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The original article was only about the 1952 version. I have chosen to combine both versions in one page as I have little details on either. If more information can be found, then it would make sense to split into two different articles. --
JLaTondre 18:21, 3 December 2005 (UTC)reply
1926 version
"Charmaine": instrumental of the M.S.T. "What Price Glory" by Raoul Walsh, 1926 [Charmaine de la Cognac] based on a Hungarian gypsy/gipsy [to distinguish from the Magyar] waltz from the operetta "Der Lachende Ehemann" ("Zigeunerlieder" = gipsy/gypsy song);["Weinlied"/"drinking song"] (trad.:"The laughing married man") re-arranged in Bratislava by Edmund Eysler in 1913: (C) by Johannes Brahms, Hungarian Dance #11 as "Waltz in La major, opus 39, "Poco andante", 1880Stephan KŒNIG 01:40, 25 February 2006 (UTC)reply