One Night With You Lyrics
One Night With You
One night with youIs what I'm now praying for
The things that we two could plan
Would make my dreams come true
Just call my name
And I'll be right by your side
I want your sweet helping hand
My loves too strong to hide
Always lived, very quiet life
I ain't never did no wrong
Now I know that life without you
Has been too lonely too long
One night with you
Is what I'm now praying for
The things that we two could plan
Would make my dreams come true
Always lived, very quiet life
I ain't never did no wrong
Now I know that life without you
Has been too lonely too long
One night with you
Is what I'm now praying for
The things that we two could plan
Would make my dreams come true
Song Overview
Review and Highlights
Quick summary
- What it is: Natalies first spark of obsession - a fast, direct crush song that tags Chad as trouble and treats trouble as a vacation.
- Who sings on the 2005 cast album: Jenn Gambatese.
- Where it sits: Act I, right after Chad rolls into town to get his bike fixed - the book uses it to flip the story from town mood to personal want.
- How this version differs from the pop single tradition: It plays like a scene button - short, focused, and built to hand the action back to dialogue quickly.
All Shook Up (2005) - musical - non-diegetic. Act I, at the filling station: Chad needs a mechanic, and Natalie sees a doorway out of her square life. The number lands like a lightning caption under her face: this is desire at first glance, and it is not shy about it.
The charm here is that the show does not pretend Natalie is being reasonable. This song is not a careful courtship. It is a dare that she is singing to herself, and the score lets her enjoy that recklessness. The arrangement skates on doo-wop pep and rock-era bounce, but the theatre trick is timing: the track is compact, which keeps the crush from turning into a detour. You get the headline, then the plot keeps moving.
Key takeaways
- Character engine: It clarifies Natalie as the person willing to sprint toward change.
- Style fusion: Doo-wop brightness with Broadway diction and pacing.
- Emotional arc: Curiosity to commitment in under two minutes - a deliberate exaggeration that reads as comedy and stakes at once.
Creation History
The underlying tune was written by Dave Bartholomew and Pearl King and first recorded by Smiley Lewis in 1956, later reworked for Elvis Presley with revised lyrics and an added co-writer credit to Anita Steinman on the better-known version. The musical borrows the cleaned-up lyric premise and turns it into a book-musical hinge: as stated in the Masterworks Broadway synopsis, the moment is triggered by Chad stopping in town for repairs, and the song functions as the scene's inner monologue made audible.
Song Meaning and Annotations
Plot
Chad arrives on a motorcycle, and the town immediately treats him like a meteor. Natalie, stuck at her fathers station, clocks him as the first real invitation she has seen in years. She decides she wants a night with him - not as a polite fantasy, but as a plan. That choice becomes the first domino in a chain that will lead to disguise, jealousy, and a townwide outbreak of romance.
Song Meaning
In this setting, the song means freedom wearing a romantic mask. Natalie is not only attracted to Chad. She is attracted to motion, noise, risk, and the possibility that a single night could rewrite the rest of her life. The music sells that impatience: quick phrases, forward rhythm, and a sense of sprinting toward the next beat before the last one is finished.
Annotations
When Chad stops in town to get his bike fixed, Natalie is immediately smitten.Synopsis cue
This is the shows cleanest piece of cause and effect. A jukebox score can feel like it is waiting for permission to be plot. Here, the song is the permission slip: Natalie hears the bike, sees the man, and the score turns her private rush into public action.
The cast recording lists the track at 1:22, which makes it closer to a scene flare than a full stop.Recording note
That brevity is a stagecraft decision. The number reads like a caption under a new relationship: fast enough to feel impulsive, short enough to keep the comedy sharp.
The original lyric history includes a shift from a more explicit title and premise to the cleaner "praying for" rewrite that stuck.Song history note
The musical benefits from that rewrite. The lyric can be flirtatious without forcing the production to play it as scandal, which lets Natalie stay bold without the scene collapsing into a lecture about propriety.
Driving rhythm and phrasing
The pulse suggests doo-wop speed without lingering in nostalgia. The point is propulsion. Natalie sings like someone who has already started packing a suitcase in her head. According to Billboard, the Presley version is a chart staple with long afterlife, and the musical cashes in on that familiarity: the audience recognizes the tune, then watches it become a character decision rather than a radio memory.
Technical Information (Quick Facts)
- Song: One Night with You
- Artist: Jenn Gambatese
- Featured: None
- Composer: Dave Bartholomew; Pearl King; Anita Steinman (credited on the revised hit version lineage)
- Producer: Jay David Saks (cast recording)
- Release Date: May 31, 2005
- Genre: Musical theatre; doo-wop influenced rock and roll
- Instruments: Voice; theatre orchestra and band
- Label: Masterworks Broadway
- Mood: Impulsive; flirtatious; forward
- Length: 1:22
- Track #: 5
- Language: English
- Album (if any): All Shook Up - Original Broadway Cast Recording
- Music style: Short-form character number built on a doo-wop pop framework
- Poetic meter: Accent-driven pop phrasing with flexible conversational stresses
Frequently Asked Questions
- Who sings this number in the musical?
- Natalie sings it, and the cast recording credits Jenn Gambatese.
- Where does it appear in the story?
- Act I, right after Chad arrives to get his motorbike fixed, when Natalie decides he might be her exit ramp from town life.
- Is it staged as a performance inside the world of the show?
- Most productions treat it as scene music and inner monologue, not a staged nightclub turn.
- Why is the cast album track so short?
- It works like an entrance-reaction beat. The show wants the impulse, then wants dialogue and action to pick up the consequences.
- Is the song originally an Elvis composition?
- No. It was written by Dave Bartholomew and Pearl King and first recorded by Smiley Lewis before Presley popularized a revised version.
- What is the lyric idea that makes it stage-friendly?
- The famous rewrite shifts the premise from a more explicit confession to a wish and promise, which lets Natalie be bold without forcing the scene into prudish panic.
- Does the song connect to the show theme about decency rules?
- Yes, indirectly. Natalie choosing desire fast becomes a quiet rebellion against the towns culture of restriction.
- Is this the same as "One Night"?
- It is the same song family. Many releases shorten the title to "One Night", but the musical uses the familiar cleaner phrasing in the lyric hook.
- What is the dramatic function besides romance?
- It is Natalies first public commitment to change. The romance is the wrapper, the journey is the engine.
Awards and Chart Positions
The cast recording track is a theatre-album cut, so its measurable life is repertory and licensing rather than singles charts. The parent song, though, carries serious chart baggage. Billboard chart summaries list Presleys "One Night" peaking at number 4 on the Hot 100, and the UK reissue pairing "One Night/I Got Stung" hit number 1 in January 2005, with Official Charts Company listing a first chart date of January 22, 2005 and a peak at the top spot.
| Version | Year | Documented chart marker | Why it matters onstage |
|---|---|---|---|
| All Shook Up cast recording track | 2005 | Track 5 on the official cast album listing | Its job is narrative speed, not radio saturation |
| Elvis Presley single lineage | 1958 | Billboard Hot 100 peak 4 | Audience recognition helps the show communicate character fast |
| UK reissue single (One Night/I Got Stung) | 2005 | Official Singles Chart peak 1 | Proof that the hook still sells, even as nostalgia product |
How to Sing One Night with You
Sheet music listings commonly publish the tune in B flat major, with a vocal range noted around C4 to D5 for a standard piano vocal guitar arrangement. Treat the musical version as character-first pop: bright consonants, quick intentions, and no lingering on sentiment.
- Tempo: Keep it brisk and dance-adjacent. The number should feel like a decision being made in real time.
- Diction: Articulate the hook words cleanly so the audience catches the promise without strain.
- Breathing: Mark breaths before the longer pickup phrases so you do not clip the ends of lines.
- Flow and rhythm: Aim for pop lightness, not belting weight. Let the rhythm carry the excitement.
- Color and intention: Play the thought: Natalie is bargaining with fate, not reciting a poem.
- Style guardrails: Avoid impersonation. The musical needs clarity and comedy, not a museum of vocal tics.
Additional Info
There is a neat historical echo in the lyric itself. The song began life with a more explicit title on some releases, then became famous for the cleaned-up rewrite that shifted the premise from confession to longing. Onstage, that rewrite becomes dramaturgy: Natalie can be daring without the show turning her into a cautionary tale. The number stays playful, which is exactly what a first-crush scene needs.
Key Contributors
| Entity | Type | Relationship (S-V-O) |
|---|---|---|
| Jenn Gambatese | Person | Gambatese performs the track on the 2005 cast album as Natalie. |
| Joe DiPietro | Person | DiPietro writes the book that places the number at Chad and Natalie first contact. |
| Dave Bartholomew | Person | Bartholomew co-writes the song that becomes the source material for the musical number. |
| Pearl King | Person | King co-writes the song that becomes the source material for the musical number. |
| Anita Steinman | Person | Steinman receives co-writer credit tied to the revised lyric version that entered the hit lineage. |
| Smiley Lewis | Person | Lewis records the early version that establishes the songs pre-Presley history. |
| Masterworks Broadway | Organization | Masterworks Broadway releases the cast recording and publishes the synopsis and track listing. |
| All Shook Up - Original Broadway Cast Recording | Work | The album lists the number as track 5 with a 1:22 runtime. |
Sources
Sources: Masterworks Broadway album page and track listing, Apple Music track page, YouTube audio release (Masterworks Broadway), Wikipedia entry for One Night (Smiley Lewis song), Official Charts Company chart history for One Night/I Got Stung, Billboard chart history and song list feature