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SHOCK ! HORROR ! FAKE FAIRIES !
After unearthing in a Townsville Op Shop this 1960 reissue of
the 1907 piece of piano
sheet music with
what looks like an
Australian gumtree and
cavorting elfin figures on the cover ,
we wondered if the artwork could be attributed to the late
Ira Rentoul Outhwaite, the noted
Australian drawer of fairies,
mentioned previously in this blog. On discussing
her with a dealer and collector
, he dropped the bombshell that
the Chinese are
supposedly producing Outhwaite
copies in vast numbers
. No! Now our suntanned
Aussie fairies
are Chinese... What next - bunyips
? Hands
off our
fairies ! Wake up Australia and protect
our wee people !
Researching
the composer , (Mrs) R.R.FORMAN , we discovered
the story behind
the world’s most popular song–Happy Birthday To You –turned up court cases over copyright and the massive
royalties paid out for
use of the song , said to be
$5000 a day in 2008. Along the way Marilyn Monroe , who sang Happy Birthday to
JFK, blew us
a kiss , causing us to break out in a sweat . The Guinness Book of World Records
said the happy birthday song , in
which Forman played a part , is the most
recognised tune in the English language . The melody has been attributed
to Good
Morning To All , composed by two
kindergarten teachers in Kentucky , Patty
and Mildred Hill, back in the 1890s.The combination of melody
and lyrics is said to have first appeared in print in 1912 and in 1935 copyright
was credited to Preston Ware Orem and Mrs R. R. Forman, she a
composer of many hymns. Warner Chapell Music bought the company owning the
copyright for $25 million , Happy Birthday
worth an estimated $5million at the time . The unhappy copyright battle apparently continues .