Thursday 29 April 2021

Frank Parker born 29 April 1903

Frank Parker (April 29, 1903* – January 10, 1999) was an American singer and radio and television personality. 

Parker was born Frank Ciccio on April 29, 1903 in New York City. He studied at the Milan Conservatory of Music. Though Italian-American, he became associated with Irish songs. He started out in vaudeville and on Broadway, appearing in the shows What’s in a Name? (1920), No Other Girl (1924)  and a revival of No, No, Nanette (1925-26). In 1926, he began singing with Harry Horlick’s Orchestra, an association which led to two Vitaphone shorts with the band in 1929 and 1935. 

An October 30, 1930, newspaper listing shows Parker singing on the Van Heusen Program on WABC in New York City. Also, in the early 1930s, he was a featured singer with Donald Voorhees and his orchestra on the Bond Sunshine Program on WEAF in New York City. This led to a stint as the featured singer on The Jack Benny Program (the slot that would later be filled by Kenny Baker and Dennis Day). This raised his profile tremendously.

Parker's tenure with Benny ended in the fall of 1935. When Michael Bartlett replaced Parker on the program, a newspaper article noted: "[Benny] turned Frank Parker into a tenor with a keen sense of humour ... Frank Parker asks $3,000 a week from theatrical booking agents, and usually gets it." 

In 1934, he sang in the all-star film Transatlantic Merry-Go-Round and was the m.c. in Romance in the Rain. In 1935 he got his own bona fide starring role in a movie, an independent musical produced in Astoria, Queens called Sweet Surrender.  That same year, Parker briefly had his own radio show, The Atlantic Family on Tour, which was heard on 36 CBS stations. In September and October 1936, Parker and Ramona (no last name printed) were featured on a 15-minute weekly program on WEAF in New York City and WMAQ in Chicago.

In 1937 he appeared in the Broadway show Howdy Stranger, and began singing on Andre Kostelanetz’s radio program, an association that would last into the 1940s. Parker was also the featured male singer on Your Home Front Reporter, which was broadcast on CBS in 1943. From 1944 through 1946 he co-starred in the long-running musical Follow the Boys (1944-46) with Jackie Gleason, Gertrude Niesen, and Buster West. 


                          

Starting in 1949, the advent of television gave his career a new shot in the arm. The Teleways Company advertised "156 brilliant 15 minute musical programs," episodes of the Frank Parker Show that were available to radio stations via transcription. The 1950s saw Parker become a member of the Little Godfreys cast of singers on Arthur Godfrey Time and Arthur Godfrey and His Friends until around 1956. Parker had known Godfrey since the 1930s.

He began appearing on the variety shows, giving performances on the shows of Ed Sullivan, Jackie Gleason, Steve Allen, Jack Paar, and Mike Douglas through the early 60s. He was also a co-host on the game show Bride and Groom in the 1950s, and appeared in the film Paris Follies of 1956. 

Married twice, Parker outlived both wives and never had children. At the age of 94 he moved in with his sister, telling her he didn't want to die in a nursing home with strangers. In recent years, he still liked to drink a glass of cognac while paging through The New Yorker magazine. 

He died at the age of 95 on January 10, 1999, in Titusville, Florida. His hobbies included golf, polo, and reading. He rarely stepped out without donning a French beret and knotting his ascot just so. Parker has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6821 Hollywood Boulevard 

(Edited from Wikipedia & Travalanche * some sources give April 29, 1906, or July 1, 1906as birth dates)



7 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Frank Parker – You And The Night And The Music (Flare 2006)” go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/13100065/Frank_Parker.rar.html

1 Begin The Beguine
2 You And The Night And The Music
3 Night And Day
4 Yours (Quiereme Mucho)
5 Sweet And Lovely
6 Moonlight And Roses (With– Marion Marlowe)
7 Jealous
8 Does Your Heart Beat For Me?
9 It's Easy To Remember
10 Mademoiselle de Paree
11 My Lady Won't Be Here Tonight
12 Penthouse Serenade
13 Manhattan
14 My Lindy Lou
15 One Night Of Love (With– Marion Marlowe)
16 Medley: For Me And My Gal; Margie; I'll Get By
17 Marry A Rich Woman
18 Tenderly
19 Come To Me, Bend To Me
20 It's Autumn Again (With– Marion Marlowe)
21 Parker's Lament
22 Blue Moon
23 The Rose Of Tralee
24 Danny Boy

The beautiful tenor voice of Frank Parker is heard here to brilliant effect as he sings so many of the classic songs from the canon. Begin the Beguine, Blue Moon, Danny Boy, Penthouse Serenade, Night and Day...the list goes on. Also included are duets with Marion Marlowe, with whom he starred on American television. For those who like the pure, clear tenor voice, this is a CD not to be missed.

gpdlt2000 said...

Many thanks for this fantastic (and almost forgotten!) singer.

Hitparade said...

Bob,
Thank you for these rare recordings of Frank Parker; any idea about the dates of these recordings; maybe 1950-1956 when he was on The Arthur Godfrey Show with Marion Marlow?

Hitparade said...

Bob,
Frank Parker had one charted hit: Two Cigarettes In The Dark (6-October 1934, 4 weeks on the chart. Copied it from my 1934 Annual chart, paying it now.

boppinbob said...

Hi HP, After a quick search of various web sites via Google Here's the dates...
1942 (track 3)
1946 (tracks 1, 2, & 4)
1953 (tracks 6,15, 18, 20 & 22)
1954 (tracks 19 & 21)
1955 (tracks 12 & 13)
1956 (tracks 5, 7 - 11,14, 16 & 17)
1959 (tracks 23 & 24)

Regards, Bob

Hitparade said...

Bob,
Thank you very much for the dates; I re-numbered the tracks in my collection in chronological order because I love to document recording dates and chart activity whenever possible.

Discogs lists an 8 song, Frank Parker & Marion Marlow 1953 album "Romance" with a beautiful album cover, with two of the songs already in our above collection. Would you please consider if you could look for missing 6 songs. It would do wonders in helping to preserve Frank Parker's musical heritage.

Thanks for all the music all these years :-)

boppinbob said...

Only found two more. Here’s the links (Go to download options click VBR MP3 click first entry download arrow as save as. Do this to both links)

https://archive.org/details/78_the-melba-waltz-dream-time_marion-marlowe-frank-parker-newell-spoliansky-percy-fa_gbia0129868a/THE+MELBA+WALTZ+(Dream+Time)+-+Marion+Marlowe.flac

An Old Fashioned Picture

https://archive.org/details/78_an-old-fashioned-picture_frank-parker-marion-marlowe-kabak-i-joseph-percy-faith-an_gbia0129868b/AN+OLD+FASHIONED+PICTURE+-+Frank+Parker+-+Marion+Marlowe.flac

The rest might be out there somewhere, but I assure you I just haven't got the time for a prolonged search. Still I hope these will suffice.