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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 .