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Ross Bagdasarian Sr. : ウィキペディア英語版
Ross Bagdasarian, Sr.

Rostom Sipan "Ross" Bagdasarian (January 27, 1919 – January 16, 1972) was an American pianist, musician, actor, and record producer of Armenian descent.
Otherwise known by his stage name David Seville, Bagdasarian was the creator of ''Alvin and the Chipmunks'' and the founder of Bagdasarian Productions (formerly Bagdasarian Film Corporation)
==Early career==
Bagdasarian was born in Fresno, California, the youngest child of Dick and Virginia (Saroyan) Bagdasarian, Armenian immigrants from the Ottoman Empire.〔US Census, Fresno, California, Enumeration 10-46 District, Supervisor's District 11, Sheet 4A〕 He enlisted in the United States Army one month after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, and served until the end of World War II.
Bagdasarian performed in the Broadway cast of ''The Time of Your Life'', written by his famous cousin, William Saroyan. Bagdasarian's first musical success was the song he wrote with Saroyan, "Come on-a My House", recorded by Rosemary Clooney in 1951. The lyrics are based on dialogue from Saroyan's novel ''The Human Comedy''. They wrote the song on the post-Broadway tour bus of ''The Time of Your Life'' in 1939, and recorded it under their own names as a duet (Saroyan speaking the narrative, Bagdasarian delivering the lyrics in dialect) for Coral Records. ("Come on-a My House" inspired an answer record, "Where's-a Your House?" by Robert Q. Lewis.)
Bagdasarian played minor roles in films, the best known of which is his appearance in Alfred Hitchcock's 1954 murder mystery ''Rear Window.'' Bagdasarian portrays a piano-playing songwriter who composes, plays, and sings the song "Lisa". His character lives in an apartment opposite the protagonist's; in keeping with the screenplay's theme of social voyeurism, his dialogue is never clearly heard, and he appears only in long shots, sometimes seen through a window. He stands next to Hitchcock in his signature cameo appearance. Bagdasarian had small parts in ''The Greatest Show on Earth'', ''Viva Zapata!'', ''Destination Gobi'', ''Stalag 17'', ''Alaska Seas'', ''The Proud and Profane'', ''Three Violent People'', ''Hot Blood'', ''The Deep Six'', and ''The Devil's Hairpin''.

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