Singer-dancer Ina Ray Hutton started out on Broadway at age 8 and performed with the big bands of Harry James and Artie Shaw, but it was as a pioneering band leader herself in the 1930s that she made her name. Hutton organized her first all-women big band, Ina Ray Hutton and her Melodears, in 1935. A few film appearances for the band and a starring role for Hutton in Ever Since Venus (1944), along with endless national touring, eventually led her to NBC and a musical variety show in 1956. In this Paramount short, one of a series directed by Fred Waller who went on to invent Cinerama, Hutton—grooving up front in her standard sheer evening dress—and the original Melodears, perform “Organ Grinder’s Swing Overture” followed by The Winstead Trio doing “The Bugle Call Rag.”
Fred Waller
Director
Aquaman: Heroines of Atlantis61%
A Plastic Ocean75%
Oprah Winfrey Presents: When They See Us Now77%
Heart of a Dog65%
Anna Nicole Smith: You Don't Know Me60%
Elstree 197661%
The U.S. vs. John Lennon67%
Avatar Spirits81%
35 Up76%
Listen to Britain62%
Evil Influencer: The Jodi Hildebrandt Story62%
42 Up75%
Marina Abramović: The Artist Is Present73%
Naqoyqatsi61%
The Cheshire Murders65%
Seduced and Abandoned62%
The Crash Reel73%