Monday 10 May 2021

Mary Small born 10 May 1922

Mary Small (May 10, 1922 – February 27, 2007) was a prominent singing personality during the Golden Age of Radio and hosted her own broadcasts for 14 consecutive years across all major networks. She headlined or opened at "presentation houses" from the 1930s through the 1950s including the Paramount Theater, Madison Square Garden, the London Palladium, the Copacabana with Sammy Davis, Jr., and the Palace Theater in Chicago. 

In addition to being an established recording artist, she was a published author and performed on film, television and Broadway during her career. She was the first singer to be widely promoted as The Little Girl With The Big Voice, a moniker likely adopted by her first manager Ed Wolfe that was marketed in the Fleischer Brothers' Love Thy Neighbor, distributed by Paramount Pictures in 1934. The moniker "Little Girl With The Big Voice" was subsequently used to promote female singing prodigies from Judy Garland to Jackie Evancho. She was married for a time to the composer Vic Mizzy with whom she had a widely publicized divorce. 

Small was born in Baltimore, Maryland to Jack and Fannie Small. Her father was a local vaudevillian and her mother a homemaker. She first performed on Baltimore radio station WBAL at the age of six or seven and at nine won a radio contest hosted by Gus Edwards. She had a younger sister named Gloria. The story of how she was discovered was widely reported in newspapers, cartoon strips and interviews well into her later years. 

In 1933, at the age of eleven she was introduced to singing trio the Three X Sisters at the Hippodrome Theater on Eutaw Street in Baltimore. The trio arranged for her an audition with their manager Ed Wolfe who then booked her on the Rudy Vallee Hour on NBC affiliate WEAF New York where she received her first big break singing Louisville Lady. 

Mary's voice was unique for that of a child, almost freakish to some, and the audience disbelief as to her age captivated America. Within a month she had landed her own show on NBC which led into Frank Sinatra's hour. Along with a selected stable of stars, they were promoted across the country on matchbooks, bottle caps and subway cars. While a child in New York she attended the Professional Children's School. Her childhood friend was Baby Rose Marie. 


                   

In 1930s Small began performing at the Paramount Theater between films and newsreels to draw in bigger crowds and then as a solo act. In 1934, Max Fleischer hired Mary to appear in one of his community-sing "Bouncing Ball" cartoons, Love Thy Neighbor, filmed at his New York studio. She appeared on camera, singing the title song. Small was successful on radio throughout the 1930s and 1940s and either hosted or was featured on a number of programs. 

She worked with the biggest bands and orchestras of the day including Tommy Dorsey, Ray Bloch, Glenn Miller and with stars like Roy Rogers, Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis, Jackie Gleason and Frank Sinatra. She had a number of announcers for her programs over the years including Bud Collyer and Milton Cross who was best known as the voice of the Metropolitan Opera for 43 years. Throughout her career she was employed by NBC, ABC and CBS and the Mutual Broadcasting Company. 

Throughout WW2 and beyond, radio stations' programming played a role in the war effort. Mary's ballads were swapped out for patriotic songs and she worked with the Treasury Department participating in US bond rallies where she shared the stage doing spots with actors like Jimmy Stewart. Mary also joined Pearl Hamilton, one of The Three X Sisters, to tour with the USO in 1943 or 1944 and sang the song Smile, America, Smile. She also toured with B.A. Rolfe's Daughters Of Uncle Sam in 1942. 

In 1942, at the March of Dimes event celebrating Franklin Roosevelt's 60th birthday, Mary performed her own song, "Thank you, Mr. President," backed by the Glenn Miller orchestra and broadcast live from the Waldorf Astoria. Small performed as a headliner and recorded consistently from 1934 through the 1950s. Her image appears on dozens of sheet music titles. After leaving showbiz to raise two daughters, she returned to Broadway in 1966 and toured with a new Follies cast. She also expanded into dramatic theater playing the role of Lenny Bruce's mother in a play about his life. 

In her later years, Small worked as a sought after vocal coach and performed in nightclubs in Manhattan. At the time of her death she had outlived most of her contemporaries. She had spent her entire fortune on health care in her final years and was too proud to let anybody know. She died from natural causes in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City, New York on February 27th 2007.

(Edited from Wikipedia) 

2 comments:

boppinbob said...

FOR “MARY SMALL & VIC MIZZY - I LIKE IT! (JASMINE 2013)” GO HERE:

https://www.upload.ee/files/13129973/Mary_Small_-_I_Like_It.rar.html

1. UNDECIDED
2. IF I CAN LOVE YOU IN THE MORNING
3. DOMINO
4. I LIKE IT, I LIKE IT
5. RIVER GET A ROLLIN'
6. ROMANCE ME
7. DIDJA EVER
8. A BEAUTIFUL WASTE OF TIME
9. YOU'D THINK I WAS IN LOVE
10. THE MERRY-GO-ROUND BROKE DOWN
11. IMMEDIATELY
12. EVERYTHING YOU SAID CAME TRUE
13. GIVE ME ANOTHER ONE JUST LIKE THAT
14. SUDDENLY
15. THERE'S A FARAWAY LOOK IN YOUR EYES
16. YOU'LL BE A LONG TIME SORRY
17. I LOVE JOHNNY JOHNNY
18. A BLUEBIRD WITH A BROKEN WING
19. RAZZLE DAZZLE
20. A LITTLE BOY'S PRAYER
21. DINO
22. NONE OF THAT NOW
23. HERE'S WHERE I START (Breaking My Heart Again)
24. DON'T COME CRYIN' TO ME
25. THAT COULD BE LOVE
26. ONE FIVE-SEVEN SINGLES
27. VALLEY OF TEARS
28. EVERYBODY BUT ME
29. MY HOME, MY HOME

The first-ever CD compilation featuring Mary Small, once known as 'The Little Girl With the Big Voice', a former child star of 1930's vaudeville and radio who made dozens of recordings throughout her seven-decade career but until now, has never had an album of her own. The focus of this collection is on the long series of singles she made as an adult headliner in theaters and nightclubs during her 20-year marriage to TV and film composer Vic Mizzy. A popular songwriter with many hits to his credit, Mizzy is perhaps best remembered today from his catchy title themes for the classic sitcoms 'Green Acres', 'Petticoat Junction' and 'The Addams Family', as well as a string of William Castle movie thrillers and Don Knotts comedies. During the fruitful years of their husband-and-wife collaboration, he did all of Mary's radio, TV and stage arrangements and also wrote and conducted nearly all of the 29 songs contained in this new Jasmine set. Among them are such jukebox favourites as 'ROMANCE ME', 'DIDJA EVER', 'IMMEDIATELY', 'RAZZLE DAZZLE', 'DINO' and the title track, many written with Mizzy's frequent collaborator Manny Curtis. They re-introduced Mary to a new and younger audience in the 1950's and now thanks to this digitally-remastered CD, they can do it again 60 years later. Mary Small was one of the more talented and distinctive vocalists of her time and she sounds as fresh and exciting today as she did back then.(Jasmine notes)

David said...

Many thanks for reintroducing a long forgotten voice.