<Ul> <Li> Further variants have been recorded, that greatly extend the number of verses and tasks that the wife can perform . An extended version of the song in which the lover performs many tasks besides the cherry pie was collected by Alan Lomax and John Avery Lomax: it appears in American Ballads and Folk Songs . The Lomax version names the woman being courted Betsy Jane . </Li> <Li> A version by the Dale Sisters was released in August 1960, billed as "Billy Boy, Billy Boy", on the B - side of their single, "The Kiss", on His Master's Voice (POP 781). </Li> <Li> A version of the song by Jerry Lee Lewis was released on the 1975 album, Rare, Vol. 1 . </Li> <Li> Millard Lampell of the folk group the Almanac Singers wrote an anti-war version of "Billy Boy". </Li> <Li> The song was performed by Burl Ives and Beulah Bondi in the 1949 Disney film So Dear to My Heart . </Li> <Li> Embedded in one of his "Schticks and Stones" medleys, Allan Sherman included a short segment about a then - current political scandal concerning Billie Sol Estes: "Oh, what have you done, Billie Sol, Billie Sol? ..." </Li> <Li> Red Garland, Pianist of the Miles Davis Quintet, recorded a trio version of the song for the 1958 Miles Davis album Milestones . </Li> <Li> Jed Clampett and Daisy "Granny" Moses sing a verse of the song while Jed is sharpening his plow in the Beverly Hillbillies episode "The Servants" (Season 1, Episode 7), which originally aired on November 7, 1962 . </Li> </Ul> <Li> Further variants have been recorded, that greatly extend the number of verses and tasks that the wife can perform . An extended version of the song in which the lover performs many tasks besides the cherry pie was collected by Alan Lomax and John Avery Lomax: it appears in American Ballads and Folk Songs . The Lomax version names the woman being courted Betsy Jane . </Li> <Li> A version by the Dale Sisters was released in August 1960, billed as "Billy Boy, Billy Boy", on the B - side of their single, "The Kiss", on His Master's Voice (POP 781). </Li> <Li> A version of the song by Jerry Lee Lewis was released on the 1975 album, Rare, Vol. 1 . </Li>

She can make a cherry pie charming billy