Joni James
(born Giovanna 'Joan' Carmella Babbo
, September 22, 1930, Chicago, Illinois) is an American singer of traditional pop music.
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Biography
James was born into an Italian family in Chicago. As an
adolescent, she studied
drama and
ballet, and on graduating from
high school, went with a local
dance group on a tour of
Canada. She then took a job as a chorus girl in the
Edgewater Beach Hotel in Chicago. After doing a fill-in in Indiana, she decided to pursue a singing career. Some executives at
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) spotted her in a
television commercial, and she was signed by MGM in 1952. Her first
hit, "
Why Don't You Believe Me?" sold over two million copies. She had a number of hits following that one, including "
Your Cheatin' Heart" (a
cover of
Hank Williams' hit) and "
Have You Heard?"
She was the first American to
record at
London's
Abbey Road Studios, and recorded five
albums there. She was also very popular across parts of the
Asia-Pacific region, particularly in the
Philippines where she performed at
Manila's now defunct EM Club in 1957. She also scored a big hit in Manila with Filipino
composer Salvador Asuncion's work entitled "In Despair."
James had seven
Top 10 hits on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart. "Why Don't You Believe Me?" (#1 in 1952) "
Have You Heard?" (#4 in 1953) "
Your Cheatin' Heart" (#2 in 1953) "
Almost Always" (#9 in 1953) "
My Love, My Love" (#8 in 1953) "
How Important Can It Be?" (#2 in 1955) and "
You Are My Love" (#6 in 1955) as well as sixteen other
Top 40 hits from 1952 to 1961. She has sold more than 100 million records.
James married composer-conductor Tony Acquaviva at
St. Patrick's Cathedral in
New York in 1956.
In 1964 she retired from the
music industry in part because Acquaviva was in bad health and needed her attention.
[1] She cared for him until his death in 1986. For many years she was out of the public eye, but began touring again in the mid 1990s some years after Acquaviva's death.
[2]
On October 5, 1997, she
married retired
Air Force General
Bernard Adolph Schriever, 20 years her senior, and an extremely important figure in post-war U.S.
ballistic missile development. They honeymooned in
France and the
Greek Isles. Gen. Schriever died on June 20, 2005.
For her contributions to the entertainment industry, James has a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame.
[3]
In a 1968
Peanuts strip, after a dust-up with the cat next door,
Snoopy says, "Just don't ask to borrow my Joni James records again!" Thirty years later, Snoopy would appear on the cover of her
Jukebox Joni
compilation album.
Major hit songs
- "Almost Always" / "Is It Any Wonder?" MGM 11470 (1953)
- "Give Us This Day" / "How Lucky You Are" MGM 12288 (1956)
- "Have You Heard?" / "Wishing Ring" MGM 11390 (1953)
- "How Important Can It Be?" / "This Is My Confession" MGM 11919 (1955)
- "My Believing Heart" / "You Never Fall In Love Again" MGM 12126 (1955)
- "My Love, My Love" / "You're Foolin' Someone" MGM 11543 (1953)
- "There Goes My Heart" / "Funny" MGM 12706 (1958)
- "There Must Be a Way" / "Sorry For Myself" MGM 12746 (1959)
- "Why Don't You Believe Me?" / "Purple Shades" MGM 11333 (1952)
- "You Are My Love" / "I Lay Me Down To Sleep" MGM 12066 (1955)
- "Your Cheatin' Heart" / "I'll Be Waiting Fof You" MGM 11426 (1953)
- "You're Nearer" / "You're My Everything" MGM 30829 (1954)
References
- One From Her Heart Joni James Returns To The Spotlight
- Joni James: A Melancholy Baby Returns
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