Difference between revisions of "One, two, three"

From REDdimension Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(Meaning)
 
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
"One, two, three" is what Sage "Jack" Normand and Genevieve Normand (parents of [[Ro Reddick]]) would say to each other as a code for "I love you." This was taken from the song "Three Little Words" written in 1930 by Harry Ruby and Bert Kalmar.  Jack Normand use to play this song with his [[Jack Normand Trio|band]] beginning in the 1940's, and since the last line of the lyrics said, "Three little words, eight little letters, which simply mean I love you," he began telling his wife "One, two, three," or simply "three" for shorthand of "I love you."
+
'''"One, two, three"''' -- ''Sage "Jack" Normand and Genevieve Normand''
 +
 
 +
==Meaning==
 +
Sage "Jack" Normand and Genevieve Normand (parents of [[Ro Reddick]]) would say, "One, two, three," to each other as a code for "I love you."
 +
 
 +
This was taken from the song "[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Little_Words_%28song%29 Three Little Words]" written in 1930 by Harry Ruby and Bert Kalmar.  Jack Normand played this song with [[Jack Normand Trio|his band]] beginning in the 1940's, and since the last line of the lyrics said, "Three little words, eight little letters, which simply mean I love you," he began telling his wife "One, two, three," or simply "three" as shorthand for "I love you."
 +
 
 +
[[Category:Quotes]]

Latest revision as of 15:27, 25 October 2007

"One, two, three" -- Sage "Jack" Normand and Genevieve Normand

Meaning

Sage "Jack" Normand and Genevieve Normand (parents of Ro Reddick) would say, "One, two, three," to each other as a code for "I love you."

This was taken from the song "Three Little Words" written in 1930 by Harry Ruby and Bert Kalmar. Jack Normand played this song with his band beginning in the 1940's, and since the last line of the lyrics said, "Three little words, eight little letters, which simply mean I love you," he began telling his wife "One, two, three," or simply "three" as shorthand for "I love you."