Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

You're the Top

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Published
  
1934

ISWC
  
T0702114199

Writer(s)
  
Cole Porter

"You're the Top" is a Cole Porter song from the 1934 musical Anything Goes. It is about a man and a woman who take turns complimenting each other. The best-selling version was Paul Whiteman's Victor single, which made the top five.

Contents

It was the most popular song from Anything Goes at the start with hundreds of parodies.

The lyrics are particularly notable because they offer a snapshot as to what was highly prized in the mid-1930s and demonstrate Porter's rhyming ability.

Some of the lyrics were re-written by P. G. Wodehouse for the British version of Anything Goes.

Versions of the song

  • Ethel Merman sang it in the original 1934 production of Anything Goes.
  • Bing Crosby sang it with Ethel Merman in the 1936 film version of Anything Goes. He also sang in the 1956 film with Mitzi Gaynor, Donald O'Connor and Jeanmaire. He and Gaynor also recorded it separately for Decca Records for inclusion in the soundtrack album.
  • Barbra Streisand: In the 1972 film What's Up, Doc?. (The film also features several Porter compositions in the form of elevator music.)
  • Diana Rigg: In the 1982 Agatha Christie Poirot film Evil Under the Sun.
  • Ella Fitzgerald: In her Cole Porter songbook.
  • Cole Porter: Over the end titles of the 2004 biopic De-Lovely.
  • Porter's version was also overdubbed in 2004 with extra instruments by Vince Giordano and his Nighthawks. This version appears in the soundtrack to the 2007 video game BioShock.
  • Patti LuPone: In the 1987 Broadway (Lincoln Center) revival of Anything Goes.
  • Louis Armstrong: In the 1994 album Verve Jazz Masters 1.
  • Rosemary Clooney: In her 1982 album Rosemary Clooney Sings the Music of Cole Porter.
  • James Gillan in Easy Virtue
  • Sutton Foster: In the 2011 Broadway revival of Anything Goes.
  • In the third season episode "Heart" of the television show Glee, actors Jeff Goldblum and Brian Stokes Mitchell sang one of the verses to this song. However, a full version featuring both was released as a single.
  • The "Washington vs. the Bunny" (season one, episode five) episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show features a version of the song performed for Laura Petrie (Mary Tyler Moore) by her very young son Ritchie. In that version, Ritchie mistakenly alters the lyrics from "You're the Mona Lisa" to "You're the Mommy Lisa".
  • The song played a major role in the M*A*S*H episode "The Joker Is Wild" whereupon the loser of a "jokeoff" in the 4077th had to sing the song without his bottoms (pants) in the mess hall. Alan Alda's character Hawkeye ultimately had to make good on said promise.
  • Also sung as the introduction by Paul Jones and arranged by Richard Rodney Bennett for the ITV series The Charmer starring Nigel Havers. Neil Patrick Harris and David Burtka did a version of the song at the 2011's gala of The Trevor Project
  • A personalized version of this song was featured in season seven of Gilmore Girls, sung by Edward Herrmann and Kelly Bishop to their onscreen granddaughter played by Alexis Bledel in honor of her graduation from Yale. It features such lines as: "You're the top/You've graduated. You're the top/Your grandparents are elated."
  • In 1985, a series of Heinz Tomato Ketchup commercials in Canada featured various cover versions of the song as their jingle.
  • In John Mortimer's novel Paradise Postponed (1985) and the television series of the same name (Euston Films, 1986): A rendering of the song by a fictitious performer, Pinky Pinkerton, includes the line, "You're my Lady Grace", which signifies Lady Grace Fanner in the story.
  • In 2003, American jazz singer Stacey Kent covered the song on her album The Boy Next Door.
  • In the 1992 film Passed Away, Father Hallahan (Patrick Breen) sings this song during a wake.
  • Parodies

    Porter biographer William McBrien wrote that at the height of its popularity in 1934 to 1935 it had become a "popular pastime" to create parodies of the lyrics. Porter, who himself had called the song "just a trick" the public would get bored by was flooded with hundreds of parodies with one reportedly written by Irving Berlin. Despite the "ribald" nature of some of the parodies, McBrien believes few, including a King Kong parody, were written by Porter or Berlin.

    References

    You're the Top Wikipedia