening dress by Anita Harris, who brought the house down with the line "I've just had a banana with Lady Diana" from the Buckingham Palace verse of the song. Although the Diana in the original version was probably Lady Diana Cooper, Prince Charles had married Lady Diana Spencer earlier in the year.
The two songs about Burlington Bertie are both predecessors of Irving Berlin's song "A Couple of Swells". In all three songs, a woman dressed in a ragged form of male finery brags about how well connected in society "he" is, while clearly demonstrating an actual state of poverty.
==Gambling terminology==
In gambling terminology, or Tic-tac, "Burlington Bertie" is rhyming slang for the fractional odds of 10/3, which is normally referred to as "one hundred to thirty".

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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