Where Do You Go To My Lovely used in movies?

The song was used as a soundtrack in Wes Anderson’s 2007 film The Darjeeling Limited and in Jennifer Saunders’s 2016 film Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie.

Where do you go to my lovely cover versions?

Versions

Title Performer Release date
Where Do You Go To (My Lovely) Top of the Pops March 1969
Where Do You Go To The Hit Parade Orchestra and Singers 1969
Where Do You Go to My Lovely Tim Rose January 1971
Where Do You Go to My Lovely Roy Bulkin 1981

Is Peter Sarstedt still alive?

January 8, 2017Peter Sarstedt / Date of death

Did Peter Sarstedt have a brother?

Eden Kane
Robin Sarstedt
Peter Sarstedt/Brothers

Where is La Bouche?

“Where Do You Go” is a song written by Peter Bischof and Franz Reuther. It was first recorded in 1995 by German Eurodance band La Bouche as an album-only song from their debut album, Sweet Dreams (1995)….Where Do You Go (La Bouche song)

“Where Do You Go”
Released 13 May 1996
Genre Dance-pop
Length 4:29
Label MCI BMG Arista

Who sang frozen orange juice?

Peter SarstedtFrozen Orange Juice / Artist

Who wrote Where Do You Go To My Lovely?

Peter SarstedtWhere Do You Go to My Lovely / Lyricist

When was where do you go to my lovely released?

1969Where Do You Go to My Lovely / Released

Is Peter star Stead still alive?

The British singer-songwriter Peter Sarstedt has died aged 75. Best known for the 1969 number one hit Where Do You Go to My Lovely, his family announced that he died after a six-year battle with progressive supranuclear palsy.

How old is Eden Kane?

82 years (March 29, 1940)Eden Kane / Age

Is Eden Cain still alive?

He had success in the early 1960s as a pop star appealing to a teenage audience, in the pre-Beatles era with hits including the co-written “Well I Ask You” which was a UK No….

Eden Kane
Genres Pop rock
Occupation(s) Singer instrumentalist record producer actor
Instruments Vocals guitar
Years active 1959–present

What is the meaning of bouche?

Definition of bouche (Entry 1 of 3) 1 obsolete : an allowance of food and drink for retinue in a royal or noble household. 2 : a slit in the edge of a medieval shield for a sword blade or a rounded opening for the shaft of a lance. bouche.