Search This Blog

Showing posts with label beryl davis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beryl davis. Show all posts

Saturday, October 29, 2011

RIP Beryl Davis.....1924-2011


Beryl Davis has passed away.....Rest in Peace

BERYL DAVIS, British Singer - Career Spanned Eight Decades in U.K. and U.S.

British-born Beryl Davis, whose eight-decade career included singing with Maj. Glenn Miller, Bob Hope and Frank Sinatra, has died. She was 87.

The daughter of English band leader Harry Davis, she spent her formative years traveling with his Oscar Rabin-Harry Davis Band and was the band’s featured singer by age eight.

At age 12, she was booked with the Quintet of The Hot Club of France, which featured Django Reinhardt and Stephane GrappellI. After touring for three years and multiple recordings, war broke out. She and Grappelli returned to England, and were joined by a young pianist by the name of George Shearing. That group performed in London clubs throughout the blitz.

Later, she rejoined the Davis/Rabin band and had her own BBC radio show.

She soon came to the attention of Captain Glenn Miller and, on August 17, 1944—the day he was promoted to Major, began singing with his band. She was the only British civilian ever officially attached to the Eighth Air Force, taking her orders directly from General James Doolittle. Her last broadcast with Miller was on December 12, 1944 at the Queensbury Club, and her final number was “I’ll Be Seeing You.” Three days later, Miller took his fateful flight over the English Channel.

After the war, Bob Hope invited her to come to the States to appear on his radio show. Six weeks after her American debut, she was preparing to return to England when Frank Sinatra invited her to join him on “Your Hit Parade” as his singing partner, leading to featured spots with Benny Goodman, Vaughn Monroe, David Rose and many others.

In 1948, she married Hollywood radio and television personality Peter Potter, who was host of “Peter Potter’s Platter Parade” and later, the Emmy-winning nationally-broadcast “Jukebox Jury.” The couple had three children and divorced in 1965.

In 1954, Davis, along with friends Jane Russell, Connie Haines and Della Russell, performed a little-known gospel song entitled “Do Lord” for a church benefit. They recorded the song and it immediately went Gold, selling 2 million copies. Rhonda Fleming later replaced Della Russell and the group continued recording and performing their gospel-inspired show in the nation’s top nightclubs and casino showrooms.

As a solo act, she performed in theaters and concert venues around the globe, and was a regular guest artist at music festivals and events honoring Reinhardt and Miller. She also performed on multiple cruise ships, including Princess Cruises, where she was known as “The First Lady of Song” for over 30 years. She was long admired and respected by the many Big Band musicians with whom she worked.

She was preceded in death by her life partner of 35 years, record executive and concert producer Buck Stapleton, in 2003. They were longtime residents of Toluca Lake, California, where she served as Honorary Mayor. The couple also resided in Palm Springs, California, where she received her star on the Palm Springs Walk of Fame.

On November 11, 2000, she was a special guest at the ground breaking ceremonies of the National WW II Memorial in Washington, D.C. where she sang “I’ll Be Seeing You,” by then her trademark song. Dignitaries that day included President Bill Clinton, who personally commended her performance at a post-event reception.

She is survived by her children, Bill Moore, Merry Moore and Melinda Moore Garber; her sister, Lisa “Cherry” Davis; and grandchildren, Shannon Moore and Asher Ferguson.

Funeral services are planned for 12:30 p.m. on Friday, November 4, 2011 at Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills, Church of the Hills. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to the Alzheimer’s Association (alz.org)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------EDITOR’S NOTE: For additional information, please contact family representative Greg Purdy at 760-808-3650 or gmpurdy@dc.rr.com.




Your superb and greatly under-appreciated vocal artistry will be ever so greatly missed!

Friday, May 20, 2011

Beryl Davis...........a little list (I don't have a lot of her)

A very young Beryl with the Quintette du Hot Club de France
With Reinhardt and Grappelli
Johnny Desmond, Martin Block, Cab Calloway, Georgie Auld, Mel Tormé, Mary Lou Williams, Tommy Dorsey, Josh White, Beryl Davis, and Ray McKinley, WMCA, New York, N.Y., ca. Oct. 1947 (William P. Gottlieb)
Rhonda Fleming, Jane Russell, Connie Hayes & Beryl Davis
 With Tommy Dorsey at WMCA in 1947

 Still goin' strong..........and looking great, IMHO......

Beryl Davis (born March 16, 1924) is a British big band singer; born into a show business family, her father was Harry Davis, and her sister is former teen and 1950's and 1960s actress Lisa Davis Waltz.

Born in Plymouth, England, she began to sing for her father's band, and became popular singing for British and Allied troops during World War II. Glenn Miller discovered her in London, and she sang for the Army Air Force Orchestra.

She moved to Los Angeles post-war with her father's big band, and with Frank Sinatra for one year on "Your Hit Parade."

She was part of "The Four Girls" singing group, with Jane Russell, Rhonda Fleming, and Connie Haines. They recorded sixteen singles, and albums that became best sellers.

She appeared both in variety shows and on film.

If anyone was ever destined to be a Big Band singer, it must have been Beryl Davis. She was the daughter of English band leader Harry Davis and was born during one of his tours. Many of her formative years were spent traveling with the Oscar Rabin-Harry Davis Band. Beryl became the featured singer in her father's band. She loved Big Band jazz and began to emulate the styles of American singers like Ella Fitzgerald. She developed into the premier British Big Band singer touring Europe with Stephane Grapelli, Django Reinhardt, George Shearing, Ted Heath and many others.


Glenn Miller discovered Beryl in London and enlisted her to sing for the highly acclaimed Army Air Force Orchestra. Beryl became the only British civilian ever officially attached to the Eighth Air Force, taking her orders directly from General James Doolittle. Beryl's many shows with the Glenn Miller Orchestra, and Johnny Desmond and the Crew Chiefs, made her the number one favorite singer of American Forces.
Bob Hope heard her records and brought her to Hollywood, to make her American debut on The Bob Hope Show. She was chosen by Frank Sinatra to be his singing co-star for one year on Your Hit Parade, leading to featured spots with Benny Goodman, Vaughn Monroe, David Rose, and many others.
One of the most exciting chapters of her career was when she joined her talent with three good friends, Jane Russell, Rhonda Fleming, and Connie Haines. As The Four Girls singing group, they recorded gospel singles (a total of sixteen) and albums that became best sellers. They also made numerous TV, stage, and nightclub appearances.

Now an American citizen, Beryl is still a valid and dynamic performer in the Big Band world today. She has made concert performances with Mel Torme, the Gene Krupa Orchestra, the Kay Kyser Band, Stephane Grappelli, Les Brown and his Band of Renown, the Tex Beneke Band---"A Salute to Glenn Miller" series. She has had guest spots with the highly acclaimed military bands, Airmen of Note and U.S. Army Band in Washington, D.C.

Beryl was honored to have sung I'll Be Seeing You at the ground breaking ceremonies at the National World War Two Memorial in Washington, D.C., November 11, 2000. Her rendition of that song has become her vocal trademark and is always dedicated to the memory of Major Glenn Miller.

Here's a few songs:
Bluebirds in the moonlight - From Paramount's "Gulliver's Travels" 1939
Don't worry 'bout me - with the Quintette du Hot Club de France
Don't you know that I care - (from The movie "London Town")
Give me that old time religion - Rhonda Fleming, Jane Russell, Connie Hayes & Beryl Davis
Heavenly music - w/ Stephane Grappelly and his Quartet
I'm waiting for ships that never come in
Jacob's ladder - Rhonda Fleming, Jane Russell, Connie Hayes & Beryl Davis
Milkman, keep those bottles quiet - Beryl Davis and the Squadronaires
My heart goes crazy - (from The movie "London Town")
No one else will do -  (from The movie "London Town")
October mood - Beryl Davis & The Skyrockets
Skylark - w/ The Geraldo Strings
So would I (reprise) -w/ Scotty McHarg (from The movie "London Town")
Somewhere list'nin - Rhonda Fleming, Jane Russell, Connie Hayes & Beryl Davis
Star eyes - w/ Stephane Grappelly and his Quartet
The 'Amstead way (reprise) (from The movie "London Town")
The 'Ampstead way - w/ Sid Field (from The movie "London Town")
This world is not my home - Rhonda Fleming, Jane Russell, Connie Hayes & Beryl Davis
Undecided - with the Quintette du Hot Club de France
Where flamingos fly

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=BCJ8WHBK

Thursday, May 19, 2011

OTR for a Thursday morning......AFRS Jubilee 9-25-1947 w/ Beryl Davis and Cyril Hanes



Jubilee was a unique series of radio entertainment designed for the guys and gals in the American Armed Forces during World War II. None of the broadcasts were heard over the regular networks in the USA. 
 
Jubilee was produced in Hollywood by the Armed Forces Radio Service (AFRS) and the programs were transcribed on 16" vinylite discs (speed: 33 1/3 rpm) and distributed to various radio stations all over the world.

Here's a broadcast from McCormick General Hospital in Pasadena, CA.....September 25, 1947, featuring the vocals of Beryl Davis, Earl Spencer and Orch., The Howard McGee Sextet, Cyril Hanes, Joe Alexander w/ the Dave Cavanaugh Quintet, and Gene Norman as MC...... (this will lead in to a nice little Beryl Davis list :) 

You'll like this one....a nice little OTR piece bridging that era between big band, and modern jazz

Enjoy!