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Schachere, Michele. "Clooney, Rosemary." Contemporary Musicians. Gale Research Inc. 1993. Encyclopedia.com. 29 Sep. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.
Schachere, Michele. "Clooney, Rosemary." Contemporary Musicians. Gale Research Inc. 1993. Encyclopedia.com. (September 29, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3492700018.html
Clooney, Rosemary
Contemporary Musicians | 1993 | Schachere, Michele | Copyright 1993 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. Copyright
Singer
The distinctively unpretentious, deep, rich, and smooth voice of Rosemary Clooney has earned her recognition as one of America’s premiere pop and jazz singers. According to Clooney’s record company press biography, Life magazine, in a tribute to America’s “girl singers” named her one of “six preeminent singers… whose performances are living displays of a precious national treasure... their recordings a preservation of jewels.” First-class crooner Frank Sinatra stated, as was also reprinted in Clooney’s press biography, “Rosemary Clooney has that great talent which exudes warmth and feeling in every song she sings. She’s a symbol of good modern American music.”
The singer noted for her decades-long mastery of American popular song started life amid the poverty of small-town Maysville, Kentucky. Her childhood was a difficult one; Clooney and younger siblings Betty and Nick were shuttled among their alcoholic father, Andy, their mother, Frances—who traveled constantly for her work with a chain of dress shops—and relatives, who would take turns raising the children. When Clooney was 13 her mother moved to California to marry a sailor, taking Nick with her but leaving the girls behind. Her father tried to care for Rosemary and Betty, working steadily at a defense plant, but he left one night to celebrate the end of World War II—taking the household money with him—and never returned.
A Difficult Childhood
As Clooney described in her autobiography, This for Remembrance, she and Betty were left to fend for themselves. They collected soda bottles and bought meals at school with the refund money. The phone had been disconnected, the utilities were about to be turned off, and the rent was overdue when Rosemary and Betty won an open singing audition at a Cincinnati radio station. The girls were so impressive, in fact, that they were hired for a regular late-night spot at $20 a week each. “The Clooney Sisters,” as they became known, began their singing career in 1945 on WLW in Cincinnati.
This work brought them to the attention of bandleader Tony Pastor, who happened to be passing through Ohio. In 1945 The Clooney Sisters joined Pastor’s orchestra. They toured with Pastor as featured singers until 1948, at which point Betty decided to return to Cincinnati and her radio career. Rosemary continued as a solo vocalist with Tony Pastor for another year. Then, in 1949, deciding she needed to expand her professional career, she left the band; at age 21 Clooney struck out on her own and headed for New York City.
Enlistment in World War II and the draft drastically depleted the personnel of most bands, creating the need for orchestras to highlight a charismatic singer. After the war, singers who had stolen the limelight from bands became even more indispensable as audiences increasingly came to demand them. Leaders of popular bands discovered and nurtured singers like Bing Crosby, Doris Day, Frank Sinatra, Peggy Lee, Ella Fitzgerald, and Dinah Washington and became associated in the public eye with their finds. Clooney’s arrival in New York was perfectly timed with the rage for orchestra-backed singers; she was immediately signed to a recording contract with Columbia Records. By then “girl singers,” as they came to be known—Kay Starr, Day, and Lee—were emerging as recording stars.
“Come On-a My House”
It was at Columbia that Clooney began an important association with Mitch Miller, one of the company’s A&R [Artists and Repertoire] representatives and top entertainers. In 1951 Miller convinced Clooney to record an oddball song, “Come On-a My House,” written by Ross Bagdasarian with lyrics by William Saroyan. When Miller first suggested the song, Clooney was highly skeptical, insisting the song was not her kind of material. She felt it was silly and demeaning; she believed the double-entendres were a cheap lyrical device and felt uncomfortable putting on an Italian accent. But Miller was persistent and finally persuaded Clooney to record “Come On-a My House.” He conceived a novel instrumental effect utilizing a harpsichord to accompany Clooney. Much to her surprise, the song was an immediate and enormous success, topping the charts to become a gold record. “Come On-a My House” made Rosemary Clooney a star. A household name, she became known simply as “Rosie.”
In the early 1950s radio made a strong bid to issue a challenge to the growing magnetism of television. Star-studded variety programs were created, and week after week Hollywood studios offered musical programs by big names. Clooney was signed to co-host, with beloved vocalist Bing Crosby, a songfest radio show, which aired every weekday morning on CBS radio. Film roles abounded; Clooney’s appearance in White Christmas was generally credited with the film’s enormous success, which made it the top grosser of 1954. Co-starring with hot properties Bob Hope and Crosby and accompanied by the music of Irving Berlin, Clooney was lauded for her performance, in which she sang the ballad “Love, You Didn’t Do Right by Me.”
The Hollywood Life
As her popularity swelled, Clooney began a romance with dancer Dante Di Paolo, her co-star in the films Here Come the Girls and Red Garters.Nonetheless, to her friends’ and the public’s amazement, Clooney eloped in the summer of 1953 with Oscar-winning actor Jose Ferrer, 16 years her senior. “Rosie” and her whirlwind marriage became a favorite topic of the tabloid journals. Clooney and Ferrer moved into a glamorous Beverly Hills home once owned by composer George Gershwin and entertained with lavish pool-side parties attended by the toast of Hollywood. Their first child was born in 1955 and by 1960, the family had grown to seven.
Clooney became the star of her own television series in 1956. The Rosemary Clooney Show, which ran through 1957, was syndicated to more than one hundred television stations. But by that time, Clooney had begun to feel the strain of stardom and her relentlessly hectic schedule. The pressure of raising five children while pursuing careers as a television, movie, radio, and recording star, coupled with the deteriorating state of her marriage, soon took its toll. Clooney developed an addiction to tranquilizers and sleeping pills. Although her life appeared idyllic to the public, the singer’s addiction to drugs worsened. Clooney and Ferrer divorced in 1961, reconciled for a few years, then divorced again in 1967. Recalling in her autobiography how she fell prey to “the ’50s myth of family and career,” the singer confessed, “I just did it all because I thought that I could, it certainly wasn’t easy.”
Collapse
For Clooney, the world came crashing down in 1968. She was standing only yards away when her close friend Bobby Kennedy, then campaigning for the Democratic presidential nomination, was assassinated in Los Angeles at the Ambassador Hotel. The tragedy, compounded with her drug addiction, triggered a public mental collapse: At a Reno engagement she cursed at her audience and stalked off the stage. She later called a press conference to announce her retirement at which she sobbed incoherently. When a doctor was summoned, Clooney fled and was eventually found driving on the wrong side of a dangerous mountain road. Soon thereafter she admitted herself to the psychiatric ward of Mount Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles. Clooney remained in therapy for many years. She worked when she could—at Holiday Inns and small hotels like the Ventura and the Hawthorne and selling paper towels in television commercials.
In 1976 Clooney’s old friend Bing Crosby asked her to join him on his 50th anniversary tour. It would be Crosby’s final tour and Clooney’s comeback event. The highlight of the show came when Clooney joined Crosby in a duet of “On a Slow Boat to China.” The next year, Clooney signed a recording contract with Concord Jazz, taking the next step on her comeback trail—one that would produce a string of more than a dozen successful recordings, inaugurated with Everything’s Coming Up Rosie.
Salvation Through Singing
“I’ll keep working as long as I live,” Clooney vowed in an interview with Lear’s magazine, “because singing has taken on the feeling of joy that I had when I started, when my only responsibility was to sing well. It’s even better now… I can even pick the songs. The arranger says to me, ’How do you want it? How do you see it?’ Nobody ever asked me that before.”
Along with her renewed recording efforts, Clooney created a living memorial to her sister Betty, who died in 1976 from a brain aneurysm: the Betty Clooney Center in Long Beach, California, a facility for brain-injured young adults. The first of its kind in the U.S., the center is supported by grants and donations as well as the annual star-splashed benefit concert that Clooney hosts. After receiving the James Smithson Bicentennial Medal in 1992 in recognition of her contribution to American music, Clooney told the Washington Post, “It’s for showing up day after day, for small increments of time and achievement.” Claiming that singing has become her salvation, Clooney added, “I’m the only instrument that’s got the words, so I’ve got to be able to get that across.” As her top-selling jazz albums indicated, Clooney was still able to mesmerize audiences with her warmth, depth of feeling, honesty, and unsurpassed craft.
For the Record…
Born May 23, 1928, in Maysville, KY; daughter of Andrew (a defense plant worker and house painter) and Frances (an employee of a dress-shop chain; maiden name, Guilfoyle) Clooney; married Jose Ferrer (an actor), 1953 (divorced, 1961), remarried Ferrer (divorced, 1967); children: Miguel Jose, Maria Providencia, Gabriel Vincente, Monsita, Rafael.
Formed duet with sister Betty and performed on radio station WLW, Cincinnati; as “The Clooney Sisters,” duet toured the U.S. with the Tony Pastor orchestra, 1945-48; performed with Pastor as solo artist, 1948-49; signed with Columbia Records, 1950, and recorded “Come On-a My House,” 1951; performed with Bing Crosby on CBS Radio songfest show, early 1950s; under contract to Paramount Pictures, 1953-54; film roles include The Stars Are Singing and Here Come the Girls, both 1953, and White Christmas, Red Garters, and Deep in My Heart, all 1954; appeared in television programs the Rosemary Clooney Show, KKTV, WRCA-TV, WPIX, 1956-57, and Lux Music Hall, NBC-TV, 1957; appeared with Bing Crosby on his 50th anniversary tour, 1976; signed with Concord Jazz, 1977. Author of autobiography This for Remembrance, Playboy Press, 1977.
Awards: Gold records for “Come On-a My House, 1951,” “Tenderly,” 1952, “Botcha Me,” 1953, “Half as Much,” 1953, and “Hey There,” 1954; special award from Look magazine, 1954; James Smithson Bicentennial Medal, 1992, for contribution to American arts.
Addresses: Record company —Concord Jazz, Inc., P.O. Box 845, Concord, CA 94522.
Selected discography
Children’s Favorites, 1956.
Everything’s Coming Up Rosie, Concord, 1977.
Rosie Sings Bing, Concord, 1978.
Here’s to My Lady, Concord, 1979.
Rosemary Clooney Sings Ira Gershwin Lyrics, Concord, 1980.
With Love, Concord, 1981.
Rosemary Clooney Sings the Music of Cole Porter, Concord, 1982.
Rosemary Clooney Sings the Music of Harold Arlen, Concord, 1983.
(With Woody Herman) My Buddy, Concord, 1983.
Rosemary Clooney Sings the Music of Irving Berlin, Concord, 1984.
Rosemary Clooney Sings Ballads, Concord, 1985.
Rosemary Clooney Sings the Music of Jimmy VanHeusen, Concord, 1986.
Rosemary Clooney Sings the Lyrics of Johnny Mercer, Concord, 1987.
Show Tunes, Concord, 1989.
Rosemary Clooney Sings Rodgers, Hart & Hammerstein, Concord, 1990.
For the Duration, Concord, 1991.
Girl Singer, Concord, 1992.
Rosemary Clooney Sings the Music of Harold Allen, Concord, 1992.
Do You Miss New York? Concord, 1993.
Sources
Books
Clooney, Rosemary, This for Remembrance, Playboy Press, 1977.
Ewen, David, All the Years of American Popular Music, Prentice-Hall, 1977.
Peroidicals
Lear’s, February 1990.
Newsweek, March 9, 1992.
New York Times, February 9, 1992.
Stereo Review, June 1991.
Variety, October 28, 1991.
Village Voice, October 16, 1991.
Washington Post, March 28, 1992.
Additional information for this profile was obtained from Concord Jazz, Inc., press materials, 1992.
—Michele Schachere APA
Schachere, Michele. "Clooney, Rosemary." Contemporary Musicians. Gale Research Inc. 1993. Retrieved September 29, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3492700018.html