"Endearing Young Charms" became a staple of
Warner Bros. cartoons, appearing first in the 1944
Private Snafu short
Booby Traps. Subsequent uses included the 1951
Merrie Melodies short
Ballot Box Bunny and 1957
Looney Tunes short
Show Biz Bugs, both starring
Bugs Bunny, the 1965 cartoon
Rushing Roulette and 1994 short
Chariots of Fur featuring
Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner, and in a 1993 episode of
Animaniacs, "Slappy Goes Walnuts", which introduces
Slappy Squirrel. In its cartoon appearances, the song is often the cue for a classic "bomb gag" where the playing of the first line of the song sets off a rigged explosion on the final note. However, the target often misses, forcing the perpetrator to play it himself and fall for his own trap.
Simone Mantia, a pioneer of American
euphonium music, composed a theme and variations on the melody, which remains a staple of the solo euphonium literature. Little Virgie (
Shirley Temple) sings the song to her father (
John Boles) in the 1935 film
The Littlest Rebel. It is used in the film
The Informer by
John Ford. The first verse was sung by the character
Alfalfa in a 1936 episode of MGM's
The Little Rascals titled
Bored of Education.
Walter Huston plays the melody on the harmonica in the film
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre.
Debbie Reynolds and
Barbara Ruick sing the first stanza in the 1953 film
The Affairs of Dobie Gillis. Arrangements of the tune "Lodging Is On the Cold Ground" can be found in
Mauro Giuliani's Op 125 (6 Irish National Airs) no. 5,
Carl Czerny's Op 575 (Die Schule des Vortrags und der Verzierungen) Vol I no. 3, and
Haydn's Hob. XXXIa:262.
Louis Drouet's "Introduction and Variations on an English Theme for Flute and Harp" is based on the tune
William Vincent Wallace composed a fantasy for piano on the melody.
Victor Herbert quotes the tune in his "Irish Rhapsody".
Roger Quilter's setting of the song was included in the
Arnold Book of Old Songs, published in 1950.
Joni James includes the song on her album
Joni Sings Irish Favorites (1959) and
Bing Crosby included it in a medley on his album
101 Gang Songs (1961). Variations were done in the 1963
Andy Griffith Show episode "Rafe Hollister Sings", and the 2010
South Park episode "
Crippled Summer". An instrumental version of the song plays around the midpoint of the 1963
Twilight Zone episode "
Passage on the Lady Anne". The song is performed at a Christmas party of the
Adams Family at the beginning of "Chapter VIII: John Quincy Adams, Secretary of State" of
The Adams Chronicles (1976).
Meredith Baxter performs a stanza of the song during a fundraiser for Steven's public television station and goes into labor as she sings the high F in the episode "Birth of a Keaton, Part 1"
of Family Ties (1984). The first line appears in some versions of
Dexys Midnight Runners' "
Come On Eileen" as an introduction played by a solo fiddle. A short version of the tune also appears at the end of some versions of the song. Leonard Bernstein uses the melody to demonstrate concepts in his lecture series "
The Unanswered Question".
Vagabond Opera used the melody as the basis for their song "Manayunk" (released 2006). ==References==