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Robey interpolated into Joy Bells two of his music hall sketches: "No, No, No" centred on turning innocent, everyday sayings into suggestive and provocative maxims, and "The Rest Cure" told the story of a pre-op hospital patient who hears worrying stories of malpractice from his well-meaning friends who visit him.[4]
Reviews were generally warm, with Emilio Cecchi writing in the Italian newspaper La Tribuna: "Robey, just by being Robey, makes us laugh until we weep. We do not want to see either Figaro or Othello; it is quite enough for Robey to appear in travelling costume and to turn his eyes in crab-like fashion from one side of the auditorium to another. Robey's aspect in dealing with his audience is paternal and, one might say, apostolic."[5]
Songs
Unfinished Melody
Holiday Girls
Goodbye, Khaki
Oh, You Wonderful Bird
Wishing for You
My Cushion Girl
Operatic Jazzing Ball
Joy Bells
I Mean to Say
Doff
The Story of My Life
Notes
^"Joy Bells", The Guide to Musical Theatre, accessed 2 April 2014
^Cecchi, Emilio. La Tribuna, quoted in Wilson, p. 111.
References
Cotes, Peter (1972). George Robey: The Darling of the Halls. London: Cassell & Company Ltd. ISBN978-0-304-93844-5.
Stone, Harry (2009). The Century of Musical Comedy and Revue. Indiana: AuthorHouse. ISBN978-1-4343-8865-0.
Wilson, Albert Edward (1956). Prime Minister of Mirth. The biography of Sir George Robey, C.B.E. With plates, including portraits. Michigan: Odham Press. OCLC1731822.