Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams, sometimes titled Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams (and Dream Your Troubles Away), is a 1931 popular song written by Harry Barris with lyrics by Ted Koehler and Billy Moll. The original recording, a Bing Crosby hit with the Gus Arnheim Orchestra, was released in March 1931 on Victor Records and helped turn the tune into a standard. Crosby also performed it in the Mack Sennett short One More Chance (1931), and an outtake from the June 9, 1939 session, preserved by Kermit Schafer, features Crosby ad libbing risqué lines and is shown on PBS's American Masters Bing Crosby Rediscovered. Over the years, many artists have covered the tune across jazz and pop albums, making it a perennial standard. Notable versions appear on Frank Sinatra's Swing Easy! (1954), Dean Martin's Sleep Warm (1958), Sarah Vaughan's The Divine One (1961), Bill Evans' Interplay (1963), and Barbra Streisand's The Way We Were soundtrack (1974). The song is commonly classified as a jazz/pop standard from the early 1930s and remains a frequently recorded piece in the Great American Songbook.