Tuesday, 4 March 2014

Fran Warren born 4 March 1926

 
Frances Wolfe (March 4, 1926 – March 4, 2013), known by her stage name, Fran Warren, was an American popular singer, nightclub performer, recording artist and actor whose career spanned more than 50 years.
 
She was born into a Jewish family in the borough of the Bronx, in New York City. After some time on a chorus line at New York's Roxy Theater, she auditioned with the big band of Duke Ellington at age 16; though she never made it into Ellington's band, she soon became a singer with bands led by Randy Brooks, Art Mooney, Billy Eckstine, Charlie Barnet, and Claude Thornhill. It was Eckstine who gave her the stage name of Fran Warren. With Charlie Barnet, she replaced Kay Starr as featured vocalist. In 1947, she made the charts for the first time, with the Thornhill band's recording of "A Sunday Kind Of Love" on Columbia Records. She made a number of other records with Thornhill that year.
 

 
 
In 1948 she went solo, signing with RCA Records. On RCA she made a number of recordings, but her biggest hit was a duet with Tony Martin, "I Said My Pajamas (and Put On My Pray'rs)" which reached No. 3 on the charts. Other recordings which she made include more duets with Tony Martin and with Lisa Kirk.
 
In the early 1950s, after a number of her RCA records failed to chart, she moved to MGM Records. She had a number of records for MGM, making her last chart hit in 1953 with "It's Anybody's Heart". Her long-playing albums included Hey There! Here's Fran Warren, arranged by Marty Paich (Tops, 1957) and Something's Coming, arranged by Ralph Burns and Al Cohn (Warwick, 1960).
 
Warren appeared as a guest on several television variety programs in the late 1940s and early 1950s, and she had a supporting role in the 1952 comedy film Abbott and Costello Meet Captain Kidd. Also in the 1950s, she also started to play in musical comedy, performing in The Pajama Game and Finian's Rainbow and later playing the title role in Mame. She did not neglect her band singing, touring with Harry James in the 1960s. In 1964, she received negative publicity and lost bookings when arrested for marijuana possession.
 
In the late 1970s, she reconnected with musical director and trumpet player Joe Cabot, with whom she had worked extensively during the 1950s and 1960s. From 1979-1982, they toured together with the musical review The Big Broadcast of 1944, and enjoyed two sold-out engagements at New York City's acclaimed jazz club, Michael's Pub.
 
She resided in Connecticut until she died of natural causes at her Brookfield, Conn., home on March 4, 2013, her 87th birthday. 

 
A charter member of the Society of Singers, Warren still has more than a dozen CDs in release, including “The Complete Fran Warren with Claude Thornhill,” “Let’s Fall in Love,” “It’s Anybody’s Heart,” “Something’s Coming” and “Love For Love.” (Info mainly Wikipedia)
 
Here's a clip from the 1950s NBC TV series "Texaco Star Theatre" with singer Fran Warren singing two short songs.


1 comment:

boppinbob said...

For Fran warrens 1957 album "Hey There" go here:

http://turbobit.net/lqpnudw47izj.html

01. Hey There
02. Imagination
03. I Can't Believe That You're in Love with Me
04. I Can't Get Started
05. I'm in the Mood for Love
06. Exactly Like You
07. They Can't Take That Away from Me
08. Don't Blame Me
09. Lucky New People in Love
10. You Don't Know What Love Is
11. Come Rain or Come Shine
12. Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered

Fran Warren - Voacls
Marty Paich - Arranger, Celeste, Conductor, Piano
Bob Enevoldsen - French Horn, Saxophone, Trumpet
Don Fagerquist - Trumpet
Mel Lewis - Drums
Dave Pell - Producer