Lola Jean Albright (July 20, 1924 – March 23, 2017) was
an American singer and actress who appeared on screen in more than 40 films
from the late 1940s. She was best known for playing the sultry singer Edie
Hart, the girlfriend of private eye Peter Gunn, on all three seasons of the TV
series Peter Gunn.
Albright was born in Akron, Ohio, to Marion A. (née
Harvey) and John Paul Albright, both of whom were gospel music singers. Lola's
mother also was born in Ohio but her father was a native of North Dakota, who
in 1930 supported the family by working as an inspector in a local insulating
business.
Albright attended King Grammar School and graduated from
West High School in Akron in 1942. She sang in public at a young age and
studied piano for 20 years. Beginning when she was 15 years old, she worked
after school as a receptionist at radio station WAKR in Akron. She left WAKR at
the age of 18 and moved to Cleveland, taking a job as a stenographer at WTAM
radio. There she met and quickly
married, in 1944, the radio announcer Warren Dean. The couple moved to Chicago, but divorced five years later, after which she went to Los Angeles and was soon spotted by a talent scout from MGM during a modelling shoot, which led to her moving to Hollywood at the age of 23.
married, in 1944, the radio announcer Warren Dean. The couple moved to Chicago, but divorced five years later, after which she went to Los Angeles and was soon spotted by a talent scout from MGM during a modelling shoot, which led to her moving to Hollywood at the age of 23.
The studio changed her name to Lola Deem and cast her as
a singing extra in The Pirate with Gene Kelly and Easter Parade (both 1948)
with Fred Astaire and Judy Garland. Snapped up by Harry Cohn at Columbia
Pictures, and now calling herself Lola Albright, she appeared in almost 20
features between 1949 and 1951 including the romantic drama Tulsa (1949), the
thriller Frightened City and the western
Sierra Passage (all 1950). Throughout
the early 1950s she also modelled for the pin-up painter Gil Elvgren.
Lola & Kirk Douglas |
After featuring in the spy-drama Arctic Flight (1952),
she appeared in the romantic drama The Brave and the Beautiful (1955) with
Anthony Quinn and Maureen O’Hara. In 1950, Lola Albright had married the actor
Jack Carson. But cracks in the marriage appeared early on; he wanted a wife and
homemaker, she wanted the movies, and they divorced in 1957, the same year that
Peter Gunn debuted.
She then became one of television’s busiest actresses,
guest-starring on popular television shows such as Gunsmoke and, from 1955-57,
appearing as Kay Michaels on The Bob Cummings Show. She also released the
albums Lola Wants You (1957), and Dreamsville (1959), for which she
collaborated with Henry Mancini, the composer of the Peter Gunn theme.
In 1961
she married the pianist and restaurant owner William Chadney. They separated
shortly afterwards, finally divorcing in 1974. Also in 1961, she starred in Alexander Singer's A Cold Wind in
August. Her performance gave fresh impetus to her film career, leading to roles
in Elvis Presley's musical Kid Galahad in 1962, in which she played the
hard-boiled, long-time girlfriend of a cynical boxing manager played by Gig
Young; and in French director René Clément's Joy House as a wealthy widow with
a passion for handing out meals to the poor (albeit with an ulterior motive).
In Lord Love a Duck (1966) she portrayed a
cocktail waitress who turns suicidal when she thinks she has ruined her daughter Tuesday Weld's life. The next year she was in the Western epic The Way West.
Lola with Henry Mancini |
cocktail waitress who turns suicidal when she thinks she has ruined her daughter Tuesday Weld's life. The next year she was in the Western epic The Way West.
She spent the early 1960s predominately on the small
screen with appearances in The Beverly Hillbillies and Wagon Train. When the
actress Dorothy Malone fell ill, Lola Albright was drafted in to play her role
as Constance McKenzie in the soap opera Peyton Place (1964). Thereafter she
cropped up in comedies such as Lord Love a Duck (1966), as well as The Man from
U.N.C.L.E. and, with David Niven, The Impossible Years (1968), after which she
announced her retirement. Chadney objected to her long working hours in the
studios. “I’ve always put the man in my life ahead of my happiness and my
career,” she said, before divorcing him and returning to work.
Lola Albright retired for good from the screen in the
1980s having won a new generation of fans with roles in Kojak, Columbo, Starsky
and Hutch, The Incredible Hulk and Airwolf.
Following her retirement from acting, Albright spent her
remaining years living in Toluca Lake, California. In 2014, she fell and
fractured her spine, an injury that contributed to a general decline in her
health over the next three years, but despite her problems she continued to
dress with a style that left those who met her in no doubt that she had once
been a star. “Your forties are your best time,” she said in one of her last
interviews. “If I had my druthers about when to live a whole life, I would say
in the forties. Just stay there.”
On March 23, 2017, Albright died of natural causes in a
home in the Toluca Lake enclave of Los Angeles at the age of 92. (Edited from Wikipedia & The Telegraph)
Here's a clip of Lola Albright performing "How High the Moon." from the television series Peter Gunn (Season 1, Episode 5, entitled "The Frog") Featuring Shorty Rogers on the flugelhorn.
Here's a clip of Lola Albright performing "How High the Moon." from the television series Peter Gunn (Season 1, Episode 5, entitled "The Frog") Featuring Shorty Rogers on the flugelhorn.
For “Lola Albright – The Jazz Singer On The ‘Peter Gunn’ TV Series.
ReplyDelete(2 LP on 1 CD) + bonus tracks go here:
https://www.upload.ee/files/12032909/Lola_Albright.rar.html
"Lola Wants You"
1 A Man, A Man, A Man
2 Candy
3 Put Your Arms Around Me
4 Goodbye My Lover
5 Aren't You Kinda Glad We Did
6 I've Got A Crush On You
7 Here 'Tis
8 All Of You
9 There's A Man In My Life
10 Think Of Me
11 Do What You Gotta Do
12 He's My Guy
Dreamsville
13 Two Sleepy People
14 Dreamsville
15 We Kiss In A Shadow
16 Brief And Breezy
17 You're Driving Me Crazy
18 They Didn't Believe Me
19 Soft Sounds
20 Slow And Easy
21 It's Always You
22 Straight To My Baby
23 Just You, Just Me
24 Sorta Blue
Tv Series
25 How High The Moon
26 September In The Rain
27 Dancing On The Ceiling
28 Goody Goody
29 Straight To Baby
30 Lonesome Road
31 A Good Man Is Hard To Find
32 Don’t Get Around Much Anymore
PERSONNEL:
ON TRACKS [1-12] from the album LOLA WANTS YOU (Kem LP-101)
LOLA ALBRIGHT with Orchestra Arranged and Conducted by DEAN ELLIOTT
(1,3,4,7,9 & 12): Don Fagerquist (tp); Jack Dumont, Ben Kanter, Howard Terry, Chuck Gentry (reeds);
Vince Terri (g); Phil Stephens (b); Milt Holland (d).
Recorded at Gold Star Recording Studios, Hollywood, May 9, 1957
(2,5,6,8,10 & 11): Don Fagerquist (tp); Hymie Gunkler, Ben Kanter, Howard Terry, Chuck Gentry (reeds)
Bob Gibbons (g); Phil Stephens (b); Nick Fatool (d)
Recorded at Gold Star Recording Studios, Hollywood, May 16, 1957.
ON TRACKS [13-24] from the album DREAMSVILLE (CS-8133)
LOLA ALBRIGHT with Orchestra Arranged and Conducted by HENRY MANCINI
(14,15,19 & 20): Dick Nash (tb); Ted Nash (fl); John Williams (p); Victor Feldman (vib)
Bob Bain (g); Red Mitchell (b); Shelly Manne, (d)s, plus string section.
Recorded at Radio Recorders, Hollywood, February 24, 1959.
(13,17,18 & 21): Same personnel but Ronny Lang, flute, replaces Ted Nash.
Recorded at Radio Recorders, Hollywood, February 26, 1959.
(16,22,23 & 24): John Williams (p); Victor Feldman (vib); Tony Rizzi (g);
Rollie Bundock (b); Jack Sperling (d)
Recorded at Radio Recorders, Hollywood, April 2, 1959.
[25-32] BONUS TRACKS 25-32, taken from the NBC TV Series PETER GUNN:
LOLA ALBRIGHT sings on the ‘Peter Gunn’ TV series (1958-1961)
Music under the direction of Henry Mancini.
Once rather dismissively regarded as one of the few blondes in Hollywood whose hair was its own natural colour, the glamorous actress Lola Albright (1924-2017) had a chequered movie career until her definitive big break arrived in 1958. That was when she was cast as the sophisticated night-club singer in NBC’s newest television hit, the detective thriller “Peter Gunn,” which aired from 1958 to 1961. The role made her a personality in her own right.
She said that Blake Edwards, the creator-producer-director of the series, had her in mind from the outset. “But,” she added, “he had no idea I could sing. I had just recorded my first album.” That was “Lola Wants You” on the Kem label, on which she sang a dozen standards and originals with her husky, sexy voice, treating them with the intimate approach required by the arrangements conceived and conducted by Dean Elliott.
In February 1959, she recorded her second album, titled “Dreamsville,” this time for Columbia and surrounded by some excellent West Coast jazzmen under the direction of Henry Mancini. Her voice, pleasant as always, carried a group of jazz-flavoured standards and six Mancini originals from the already-famed Peter Gunn score, in a pervasive and smoky jazz atmosphere. And that was that. Always independent minded, she subsequently pursued a widely-varied career in film and television until, tiring of the spotlight, she withdrew from public life in the 1970s. (Fresh Sounds Records 2017)
Nice voice. Heard the name before but don't recall hearing her sing. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteA quick correction: that's Bob Hope's main squeeze Marilyn Maxwell with her Champion, Kirk Douglas.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
Thanks Creedmoor. I hope I've replaced it with a correct photo. That's what you get when you trust Google search.Regards, Bob
ReplyDeleteBingo! Thanks, Bpb.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link for the download. I've collected all things
ReplyDeleteMancini since 1963, but I had never been aware of Lola's recording
with Mancini on the Dreamsville album from 1959.
For anyone familiar with Mancini's two Peter Gunn LP's, this is
essential. Same jazz personnel as used on those albums, but now with
lyrics for Lola to terrifically sing. To be honest, I was blown away
hearing these recordings...it really is a long lost Henry Mancini stereo
album from 1959. Thanks again....
One other thing...While Lola WAS in Elvis' "Kid Galahad" from 1962,
ReplyDeletethe picture you have of Elvis is not with Lola but in fact
Joan Blackman, his love interest in the film. Just a minor correction....
Thanks Cutter, My problem is trusting Google picture search. Or as President Trump would say...Fake Views!!
ReplyDelete