Craig Douglas (born Terence Perkins,
12 August 1941, Newport,
Isle Of Wight) is an English pop singer, who was popular
in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
Terence was one of a pair of twins (and those twins were one of
three sets among nine children). His mother sang well, one of
Douglas' sisters performed on the Isle of
Wight, and he'd reportedly begun trying to sing while
still in the crib. An indifferent student, he preferred athletics
and being outdoors, which led to his volunteering during a school
holiday to help the milkman make his deliveries.
It
was the latter brief diversion that got the boy labeled the Singing
Milkman at the outset of his career. At 16, his mother entered him
in a local talent contest and he won by singing "Love Letters in the
Sand." He got to a final round, where he specifically avoided doing
the standard Elvis Presley imitations that his competitors presented.
This led to an appearance at a variety show on the island, where he
was seen by London agent
Bunny Lewis, whose wife was performing on the same bill. She, in
turn, was impressed with the boy's poise and professionalism. Lewis
arranged for singing lessons for the 16-year-old and began grooming
him for a career on the stage in London.
He also acquired the name Craig Douglas.
His
breakthrough came on The Six-Five Special, then the only real
showcase for rock & roll on British television. Douglas
was booked on the show the same week that Cliff Richard and Joe
Brown appeared, but he made an impression even in their company: A
few days later, he was presented with two huge sacks of fan mail
from the performance. The Six-Five Special led Douglas
to a recording contract and a string of successes. Much of Douglas'
career was spent at EMI, for which he had a number one hit with his
version of "Only Sixteen," but also charted very high with "A
Teenager in Love," "The Heart of a Teenage Girl," "Pretty Blue Eyes,"
and "When My Little Girl Is Smiling."
Douglas
wasn't really a rock & roll singer, his diction being too good and
his delivery too straight-ahead for that designation. His early
records call up images of Ricky Nelson but, like a lot of young
British singers of his era, he quickly aimed for a more mature
audience. His singing was very emotive but also very clean. He was
obviously more comfortable with dignified pop music, such as "Time,"
than with the more rocking numbers like "Ring-A-Ding" that he was
occasionally called upon to record, with its slurred lyrics, honking
saxes, and loud electric guitars (although Douglas acquitted himself
well in that setting).
He
made the usual moves, appearing on film soundtracks (Two and Two
Make Six) and in movies (It's Trad, Dad; A Painted Smile), as well
as numerous television shows. Douglas'
appearance alongside his EMI stablemate Helen Shapiro in It's Trad,
Dad (which was Richard Lester's first feature and a dry run for A
Hard Day's Night) showed off his strengths and weaknesses. He was
charismatic simply based on his good looks, but was rather a stiff
on camera as an actor, especially next to the vivacious Shapiro (who
was also about five years younger than the then 21-year-old
Douglas). Rock & roll was just another musical genre to
Douglas, which is not to say he was wrong, it's just
that antique numbers like "It All Depends on You" or "Five Foot Two,
Eyes of Blue" done straight will never resonate the same way "Dream
Lover" or "Rainbows" will to listeners born after 1945.
On
October 1962 he found himself in Liverpool Empire Theatre as a late
replacement for Marty Wilde. A relatively unknown
Liverpool band called The Beatles backed him. They had
just recorded a single called Love Me Do.
Douglas' time on the English charts ended in 1962 and
his major recording career came to a halt a year later with the
advent of the Liverpool
sound, but he continues to perform regularly in clubs, on cruises,
and in cabarets, as well as international tours. Indeed, well into
the 1990s, he had an annual month-long booking in Hong
Kong. He's a fondly remembered and talented exponent of
England's early flirtation with
rock & roll.
Craig has recently completed a highly successful Solid Silver
Sixties tour with Showaddywaddy, John Leyton and Freddy Cannon.
(info mainly AMG)