Constance Foore "Connee" Boswell (December 3,
1907 - October 11, 1976) was an American female vocalist born in Kansas City,
Missouri but raised in New Orleans, Louisiana. With her sisters, Martha and
Helvetia "Vet" Boswell, she performed in the 1930's as The Boswell
Sisters and became a highly influential singing group during this period via
recordings and radio. 

The Boswells came
to be well known locally while still in their early teens, making appearances
in New Orleans theaters and radio. They made their first recordings for Victor
Records in 1925, which included "Cryin' Blues" where Connee is
featured singing in the style of her early influence, the African American
singer Mamie Smith.

The Boswell Sisters travelled to Los Angeles where they
performed on local radio and "side-miked" for the soundies, including
the 1930 production "Under Montana Skies." did not attain national
attention, however, until they moved to New York City in 1930 and started
making national radio broadcasts. After a few recordings with Okeh Records,
they made numerous recordings for Brunswick Records from 1931-1935. In 1935,
the sisters had a #1 hit with "The Object of My Affection", the
biggest of twenty top 20 records they would enjoy.
In 1936, the group
signed to Decca Records and after just three releases called it quits (the last
recording was February 12, 1936). Connee Boswell continued to have a successful
solo career as a singer for Decca. She had changed the spelling of her name
from Connie to Connee, reputedly because it made it easier to sign
autographs.
Connee sang from a wheelchair - or seated position -
during her

entire career, due to either a childhood bout with polio or a
childhood accident (sources differ). The general public was not aware of her condition although Boswell
herself did not keep this secret. During World War II, she tried to get
involved with the U.S.O. but was not given permission to travel overseas, the
"powers that be" apparently thought it might not be a morale-booster
to have a "cripple" perform for the troops.

In 1954, Connee recorded her last charted hit, “If I Give
My Heart to You.” The song was a smash hit for Kitty Kallen but Boswell’s
version rose to the #10 spot in September, 1954, and spent 11 weeks on the
charts. In April of 1956 Connee was back in Decca’s recording studios in NYC
with Sy Oliver and His Orchestra. The subsequent recordings were issued as her
second album, simply named “Connee.” This is her last recording session with
Decca records, ending a twenty-five year collaboration that had yielded many
hit recordings. 

In 1958 Connee unfortunately made her last album
"Connee Boswell Sings The Rodgers & Hart Songbook" on the Design
Record label. It is unfortunate that Verve never signed Connee as they did Ella
Fitzgerald. Connee still had an amazing voice in the 1950s.
Connee moved on to more causes that are dear to her heart
by the 1960s. She was on the board of an organization called, “Comeback, Inc,”
whose focus is rehabilitation of the chronically ill, aged and handicapped. By
1962 she decided to limit her performances to some occasional television work
and club dates and stays much closer to home to care for her husband Harry. She
continued in her humanitarian work and volunteer appearances at children’s hospitals,
and in her hobby of training dogs.


Sometime afterward
though, they discovered that the cancer had returned and began chemotherapy. By
the early fall, she was confined to her hospital room at Mt Sinai and finally
asked doctors to stop all treatments. On October 12, 1976 Constance Foore
Boswell Leedy died at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City. She was 68 years
old. She was buried in Ferncliff Cemetery, Hartsdale, New York, next to her
husband Harry. (Info edited from Wikipedia & an article by David Lobosco)