The duration of Cab Calloway's Jitterbug Party is 480.0 seconds.
The duration of Radio Cab Murder is 1.17 hours.
Cab Calloway's Hi-De-Ho was created in 1934.
Cab fare
Comedian Ben Bailey is the driver on "Cash Cab."
No
Cab Calloway's Jitterbug Party was created in 1935.
Cab Calloway's Jitterbug Party - 1935 was released on: USA: 24 May 1935
Cab Calloway's Jitterbug Party - 1935 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Approved USA:Passed (National Board of Review)
Minnie the Moocher.
The duration of D.C. Cab is 1.67 hours.
Owney Madden, Duke Ellington, Ethel Waters, Cab Calloways, and James Haskins.
The duration of The Yellow Cab Man is 1.42 hours.
The duration of Radio Cab Murder is 1.17 hours.
OMG...Whats up the school BMMS Rcokes and by the way the Jitterbug was first started in the 1930's by a man named Cab Calloway..trust me i checked like 18 websites...alright theres your answer...bye!!!!
Cab Calloway's Hi-De-Ho was created in 1934.
The taxi is private property. Never do anything in someone's cab for which you do not have permission.
Jitterbug can be used as a noun to refer to a swing dancer or various types of swing dances, e.g., Lindy Hop, Jive and East Coast Swing. This has led to confusion within the dance community since jitterbug can refer to different swing dances. It can also be used as a verb to mean someone dancing to swing music. For example, "People were top-notch jitterbugging, jumping around, cutting loose and going crazy".[2] Various editions of Arthur Murray's "How To Become a Good Dancer" contain the following text. "There are hundreds of regional dances of the Jitterbug type", "A favorite with young New Yorkers is the Lindy Hop"(1947), "Whether it's called Swing, Lindy or Jitterbug.." (1954). "Formerly called Jitterbug, Lindy Hop and various other names in different parts of the country... Swing is the newer title"(1959)." The term "jitterbug" comes from an early 20th century slang used to describe alcoholics who suffered from the "jitters" (delirium tremens).[citation needed] During the early 1900s, the term became associated with swing dancers who danced without any control or knowledge of the dance. This term was famously associated with swing era dancers by band leader Cab Calloway because, as he put it, "They look like a bunch of jitterbugs out there on the floor"[citation needed] due to their fast often bouncy movements on the dance floor. In popular culture it became generalized to mean a swing dancer (e.g., you were a jitterbug), a type of swing dance (e.g., you danced the jitterbug), or the act of swing dancing (e.g., you were jitterbugging). Calloway's 1935 recording of "Call of the Jitter Bug (Jitterbug