| FRANKIE
VAUGHAN (ARTIEST BIOGRAPHY)
Frankie Vaughan, CBE (3 February 1928-17 May 1999)
was a singer of traditional pop music in the United Kingdom.
He was born Frank Abelson to a Jewish family in Liverpool, England.
The name Vaughan came from a grandmother whose first grandson he
was, who used to call Frank “my number one” grandson, in whose
Russian accent “one” sounded like “Vaughan.”
In his early life, he was a member of the Lancaster Lads Club, a
member group of the National Association of Boys’ Clubs in the UK,
and in his career he was a major contributor to the clubs,
dedicating his monetary compensation from one song each year to them.
He started out at the club intending to be a boxer. Then at age 14
he received a scholarship to the Lancaster College of Art, where he
sang in the dance band. After a stint in the Royal Army Medical
Corps in World War II (where he spent most of his time boxing) he
returned to art school, this time at the Leeds College of Art.
When he won a prize to design a furniture exhibition stand, he left
for London, where he won second prize on a radio talent show.
Frankie’s career began in the late 1940s in the theatre doing
variety song and dance acts. He was known as a fancy dresser,
wearing top hat, bow tie, tails, and cane. In the 1950s he began
making records, and was very popular in the UK. In 1955, he recorded
what was to become his trademark song, “Give Me the Moonlight, Give
Me the Girl.”
He recorded a large number of songs that were covers of United
States hit songs, including Perry Como’s “Kewpie Doll,” Jimmie
Rodgers’ “Kisses Sweeter than Wine,”Boyd Bennett’s “Seventeen” (also
covered in the US by the Fontane Sisters), Jim Lowe’s “The Green
Door,” and (with the Kaye Sisters) the Fleetwoods’ “Come Softly to
Me.” From the 1950s through the 1960s, his recordings were popular
chart toppers in the UK.
He came to the United States in 1960 to make a movie with Marilyn
Monroe, “Let’s Make Love,” and was an actor in several other movies,
but his recordings were never chart hits in the US (though one, “Judy,”
did make the charts briefly and at a very low spot; even that one
never got much air play in the US).
During the 1960’s he became involved with youth social problems in
Easterhouse, a large housing estate in the outskirts of Glasgow, and
was influential in attracting new resources and inward investment to
the area.
He continued performing until 1985, when he starred in a stage
version of “42nd Street” at Drury Lane in London. After a year, he
suffered a near fatal bout of peritonitis and had to leave the cast.
He was married to Stella from 1951 to 1999 and they had three
children and several grandchildren. He was awarded an OBE in 1965, a
CBE in 1996 and had been a Deputy Lord Lieutenant of the County of
Buckinghamshire since 1993. He died from heart failure in 1999, aged
71. |