Connie Francis, the angelic-voiced singer who was one of many largest recording stars of the late Fifties and early Sixties, has died. She was 87.
Her good friend and publicist, Ron Roberts, introduced the singer’s dying Thursday, in response to the Related Press.
A month previous to her dying, Francis was hospitalized for “extreme pain” following a fracture in her pelvic space. The singer, who shared particulars about her well being with followers on social media, used a wheelchair in her later years and stated she lived with a “troublesome painful hip.”
Francis emerged when rock ’n’ roll first captivated America. Her earliest hits — a dreamy association of the previous customary “Who’s Sorry Now?,” the cheerfully foolish “Stupid Cupid” and the galloping “Lipstick on Your Collar” — match neatly into the rising style’s lighter facet. Though she focused teen listeners with such songs because the spring break anthem “Where the Boys Are,” Francis in the end gravitated towards the center of the highway, singing softly lit, tasteful pop for grownup audiences.
Francis’ business peak roughly spanned from Elvis Presley’s induction into the U.S. Military to the Beatles first setting foot on American soil. Over that five-year interval, Francis was one of many largest stars in music, incomes three No. 1 hits: “Everybody’s Somebody’s Fool,” “My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own” and “Don’t Break the Heart That Loves You.” As her singles provided acquainted adolescent fare, her albums have been constructed for particular demographics. Through the early ’60s, she lower information devoted to “Italian Favorites,” “Rock ’n’ Roll Million Sellers,” “Country & Western,” “Fun Songs for Children,” “Jewish Favorites” and “Spanish and Latin American Favorites,” even recording variations of her hits in Italian, German, Spanish and Japanese.
This adaptability grew to become a substantial asset as soon as her pop hits dried up within the mid-’60s. Francis continued to be a well-liked live performance attraction by the Sixties, her dwell success sustaining her as she eased into grownup modern fare. Quite a few private tragedies stalled her profession within the Nineteen Seventies, however by the ’90s, her life stabilized sufficient for her to return to the stage, enjoying venues in Las Vegas, Atlantic Metropolis and elsewhere till her retirement within the 2010s.
Connie Francis circa 1960.
(Archive Pictures/Getty Photographs)
Connie Francis was born Concetta Maria Franconero on Dec. 12, 1938, in Newark, N.J. When she was 3, her father purchased her an accordion and she or he spent her childhood studying Italian people songs. By age 10, her dad and mom enrolled her in native expertise contests. When her father tried to e-book her on the New York-based tv present “Startime,” producer George Scheck solely agreed as a result of Francis performed the accordion and he was “up to here in singers.” Francis remained a fixture on “Startime” by her early teenagers — Scheck served as her supervisor throughout these adolescence — throughout which era she additionally appeared on Arthur Grodfrey’s “Talent Scouts.” Godfrey stumbled over her Italian title, suggesting she shorten it to one thing “easy and Irish,” thereby giving beginning to her stage title.
Scheck managed to safe Francis a report contract with MGM in 1955. As she acquired work dubbing her singing voice for movie actresses — she subbed for Tuesday Weld in 1956’s “Rock, Rock, Rock” and Freda Holloway in 1957’s “Jamboree” — MGM steadily tried to maneuver her from pop to rock. Nothing clicked till Francis recorded “Who’s Sorry Now?” as a favor to her father, giving the 1923 tune a romantic sway.
“Who’s Sorry Now?” caught the ear of Dick Clark, who usually performed the report on his “American Bandstand,” which had simply expanded into the nationwide market. Clark’s endorsement helped break “Who’s Sorry Now?” and despatched it into the Billboard High 10. MGM tried to copy its success by having Francis spruce up previous chestnuts, however to no avail. The singer didn’t have one other hit till she lower “Stupid Cupid,” a tune co-written by Neil Sedaka and Howie Greenfield, a pair of younger songwriters on the Brill Constructing who have been navigating the space separating Broadway-bound pop and rock ’n’ roll.
“Stupid Cupid” was the primary of many hits she’d have with the songwriters, together with the slinky ‘Fallin’” and the ballad “Frankie.” She later stated, “Neil and Howie never failed to come up with a hit for me. It was a great marriage. We thought the same way.” Sedaka and Greenfield weren’t the one Brill Constructing songwriters to command Francis’ consideration: She developed a romance with a pre-fame Bobby Darin, who was chased away by her father.
Over the following few years, Francis recorded each requirements and new songs from Sedaka and Greenfield, together with materials from different rising songwriters, similar to George Goehring and Edna Lewis, who wrote the energetic “Lipstick on Your Collar.” Inside lower than two years, her recognition was such that MGM launched 5 completely different Connie Francis LPs for Christmas 1959: a set of vacation tunes, a greatest-hits report, an LP devoted to nation, one devoted to rock ’n’ roll and a set of Italian music, carried out partially within the unique language.
Connie Francis and Neil Sedaka in 2007.
(George Napolitano / FilmMagic / Getty Photographs)
Together with her recognition at an apex, Connie Francis made her cinematic debut within the 1960 teen comedy “Where the Boys Are,” which additionally featured a Sedaka and Greenfield tune as its theme. Francis appeared in three quasi-sequels culminating in 1965’s “When the Boys Meet the Girls,” however she by no means felt solely comfy onscreen, preferring dwell efficiency. “Vacation” grew to become her final High 10 single in 1962 — the identical yr she revealed the e-book “For Every Young Heart: Connie Francis Talks to Teenagers.” Too younger to be an oldies act, Francis spent the rest of the Sixties chasing just a few developments — in 1968, she launched “Connie & Clyde — Hit Songs of the ’30s,” a rushed try to money in on the recognition of Arthur Penn’s controversial hit movie “Bonnie and Clyde” — whereas busying herself on a showbiz circuit that encompassed Vegas, tv selection exhibits and singing for troops in Vietnam.
A comeback try within the early Nineteen Seventies was swiftly derailed by tragedy. After showing at Lengthy Island’s Westbury Music Honest on Nov. 8, 1974, she was sexually assaulted in her Howard Johnson’s resort room; the perpetrator was by no means caught. Francis sued the resort chain; she’d later win a $2.5-million settlement that helped reshape safety practices within the hospitality trade. As she was recovering from her assault, she underwent a nasal surgical procedure that went astray, main her to lose her voice for years; it took three subsequent surgical procedures earlier than she regained her potential to sing. Francis spent a lot of the rest of the ’70s battling extreme melancholy, however as soon as her voice returned, recordings occurred from time to time, together with a disco model of “Where the Boys Are” in 1978.
Connie Francis.
(ullstein bild through Getty Photographs)
Francis returned to the general public eye within the early Nineteen Eighties, first as a victims rights activist, then as a dwell performer. Her comeback was marred by additional tragedy — the homicide of her brother George, a lawyer who grew to become a authorities witness after pleading responsible to financial institution fraud; the police indicated the killing was associated to organized crime.
Francis continued to work within the wake of his dying, enjoying exhibits and writing her 1984 autobiography, “Who’s Sorry Now?,” however she continued to be plagued with private issues. She instructed the Village Voice’s Michael Musto, “In the ’80s I was involuntarily committed to mental institutions 17 times in nine years in five different states. I was misdiagnosed as bipolar, ADD, ADHD, and a few other letters the scientific community had never heard of.” After receiving a analysis for post-traumatic stress dysfunction, Francis returned to dwell performances within the Nineteen Nineties; considered one of her exhibits was documented on “The Return Concert Live at Trump’s Castle,” a 1996 album that was her final major-label launch. When requested by the Las Vegas Solar in 2004 if life was nonetheless a battle, she responded, “Not for the past 12 years.”
Francis usually performed casinos and theaters within the 2000s as she developed a biopic of her life with Gloria Estefan, who deliberate to play the previous teen idol. The movie by no means materialized. In 2010, Francis grew to become the nationwide spokesperson for Psychological Well being America’s trauma marketing campaign. By the tip of the 2010s, she retired to Parkland, Fla., and revealed her second memoir, “Among My Souvenirs: The Real Story, Vol. 1,” in 2017.
Connie Francis married 4 occasions. Her first marriage, to Dick Kanellis in 1964, ended after three months; her second, to Izzy Marion, lasted from 1971 to 1972. She adopted a toddler along with her third husband, Joseph Garzilli, to whom she was wed from 1973 to 1978. Her fourth marriage, to Bob Parkinson, resulted in 1986 after one yr.

