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With Harry Zimmerman and His Orchestra. From the radio program "The Feeling is Mutual," April 29, 1946. Words by Laurence Hope, music by Amy Woodforde-Finden. "The Feeling is Mutual" (a clever reference to its radio network, the Mutual Broadcasting System) aired Monday nights circa 1945-46, providing 15 minutes of continuous music, interrupted only by short poetic dialogues between announcer Bill Harpel and the harmonizing Lyttle Sisters (acting as some sort of swing era Greek chorus). It was broadcast from Republic Studio's New Music Auditorium in North Hollywood without a studio audience. Introduced at the beginning and end of each show simply as "the Four Lyttle Sisters and Vernon," the Lyttle Sisters (often mispelled as the "Little Sisters") were actually the Gourly sisters from Lincoln, Nebraska, who'd done stints with Orrin Tucker and Hal McIntyre before settling in Hollywood. "Vernon" was Vernon Polk, who also sang in the popular Town Criers with his brother Gordon and sisters Elva and Lucy Ann. At the time, Lucy Ann and Gordon were both becoming increasingly successful with their lucrative side-gigs as soloists for Kay Kyser and Bob Crosby, respectively, and the Criers' only regular singing engagement was on the Bob Crosby Show every Wednesday night. This spot with the Lyttle Sisters must have helped Vernon keep busy. The Lyttle Sisters on film: • Bob Haymes AKA Robert Stanton, crooner in ...