View Full Version : Larry LaPrise dies
reiverix
03-13-2006, 6:54 PM
With all the sadness and trauma going on in the world at the moment, it is worth reflecting on the death of a very important person, which almost went unnoticed last week.
Larry LaPrise, the man that wrote "The Hokey Pokey" died peacefully at the age of 93.
The most traumatic part for his family was getting him into the coffin. They put his left leg in. And then the trouble started.
TheMightyQueenPixie
03-13-2006, 7:23 PM
Oh Man John- YOU SLAY ME!
LOLOLO !!
Tell me....did he.....(*snort*).... turn himself around ??? http://www.planetsmilies.com/smilies/happy/happy0188.gif
reiverix
03-13-2006, 10:03 PM
Yep. But that was after he shook it all about :D
nursie
03-13-2006, 10:21 PM
that was almost painful..http://bestsmileys.com/sick/7.gif
YoFishboy
03-14-2006, 12:44 AM
So....death...that's what it's all about....
125gJoe
03-14-2006, 2:35 AM
April 11, 1996
(CNN) -- Every child in America, and almost every adult, knows the Hokey Pokey. You just put your right foot in and put your right foot out to perform one of the best-known circle dances in American history.
Its popularity belies its age, and conceals its author. The man who wrote the song, Larry LaPrise, died last week at 83 in Boise, Idaho.
He wrote the tune for the Sun Valley, Idaho, ski crowd in the late 1940s, but it took a recording by big band leader Ray Anthony to make the Hokey Pokey a nationwide phenomenon. (It appeared on the B side of the "Bunny Hop" single.)
LaPrise didn't receive royalties for the song until the 1960s, when its rights were purchased by country star Roy Acuff's publishing company.
In recent years, LaPrise worked in the post office in Ketchum, Idaho. Children often wrote him notes addressed to "The Hokey Pokey Man."
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