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"Puff, the Magic Dragon" (or "Puff") is a song written by Leonard Lipton and Peter Yarrow, and made popular by Yarrow's group Peter, Paul and Mary in a 1963 recording.

Lipton wrote a poem in 1959; Yarrow found it and wrote the lyrics based on the poem. After the song was released, Yarrow searched for Lipton and gave him half credit for the song.


Video Puff, the Magic Dragon



Lyrics

The lyrics for "Puff, the Magic Dragon" are based on a 1959 poem by Leonard Lipton, then a 19-year-old Cornell University student. Lipton was inspired by an Ogden Nash poem titled "Custard the Dragon", about a "realio, trulio little pet dragon".

The lyrics tell a story of the ageless dragon Puff and his playmate, Jackie Paper, a little boy who grows up and loses interest in the imaginary adventures of childhood and leaves Puff to be with himself. (The line "A dragon lives forever, but not so little boys" is generally thought to imply only that "little Jackie Paper" grew up.) The story of the song takes place "by the sea" in the fictional land of "Honalee".

Lipton was friends with Peter Yarrow's housemate when they were all students at Cornell. He used Yarrow's typewriter to get the poem out of his head. He then forgot about it until years later, when a friend called and told him Yarrow was looking for him, to give him credit for the lyrics. On making contact Yarrow gave Lipton half the songwriting credit, and he still gets royalties from the song.

In an effort to be gender-neutral, Yarrow now sings the line "A dragon lives forever, but not so little boys" as "A dragon lives forever, but not so girls and boys." The original poem also had a verse that did not make it into the song. In it, Puff found another child and played with him after returning. Neither Yarrow nor Lipton remembers the verse in any detail, and the paper that was left in Yarrow's typewriter in 1958 has since been lost.

In 1961, Peter Yarrow joined Paul Stookey and Mary Travers to form Peter, Paul and Mary. The group incorporated the song into their live performances before recording it in 1962; their 1962 recording of "Puff the Magic Dragon" reached number two on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and spent two weeks atop the Billboard easy listening chart in early 1963. It also reached number ten on Billboard's R&B chart.


Maps Puff, the Magic Dragon



Speculation about drug references

After the song's initial success, speculation arose -- as early as a 1964 article in Newsweek -- that the song contained veiled references to smoking marijuana. The word "paper" in the name of Puff's human friend (Jackie Paper) was said to be a reference to rolling papers, and the word "dragon" was interpreted as "draggin'," i.e. inhaling smoke; similarly, the name "Puff" was alleged to be a reference to taking a "puff" on a joint, and the lyric "lived by the sea" was interpreted as "living by the 'C'" (as in cocaine). The supposition was claimed to be common knowledge in a letter by a member of the public to The New York Times in 1984.

The authors of the song have repeatedly rejected this interpretation and have strongly and consistently denied that they intended any references to drug use. Both Leonard Lipton and lead singer Peter Yarrow have stated "Puff the Magic Dragon is not about drugs." Yarrow has frequently explained that the song is about the hardships of growing older and has no relationship to drug-taking. He has also said of the song that it "never had any meaning other than the obvious one" and is about the "loss of innocence in children", and dismissed the suggestion of association with drugs as "sloppy research".

In 1973, Yarrow's bandmate Paul Stookey of Peter, Paul and Mary also upheld the song's innocence. He recorded a version of the song at the Sydney Opera House in March 1973, in which he set up a fictitious trial scene. The Prosecutor accused the song of being about marijuana, but Puff and Jackie protested. The judge finally left the case to the jury (the Opera House audience) and said if they will sing along with the song, it would be acquitted. The audience joined in with Stookey, and at the end of their sing-along, the judge declared: "case dismissed."


Sometimes, a walk down memory lane… sucks. | Funny Farm
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Notable recordings

  • Peter, Paul and Mary (1963) - Entered the top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 charts on March 30, 1963 and peaked at No. 2. Topped Billboard's Adult Contemporary charts.
  • Nina & Frederik (1963)
  • Glen Campbell - instrumental version for his album The Astounding 12-String Guitar of Glen Campbell (1964)
  • Trini Lopez - recorded for The Folk Album (1965)
  • Connie Francis - included in her album Connie Francis and The Kids Next Door (1966)
  • Bing Crosby - included in his album Thoroughly Modern Bing (1968)
  • The Mike Sammes Singers (1970)
  • Slim Whitman - recorded for his album Ghost Riders in the Sky (1978)
  • Genevieve Jereb - recorded for her album Cool Bananas (2004)
  • Broken Social Scene - recorded for their album See You On The Moon (2006)

Puff the Magic Dragon by Peter Yarrow and Lenny Lipton -Read Aloud ...
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Adaptations

A 1978 animated television special, Puff the Magic Dragon, adapted the song. It was followed by two sequels, Puff the Magic Dragon in the Land of the Living Lies and Puff and the Incredible Mr. Nobody. In all three films Burgess Meredith voiced Puff. In December 2016, it was announced that Fox Animation will produce a live-action/animation film based on the song with Mike Mitchell as director.

The song was adapted for a children's pantomime, which played at Sydney's Seymour Centre in 1983.

A 2007 book adaptation of the song's lyrics by Yarrow, Lipton, and illustrator Eric Puybaret gives the story a happier ending with a young girl (presumed by reviewers to be Jackie Paper's daughter) seeking out Puff to become her new companion. The lyrics remain unchanged from the Peter Paul and Mary version; the young girl is only seen in the pictures by illustrator Puybaret. On the last page of the book, she is introduced to Puff by an older Jackie Paper.

The tune was used in the promotional LP Push the Magic Button for the track with the same name by Versatec, a computer printer company


Puff the Magic Dragon movie in the works â€
src: moviehole.net


Parodies

In the mid 1970s an American Jewish band named Ruach created a parody version of the song entitled "Puff the Kosher Dragon". In the course of the song, Kosher Puff eats kosher food, has a Bar Mitzvah, fights anti-semites and finally marries and brings up his children as loyal members of the faith. The Ruach song has been noted as one of the first examples of a modern Jewish band using a popular secular tune.

Both tune and elements of the lyrics were adapted in the controversial parody "Barack the Magic Negro", written and recorded by Paul Shanklin for Rush Limbaugh's radio program, after the term was first applied to then presidential candidate Obama by movie and culture critic, David Ehrenstein, in a Los Angeles Times op ed column of March 19, 2007. Yarrow condemned the act as "shocking and saddening in the extreme," stating that "taking a children's song and twisting it in such vulgar, mean-spirited way, is a slur to our entire country and our common agreement to move beyond racism... Puff, himself, if asked, would certainly agree."


Puff the Magic Dragon + CD - Soft Cover [7-297] - $16.99 : Sound ...
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Vietnam War-era gunship

During the Vietnam War the AC-47 Spooky gunship was nicknamed the "Dragon" or "Dragon ship" by the Americans because of its armament and firepower - the nickname soon caught on, and one website without primary citations indicates that the American troops began to call the AC-47 "Puff the Magic Dragon". Robert Mason's Chickenhawk states, in reference to the Peter, Paul and Mary song playing on a turntable: "Puff the Magic Dragon" was making me uncomfortable. It was the saccharine song that had inspired the naming of the murderous Gatling-gun-armed C-47s. I couldn't listen.


Puff the Magic Dragon - YouTube
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Cultural references

Elon Musk, founder of SpaceX, said his Dragon spacecraft was named after "Puff the Magic Dragon".

In Japan, part of this song is used as the ending theme of Jijihoudan, a political talk show which broadcasts on TBS and BS-TBS.

In an episode of King of the Hill titled "The Bluegrass is Always Greener", Hank scolds Bill for being a fan of the song; as a bait-and-switch joke, the conservative and uptight Hank isn't aware of the alleged drug references, instead chiding Bill that grown men ought to appreciate other kinds of music.

The Orlando Magic mascot is named "Stuff the Magic Dragon".

In Marvel Studios' Iron Man 2, the character Justin Hammer, who owns Hammer Industries, introduces a machine gun nicknamed Puff the Magic Dragon to the U.S. military, thereby combining allusions to both PP&M's "If I Had a Hammer" and "Puff".

In the 2000 film Meet The Parents, Robert De Niro's character, Jack Byrnes, plays the song in the car when driving with his daughter's boyfriend. In an attempt to make humorous chat Greg Focker (Ben Stiller) makes the point that this song is clearly about smoking pot. Jack feigns ignorance and uses this to later on implicate Greg as a dope fiend, in an attempt to get his daughter to break up with Greg. In a post credit sting, we later see Greg Focker referring to this conversation and calling doubt on Jack's ignorance of the inferred drug reference.

In the movie While You Were Sleeping, Jack, brother of Peter (then in a coma), tries to prove - by a series of personal questions about his brother - that Lucy (who has been accidentally identified as Peter's fiancee) does not really even know Peter. During the interrogation it is revealed that Peter's favorite song is "Puff, the Magic Dragon."

There is a comedic magician who calls himself Piff the Magic Dragon. He always opens his show with, "You might know my brother... Steve."


Fox Developing Hybrid 'Puff the Magic Dragon' Feature | Animation ...
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International versions

A German version ("Paff, der Zauberdrachen") was recorded by Marlene Dietrich in 1963.

A Catalan translation ("Paf, el drac màgic") was popularized by the Grup de Folk supergroup on the 1967 EP "Escolta-ho en el Vent", becoming from then onwards one of the most popular children's songs in Catalan. It has also been played by, among many others, Joan Manuel Serrat.

A Hungarian version ("Paff, a b?vös sárkány") was performed by 100 Folk Celsius band in 1984.

A Korean version (Puff(?)) was recorded by Yang Hee-eun in 1971.


Richard Wolfe Children's Chorus - ENTIRE ALBUM - Puff The Magic ...
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See also

  • List of number-one adult contemporary singles of 1963 (U.S.)

Puff the Magic Dragon | Song and Book Read Along | Kids Bookshelf ...
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References


Puff The Magic Dragon
src: doyouremember.com


External links

  • "Puff", Urban Legends Reference, Snopes . Disputes the drug-reference interpretation.
  • "Cartoon", Video (adaptation), Google .
  • Puff the Magic... Stoner?, Philadelphia: NBC .

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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