"Why Do They Call Me a Gibson Girl?"


(This was Camille Clifford's signature song in the play The Belle of Mayfair. She played the role of the Duchess of Dunmow; perhaps it was good practice, for in real life she eventually married the heir of Lord Aberdare and became "The Honourable Mrs. H. Lyndhurst Bruce.")

I walked one day
Along Broadway
When I was in New York.
And friend of mine
Said "My, you're fine!
You have got the Gibson walk!
You have the pose
And Gibson nose
And quite the Gibson leer.
You've surely heard of the man called Gibson."
(He meant the fellow called Dana Gibson.)
What he meant was not quite clear
Until I landed over here.

But why do they call me a Gibson Girl? (Gibson Girl?) Gibson Girl!
What is the matter with Mister Ibsen? (Mister Ibsen?) Why Dana Gibson?
Wear a black expression and a monumental curl,
And walk with a bend in your back,
Then they call you a Gibson Girl.

Just walk round town,
Look up and down:
The girls affect a style
As they pass by,
With dreamy eye,
Or a bored and languid smile.
They look as if
They had a tiff
With Hicks or Beerbohm Tree;
They do their best, for they've seen the pictures.
(They've missed the point of the Dana pictures.)
They're intended, don't you see,
For all a perfect type to be.

But why do they call me a Gibson Girl? (Gibson Girl?) Gibson Girl!
What is the matter with Mister Ibsen? (Mister Ibsen?) Why Dana Gibson?
Wear a black expression and a monumental curl,
And walk with a bend in your back,
Then they call you a Gibson Girl.

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