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Bill McKinleyDoes a Bear Sing in the Woods?Metropolitan Room
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![]() McKinley tore into a bunch of animal songs including "Smokey The Bear," "Yogi Bear Song," "Winnie the Pooh," "The Bare Necessities," "Fuzzy Wuzzy" and, with special "bear" lyrics, "Anything Goes" and Fanny Brice’s song "Cookin’ Breakfast" ("for the bear I love"). Later ,he sang a novelty number by Jonathan Sheffer and David Zippel entitled "Horsin’ Around" and, from The Wizard of Oz, "King of the Forest." McKinley may have miscalculated his effect on straight men and women in the audience when he repeated, in hoary detail, an old joke about a hunter and a bear in the forest. He redeemed himself by singing two tender love ballads, "What a Funny Boy He Is" by Alex Rybeck, who was in the audience, and from Promises Promises, "I’ll Never Fall In Love Again." In the midst of all the bear novelty songs there was some very effective singing by his gloriously legit voice, especially "My White Knight," a ballad by David Friedman, and McKinley’s closing number, "Everything’s Possible." He told a story of a gay teenager in the Midwest who was considering suicide until he heard "Everything’s Possible" by Fred Small on McKinley’s first CD. The boy wrote a letter to McKinley saying how the song had saved his life. Years later, the boy was in Chicago and saw that McKinley was appearing and they connected. Then McKinley sang the song, which has a lyric that details that you can be anything you want to be in life, love anyone you love no matter what the sex orientation: Joe Regan, Jr. |
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