^Mordden, Ethan. Broadway Babies: The People Who Made the American Musical (1988) ISBN0195363752. Mordden writes: "Rise Stevens, on Columbia, is sluggish and prim; she sounds as if she's preparing to play a dull Anna in The King and I, which she duly did, at Lincoln Center. The Victor Lady in the Dark dates from a 1954 TV version with Ann Sothern, very right for the part. But even Sothern lacks Lawrence's urgency, her quizzical aplomb. Lawrence lived long enough to make an original cast album: The King and I. A classic performance."
^Suskin, Steven. The Sound of Broadway Music: A Book of Orchestrators and Orchestrations (2011) ISBN0199831076. Suskin writes: "Frederick Dvonch. Born: July 18, 1912, Chicago, Illinois. Died: November 18, 1976, New York, New York. Musical Director, Vocal Arranger Frederick Dvonch grew up in the same poor Chicago neighborhood as his classmate Irv Kostal. A violinist, he won several awards and scholarships (including the Paganini scholarship at Chicago Musical College, the Ditson Award, and a MacDowell Young Artist prize). He began his professional career as a symphonic conductor."
^Hischak, Thomas S. The Rodgers and Hammerstein Encyclopedia (2007) p. 152 ISBN0313341400 "The earliest studio recording came out soon after the musical opened and featured Patrice Munsel, Robert Merrill, Dinah Shore, and Tony Martin. They would be followed over the years by such performers as Barbara Cook, Theodore Bikel, Jessie Matthews, Christopher Lee, Julie Andrews, and Ben Kingsley. The 1953 London cast recording is less complete than the Broadway one and Valerie Hobson's Anna is no stronger a singer than Lawrence. Herbert Lom talk-sings as Brynner".