"Tea For Two" (Victor Youmans - Irving Caesar - Otto Harbach) is from the Broadway musical "No, No, Nanette". The show ran for a year in Chicago before it's New York opening. Wikipedia: "Some years after the premiere, it was claimed that producer Harry Frazee, a former owner of the Boston Red Sox, financed No, No, Nanette by selling baseball superstar Babe Ruth to the New York Yankees, resulting in the "Curse of the Bambino," which, according to a popular superstition, kept the Red Sox from winning the World Series from 1918 until 2004. In the 1990s, that story was partially debunked on the grounds that the sale of Ruth had occurred five years earlier. Leigh Montville discovered during research for his 2006 book, The Big Bam: The Life and Times of Babe Ruth, that No, No, Nanette had originated as a non-musical stage play called My Lady Friends, which opened on Broadway in December 1919. That play had, indeed, been financed by the Ruth sale to the Yankees". The 1971 revival starred Ruby Keeler and won six Tony Awards. Marion Harris had one of the earliest charted renditions on "Tea For Tea" (Youmans - Caesar) recorded in October, 1924 and charting on Billboard the next year.

In 1958 The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra "starring Warren Covington" released "Tea For Two Cha Cha" (Vincent Youmans - Irving Caesar). Despite the fact that Tommy had died two years earlier this was a million selling top ten hit at number seven on Billboard surrounded by the Everly Brothers "Bird Dog", Bobby Day's "Rockin' Robin" and Eddie Cochran's "Summertime Blues".