| DAMITA JO |
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| DAMITA JO (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY) Damita Jo DuBlanc (a.k.a. Damita Jo, 1930 – 1998) was an American actress, comedian, and lounge music performer. Katherine Jackson, the mother of the famous Jackson family musical clan, named her youngest daughter Janet Damita Jo Jackson after Damita Jo, who was her favorite singer. R&B diva Damita Jo remains best known for the million-selling 1960 smash "I'll Save the Last Dance for You," her ingenious riposte to the Drifters' "Save the Last Dance for Me."
Born Damita Jo DuBlanc in
Signed to Mercury Records by producer Shelby Singleton, Damita Jo
supported her Steve Allen-penned debut single "It Takes a Little
Loneliness" with an appearance on Allen's late-night television
showcase -- despite the publicity the record was not a hit, but she
scored a Top 20 R&B smash with the sumptuous follow-up "I'll Save
the Last Dance for You," written by Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman. With
1961's "I'll Be There," an answer song to Ben E. King's "Stand by
Me," Damita Jo reached number 12 on the Billboard pop charts, but
subsequent singles like "I Had Someone Else Before I Had You" and "I'll
Get Along Somehow" stalled, and in the wake of the 1962 live LP
Damita Jo at the Diplomat, Mercury terminated her contract. Upon
signing to Epic, she scored a minor chart entry with 1965's "If You
Go Away," but her career again waned, and after issuing 1968's Miss
Damita Jo on the tiny Ranwood label, she focused on the supper-club
circuit, later incorporating a comedy routine into her musical act.
In 1977 she toured with standup comedian Redd Foxx, and also played
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