Paper Doll

“Paper Doll” was a hit song for The Mills Brothers. In the United States it held the number-one position on the Billboard singles chart for twelve weeks,[3] from November 6, 1943, to January 22, 1944. The success of the song represented something of a revival for the group after a few years of declining sales. It is one of the fewer than 40 all-time singles to have sold 10 million (or more) physical copies worldwide. The song was written in 1915 (although it was not published until 1930) by Johnny S. Black, whose greatest success would come with his song “Dardanella”,[5] which sold 5,000,000 copies in a recording by the bandleader Ben Selvin in 1920 and a further 2,000,000 copies of sheet music. In 1922, Black played “Paper Doll” to the music publisher Edward B. Marks on the violin, after which Marks bought it for $25 in advance royalties. Marks put “Paper Doll” on the market, but it was a flop. In 1936, Johnny Black died after a fight with a customer at his Hamilton, Ohio, roadhouse. Black was apparently inspired to write the song after he was jilted by a girlfriend. The author Jack London Riehl wrote that Black was “a pianist, who augmented his income by boxing. His girlfriend ran off with another boxer, and he wrote this song, which began, ‘I’d like to buy a paper doll that I can call my own …’ and ended ‘I’d rather have a paper doll to call my own than have a fickle-minded real live girl.

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