The song is a dialogue between "Henry" and the singer:
Hey baby, whatta I have to do to make you love me too?
You've got to roll with me Henry
The context is the dance floor. The Midnighters also recorded an "answer to the answer": "Henry's Got Flat Feet (Can't Dance No More)".
Under the title "The Wallflower," the single became a rhythm and blues hit, topping the US BillboardR&B chart for four weeks. On Billboard's Top R&B Records of 1955 list, it ranked No. 6 according to retail sales, No. 3 according to disk jockey plays and No. 15 according to jukebox plays.[2]
In 1955, the song was covered for the pop market by Georgia Gibbs, with uncredited vocal responses from Thurl Ravenscroft, under the title "Dance with Me Henry." That version charted, hitting the top five of several pop charts, including No. 1 on the Most Played In Juke Boxes chart on May 14, 1955, spending three weeks on top of that chart.[4] In 1958, Etta James recorded her own cover of "Dance with Me Henry".