• Connie Francis, 87, pop star of the 50s and 60s

    From jsnsmith565@jsnsmith565@gmail.com (Jason) to alt.obituaries on Thu Jul 17 10:06:05 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.obituaries

    https://people.com/connie-francis-dead-age-87-8599290

    Connie Francis, 'Who's Sorry Now?' and 'Pretty Little Baby' Singer, Dies
    at 87
    The pop star of the '50s and '60s was the first woman to have a No. 1
    hit on the Billboard Hot 100 as a solo artist.

    Connie Francis has died at the age of 87, two weeks after it was
    revealed that she'd been hospitalized due to "extreme pain."

    Francis' close friend, Ron Roberts, who is the president of the
    musician's label Concetta Records, confirmed the news on Facebook early
    on Thursday, July 17.

    Roberts wrote, "It is with a heavy heart and extreme sadness that I
    inform you of the passing of my dear friend Connie Francis last night."

    "I know that Connie would approve that her fans are among the first to
    learn of this sad news. More details will follow later," the message,
    which was also shared on Francis' official Facebook profile, concluded.

    The news comes after Francis confirmed in a Fourth of July Facebook post
    that she was "feeling much better after a good night," two days after it
    was confirmed that she had been hospitalized.

    The musician revealed that she was "back in hospital" on July 2, telling
    fans she'd been "undergoing tests and checks to determine the cause(s)
    of the extreme pain I have been experiencing."

    Francis had recently been making headlines due to her 1962 song "Pretty
    Little Baby" becoming a huge hit on TikTok, 63 years after she recorded
    the B-side.

    A contemporary of Elvis Presley and Brenda Lee, Francis was one of the
    most popular singers of the 1950s and early 1960s, with Top 10 singles
    like "Who's Sorry Now?,rCY rCLMy Heart Has A Mind Of Its Own," "Where the
    Boys Are" and rCLDon't Break The Heart That Loves You.rCY Francis was the
    first woman to have a No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 with her 1960
    track rCLEverybody's Somebody's Fool.rCY

    The singer was born Concetta Franconero in Newark, New Jersey, in 1937.
    As early as age 4, she began taking part in talent contests and
    pageants, at her father's encouragement, singing and playing accordion.
    Later, she began appearing on TV shows and was a featured performer on
    NBCrCOs Startime Kids. She chose Connie Francis as her stage name.

    She signed a recording contract with MGM Records in 1955, but most of
    her early singles were unsuccessful. The label was going to drop her,
    but her father convinced her to record a version of "Who's Sorry Now?"
    as a last attempt at a hit in 1957.

    rCLI had 18 bomb records,rCY Francis told UPI in 1996. rCLHe wanted me to record a song written in 1923. I said 'Forget about it rCo the kids on
    American Bandstand would laugh me right off the show.' He said, 'If you
    don't record this song, dummy, the only way you'll get on American
    Bandstand is to sit on the TV.''

    The track also performed poorly rCo until it debuted on Dick Clark's
    American Bandstand in 1958. It then became a hit in both the U.S. and
    the U.K., and Francis and Clark would form a lifelong friendship.

    FrancisrCOs career grew from there, with follow-up hits like "My
    Happiness,rCY "Lipstick on Your CollarrCY and rCLAmong My Souvenirs.rCY Her 1959
    album Connie Francis Sings Italian Favorites became her most successful,
    and 1960rCOs rCLEverybody's Somebody's FoolrCY became her first No. 1 in the United States rCo and the first ever by a solo female artist on the
    Billboard Hot 100, which had launched in 1958.

    Francis also found international success, thanks, in part, to her
    re-recording of her songs in different languages. She had two more No. 1
    hits, with rCLMy Heart Has A Mind Of Its OwnrCY (which hit the top spot just three months after "Everybody's Somebody's Fool") and rCLDon't Break The
    Heart That Loves You.rCY

    rCL'I was sitting on top of the world and didn't know what problems were yet,rCY she told PEOPLE in 1992 of her early career. Francis also appeared
    in a handful of films in the 1960s, including the 1960 hit Where the
    Boys Are, a teen rom-com costarring a young George Hamilton.

    Francis became less successful as the music industry changed in the late
    1960s, and then suffered a series of personal tragedies. In 1974, she
    was the victim of a rape in a Long Island motel room. She had nasal
    surgery in 1977 that caused her to temporarily lose her voice. And in
    1981, her brother George was murdered by the mafia.

    That same year, she launched a career comeback, but it was hindered by
    her struggles with her mental health. Her father had her committed to
    multiple psychiatric hospitals, and she survived a 1984 suicide attempt.
    That same year, she published her first memoir, Who's Sorry Now?.

    rCLTo make a short story long, in the rCO80s, I was involuntarily committed
    to mental institutions 17 times in nine years in five different states,rCY
    she told the Village Voice in 2011. rCLI was misdiagnosed as bipolar, ADD, ADHD, and a few other letters the scientific community had never heard
    of. A few years later, I was discovered to have had post-traumatic
    stress disorder following a horrendous string of events in my life.rCY

    She partnered with Ronald Reagan's presidential administration on a task
    force on violent crime and was an advocate for rape victims. In 2010,
    she partnered with Mental Health America to help raise awareness of the
    effects of trauma and treatments for it.

    rCLI tried to see humor in everything, even when I was in a mental institution,rCY she told The Oklahoman in 2018. rCLBut I have to say the support of the public has also been incredibly uplifting. They saw me
    through the best and worst of times and never stopped writing from
    around the world to encourage me.rCY Francis released another memoir,
    Among My Souvenirs, in 2017.

    Francis had a relationship with singer Bobby Darin early in her career,
    but her father kept them apart. She considered Darin, who died in 1973
    at age 37, the love of her life. "My personal life is a regret from A to
    Z," Francis told PEOPLE in 1984. "I realized I had allowed my father to
    exert too much influence over me."

    She was married four times. Her first husband was Dick Kanellis; they
    married in 1964 and divorced after five months. She married Izzy Marion
    in 1971, divorcing 10 months later. She married Joseph Garzilli in 1973.
    They adopted a son, Joseph Garzilli Jr., in 1974. The couple split in
    1977. She married for a fourth time to Bob Parkinson in 1985, but once
    again the marriage only lasted a few months.

    Francis told PEOPLE in 2017 that she wanted to be remembered rCLnot so
    much for the heights I have reached, but for the depths from which I
    have come. . . . I hope I did okay.rCY

    Francis is survived by her son.

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  • From Lenona@lenona321@yahoo.com to alt.obituaries on Fri Jul 18 16:57:07 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.obituaries

    Many years ago, I stumbled on this 'zine, "Murder Can Be Fun," by John
    Marr:

    https://www.murdercanbefun.com/issues/

    The title of the issue I bought is "(Anti) Sex Tips for Teens: THE TEEN
    ADVICE BOOK, 1897 - 1987" You can see two pages from inside, when you
    click.

    Why do I mention it? Because Francis wrote such a book - it's "For Every
    Young Heart" (1962).

    Marr wrote: "Connie Francis could very well be the least qualified
    person to ever write a teen advice book, and when you look at some of
    the other nuts and self-appointed 'experts' who've written them, that's
    saying a lot... Connie's adolescence was hardly normal..."

    More later - I have to run. Btw, that issue also mentions the authors
    Pat Boone, Dick Clark, Ann Landers, Gay Head (1953), and Brooke Shields.
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  • From Louis Epstein@le@lekno.ws to alt.obituaries on Fri Jul 18 18:04:46 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.obituaries

    Jason <jsnsmith565@gmail.com> wrote:
    https://people.com/connie-francis-dead-age-87-8599290


    A contemporary of Elvis Presley and Brenda Lee, Francis was one of the
    most popular singers of the 1950s and early 1960s, with Top 10 singles
    like "Who's Sorry Now?,rCY rCLMy Heart Has A Mind Of Its Own," "Where the Boys Are" and rCLDon't Break The Heart That Loves You.rCY Francis was the first woman to have a No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 with her 1960
    track rCLEverybody's Somebody's Fool.rCY

    It's my understanding that the first woman to have a Billboard No. 1
    song was Dinah Shore with "I'll Walk Alone" in 1945.

    Is there a distinction between what sort of No. 1 the songs were?

    -=-=-
    The World Trade Center towers MUST rise again,
    at least as tall as before...or terror has triumphed.
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