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It was written by Max Miller, Sam Kern & Jerome Walsh.
It was written by Max Miller, Sam Kern & Jerome Walsh.


It became Miller's signature tune, played by the orchestra when he walked on stage. It was a mildly riqué song about Max falling for Mary from the dairy and includes the lines "I don't do things by halves / I'll let you see my calves / and they're not the same shaped calves as Nellie Dean's"
It became Miller's signature tune, played by the orchestra when he walked on stage. It was a mildly risqué song about Max falling for Mary from the dairy and includes the lines "I don't do things by halves / I'll let you see my calves / and they're not the same shaped calves as Nellie Dean's"


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 00:19, 30 May 2006

"Mary From the Dairy" is a comic song made famous by British comedian Max Miller in the 1930s and 1940s.

It was written by Max Miller, Sam Kern & Jerome Walsh.

It became Miller's signature tune, played by the orchestra when he walked on stage. It was a mildly risqué song about Max falling for Mary from the dairy and includes the lines "I don't do things by halves / I'll let you see my calves / and they're not the same shaped calves as Nellie Dean's"