翻訳と辞書
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・ I Wasn't Born Yesterday
・ I Wasn't Kidding
・ I Wasn't the One (Who Said Goodbye)
・ I Wasn't with It
・ I Watched It All (On My Radio)
・ I Watched It on the Radio
・ I Wayan Gangga Mudana
・ I Wayan Gobiah
・ I Wayan Suweca
・ I Wayne
・ I Wear the Face
・ I Wear Your Shirt
・ I Wed Three Wives
・ I Went Down
・ I Went for a Walk
I Went to a Marvellous Party
・ I Went to This Party and There Were 88 Guards with Guns
・ I Went to Your Wedding
・ I Whistle a Happy Tune
・ I Who Have Never Known Men
・ I Will
・ I Will (Dick Glasser song)
・ I Will (disambiguation)
・ I Will (Do song)
・ I Will (F.T. Island album)
・ I Will (film)
・ I Will (Jimmy Wayne song)
・ I Will (Mozella album)
・ I Will (Namie Amuro song)
・ I Will (Zhang Liyin album)


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I Went to a Marvellous Party : ウィキペディア英語版
I Went to a Marvellous Party
"I Went to a Marvellous Party" (sometimes known as ''I've Been to a Marvellous Party'') is a song with words and music by Noël Coward, written in 1938, and included in the review ''Set to Music''. Although a melody exists, the text is most often recited over a piano accompaniment.〔 〕 Out of Noël Coward's approximately 300 songs, this piece is one of his most popular, ranking among the top 30 in royalty potential.〔
==Description==
The lyrics of ''I Went to a Marvellous Party'' are a first-person description of five parties attended by the singer on the French Riviera. The character of the song is humorous and giddy. It has been suggested that the activities described in the lyrics were typical of the "frantic, addleheaded search for amusement" of the Train bleu society, which flocked to the Riviera each summer in the 1920s and '30s.
Noël Coward composed this song after he and Beatrice Lillie attended a beach party given by Elsa Maxwell in the south of France,〔 an event which his memory placed in either 1937 or 1938. The lyrics in the first stanza are based on a real life experience of Coward and Lillie: The two were invited to "come as they were," but on arriving they discovered the other guests were formally dressed. Perhaps this explains why the singer claims it was hell to stay dressed as they were.〔 "Poor Grace" in the first stanza is a reference to Grace Moore, the opera singer and movie actress, who was also a guest.〔 The song was first sung by Bea Lillie in the revue ''Set to Music'' in 1939.
Although the text is published in various collections of Noël Coward songs, Coward's own recording from 1956, heard on the ''Noël Coward Album'', contains variations from the printed page. When written out, this version does not scan well. However, Coward maintains the major textual stresses in performance and fits added words and phrases before and after the stresses. He also places the second verse after the second stanza, instead of after the third, as it appears in the sheet music.
The song appeared in the David Niven film ''Better Late Than Never'' (1982), in which Niven appeared as an ageing cabaret artiste performing to an indifferent French Riviera audience.

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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