Betty (band)


Betty is an alternative rock group from New York City.

Biography

The band was formed in Washington D.C. around the scene of the 9:30 club.
In 1989, the band relocated to New York City. The name of their first album, Hello, Betty! comes from the standard opening for all their appearances. In 1995, the band expanded by adding Tony Salvatore on lead guitar and drums to the initial line-up of vocals with electronic accompaniment, bass and cello.
Betty appeared in every episode of the 1989 HBO series Encyclopedia, singing educational songs each centered on a particular word, as well as performing the opening and closing theme songs. The members involved were Alyson Palmer, Amy Ziff, and Elizabeth Ziff, although they were credited in the show's opening titles as simply "Betty".
In 2002 the group starred in its own off-Broadway show Betty Rules directed by Rent's Michael Greif. The musical ran for nine months at the Zipper Theatre. The show has since been performed in Chicago at the Lakeside Theatre and sold-out three runs at Theater J in Washington, DC. Betty has appeared as a regular guest artist on the television show The L Word, for which they provided the theme song.
Activist entertainers, Betty is as well known for their performances at rallies for causes in which they believe as they are for their seven television theme songs, film appearances and commercial jingles. Although the band on television's Phineas and Ferb bears an uncanny resemblance, Disney proclaims that is not the same Betty.

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