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Biography
About|the singer|the baseball player|Johnny RayInfobox musical artist| name = Johnnie Ray| image = Johnnie Ray Allan Warren.jpg| caption = Ray in 1969, as best man at Judy Garland 's wedding, by Allan Warren | background = solo_singer| birth_name = John Alvin Ray| Born = birth date|1927|1|10 Hopewell, Oregon , United States | Died = death date and age|1990|2|24|1927|1|10 Los Angeles, California , United States| instrument = Human voice|Vocals , piano | genre = Traditional pop music | occupation = Singer , songwriter | years_active = 1951–1989| label = OKeh Records Johnnie Ray (January 10, 1927 & ndash; February 24, 1990) was an United States|American singer , songwriter , and pianist . Popular for most of the 1950s, Ray has been cited by critics as a major precursor of what would become rock and roll , for his jazz and blues -influenced music and his animated stage personality.cite web | author=Ruhlmann, William | title=High Drama: The Real Johnnie Ray | url=Allmusic|class=album|id=r317940|pure_url=yes | work=Allmusic.com | date= | accessdate=2008-03-04
Early life
John Alvin Ray was born in Dallas, Oregon , spending part of his childhood on a farm, lived in Dallas, Polk County, Oregon with parents Elmer and Hazel Ray and older sister Elma Ray, and attended grade school there, eventually moving to Portland, Oregon where he attended high school. Ray was not of Native Americans in the United States|Native American origin: it was rumored that his great-grandmother was a full-blooded Blackfoot Indian, but in a response to a reporter questioning his heritage in 1952, Ray, puzzled, looked down at his shoes and said "Blackfoot". His great-grandfather was Oregon pioneer George Kirby Gay of Berkeley, Gloucestershire , England .Citation needed|date=January 2008 He became deafness|deaf in his right ear at age 13 after an accident during a Boy Scouts of America|Boy Scout "blanket toss," a variation of the trampoline . (Ray later performed wearing a hearing aid . Surgery performed in New York in 1958 left him almost completely deaf in both ears, although hearing aids helped his condition.)
Career
Inspired by rhythm singers like Kay Starr , LaVern Baker and Ivory Joe Hunter , Ray developed a unique rhythm-based style, described as alternating between pre-rock R& B and a more conventional classic pop approach.
Ray first attracted the attention of Bernie Lang, a song plugger, who was taken to the Flame Showbar nightclub in Detroit, Michigan by local DJ, Robin Seymour (DJ)|Robin Seymour of WKMH. "We were both excited," Seymour recalls. "We heard two shows that first night." Lang rushed off to New York to sell the singer to Danny Kessler, the "Mr. Big" of the Okeh label, a subsidiary of Columbia Records . Kessler came over from New York, and he, Lang and Seymour went to the Flame. According to Seymour, Kessler's reaction was, "Well, I don't know. This kid looks well on the stand, but he will never go on records."Citation needed|date=July 2011 It was Seymour and Lowell Worley of the local office of Columbia who persuaded Kessler to have a test record made of Ray. Worley arranged for a record to be cut at the United Sound Studios in Detroit. Seymour told reporter Dick Osgood that there was a verbal agreement that he would be cut in on the three-way deal in the management of Ray. But the deal mysteriously evaporated, and so did Seymour's friendship with Kessler.cite news | author=Osgood, Dick | title=WKMH's Seymour Can Cry About Ray Deal, Too | url= | work=Detroit News | year=1958 | accessdate=
Ray's first record, the self-penned R& B number for OKeh Records , "Whiskey and Gin", was a minor hit in 1951. The following year he dominated the charts with the double-sided hit single of " Cry (Churchill Kohlman song)|Cry " and " The Little White Cloud That Cried ". http://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc19746/m1/ Show 2 - Play A Simple Melody: American pop music in the early fifties. Part 2& #93; : UNT Digital Library Selling over two million copies of the 78rpm single, Ray's delivery struck a chord with teenagers and he quickly became a teen idol .cite news | author=Holden, Steven | title=Johnnie Ray, 63, 50s Singer Who Hit No. 1 With a Sob in His Voice | work=The New York Times | url= http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html? res=9C0CEEDE1238F935A15751C0A966958260 | date=1990-02-26 | accessdate=2008-02-27
Ray's performing style included theatrics later associated with rock 'n roll, including tearing at his hair, falling to the floor, and letting the tears flow.cite web | author=Fox, James | url= http://www.oregonencyclopedia.org/entry/view/johnnie_ray/ | title=The Oregon Encyclopedia: Johnnie Ray (1927-1990) | accessdate=2010-03-10 Ray quickly earned the nicknames "Mr. Emotion", "The Nabob of Sob", and "The Prince of Wails", and several others.cite web | author=Rapp, Linda | url= http://www.glbtq.com/arts/ray_j.html | title=Ray, Johnnie (1927-1990) | accessdate=2008-02-27
More hits followed, including "Please Mr. Sun", " Such a Night ", "Walkin' My Baby Back Home", "A Sinner Am I", and "Yes Tonight Josephine". He had a UK Christmas #1 hit with " Just Walkin' in the Rain " in 1956. He hit again in 1957 with "You Don't Owe Me a Thing", which reached #10 in the Billboard charts. He was popular in the United Kingdom , breaking the record at the London Palladium formerly set by Frankie Laine .Citation needed|date=January 2008 In later years, he retained a loyal fan base overseas, particularly in Australia .cite news|url= http://news.google.com/newspapers? id=WbhVAAAAIBAJ& sjid=hLIDAAAAIBAJ& pg=6561,2615311& dq=perry+como& hl=en|title=Johnnie Doesn't Like His Own Voice|date=12 September 1954|publisher=The Sydney Morning Herald|accessdate=24 October 2010
Later career influences
Ray had a close relationship with journalist and television game show panelist Dorothy Kilgallen who gave a boost to his sagging American career during his engagement at the Tropicana Resort & Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada in 1965.cite book | last=Israel | first=Lee | title=Kilgallen | location=New York | publisher=Delacorte Press | year=1979 | pages=401–2| isbn=0440045223
In early 1969, Ray befriended Judy Garland , performing as her opening act during her last concerts in Copenhagen, Denmark and Malmo, Sweden . Ray was also the best man during Garland's wedding to nightclub manager Mickey Deans in London.cite web | author= | title=Mickey Deans: Drinking to Judy | url= http://www.jamd.com/search? text=%22mickey%20deans%22& partner=Google& epmid=3 | work=Jamd | publisher=Getty Images | accessdate=2008-03-04
Ray's American career revived in the early 1970s, with appearances on The Andy Williams Show in 1970 and The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson three times during 1972 and 1973. His personal manager Bill Franklin resigned in 1976 and cut off contact with the singer a few years later. His American revival turned out to be short-lived. He performed in small American venues such as El Camino College in 1987.cite news | author=Hawn, Jack | pages=6; Calendar Section | title=No Slowing Down For Mr. Emotion | work=Los Angeles Times | date=30 January 1987 | accessdate=2008-03-04 Australian, English and Scottish promoters booked him for their large venues as late as 1989, his last year of performing.
Some writers suggested that the reason American entertainment bookers and songwriters ignored him in the 1980s was because they simply did not know who he was, or what his sound was like.cite book | last=Baker | first=Glenn A | coauthors=Coupe, Stuart | title=The New Rock 'n Roll | location=Toronto | publisher=Sound & Vision | year=1984 | isbn=0920151000 His exposure during the new era of cable television was limited to a few seconds in Dexys Midnight Runners ' 1982 music video for " Come On Eileen ", using archival footage of Ray from 1954. The lyrics of the song say, "Poor old Johnnie Ray sounded sad upon the radio / he moved a million hearts in mono". http://www.lyricmania.com/save+ferris-come+on+eileen-lyric.html Lyricmania.com
Ray's other MTV video appearance was in Billy Idol 's 1986 "Don't Need a Gun", for which he was filmed in 1986 for an on-camera appearance. He is name-checked in the lyrics.
Ray is one of the cultural touchstones mentioned in the We_Didn%27t_Start_the_Fire#Historical_items_referred_to_in_the_song|first verse (concerning events from the late 1940s and early 1950s) of Billy Joel 's 1989 hit single " We Didn't Start the Fire ", between People's Republic of China|Red China and South Pacific (musical)|South Pacific . At the time of the song's release Ray was alive and details of his poor health were not public knowledge.
After Ray's death, he was name-check ed by Van Morrison in his duet with Tom Jones (singer)|Tom Jones entitled "Sometimes We Cry,"
Personal life
Ray was arrested twice for soliciting men for sex. He quietly pled guilty and paid a fine after the first arrest, in the restroom of the Stone Theatre American burlesque|burlesque house in Detroit, which was just prior to the release of his first record in 1951. The incident wasn't reported in newspapers, and very few people outside Detroit knew about it during his sudden rise to stardom in 1952. Ray went to trial following the second arrest in 1959, also in Detroit, for soliciting an undercover officer in a bar called the Brass Rail, which has been described variously as attracting traveling musicians and attracting gay people. He was found not guilty.
Despite her knowledge of the 1951 arrest, Marilyn Morrison, daughter of the owner of the Mocambo nightclub in West Hollywood, California , married Johnnie Ray in 1952. The wedding ceremony took place in New York a short time after he gave his first New York concert, which was at the Copacabana (nightclub)|Copacabana . New York mayor Vincent R. Impellitteri attended the ceremony, which got a lot of attention via the cover of the New York Daily News .cite news | author=Di Lorenzo, Josephine | title=Johnnie Ray Weds -- Bride Cries | url= | work=New York Daily News | date=26 May 1952 | accessdate= Morrison was aware of the singer's sexual orientation|sexuality from the start, telling a friend she would "straighten it out."cite web | author=Rapp, Linda | title=Ray, Johnnie (1927-1990) | url= http://www.glbtq.com/arts/ray_j.html | publisher=glbtq.com | date= | accessdate=2008-03-04 The couple separated in 1953 and divorced in 1954. A Ray biography published in 1994 claimed Morrison tried to contact Ray many times in the decades that followed their divorce, sometimes talking on the phone with Bill Franklin, who served as his manager between 1963 and 1976. Ray always instructed Franklin to get rid of her on the phone. The book also claims Morrison seemed very sad while attending a Los Angeles memorial service for Ray a month after his death (he was buried in Oregon), and she refused to talk to the biographer in the early 1990s.
Several writers have noted that the Ray-Morrison marriage occurred under false pretenses,cite book | last=Stephens | first=Vincent Lamar, PhD. | url= http://www.lib.umd.edu/drum/bitstream/1903/2444/1/umi-umd-2312.pdf | title=Queering the Textures of Rock and Roll History | location=College Park | publisher=University of Maryland | year=2005 | oclc=76833219|format=PDF and that Ray had a long-term relationship with his manager, Bill Franklin.cite book | last=Stern | first=Keith | url= http://books.google.com/books? id=zVKCL0xKTOAC | title=Queers in History | location=Morrisville, North Carolina | publisher=Lulu.com | year=2006 | isbn=1847283489 | accessdate=2008-03-04cite book | last=Whiteside | first=Jonny | title=Cry: The Johnnie Ray Story | location=New York | publisher=Barricade | year=1994 | isbn=1569800138 Ray also had a relationship with newspaper columnist Dorothy Kilgallen , whom he allegedly met for the first time during one of his two appearances as the mystery guest on '' What's My Line? ''. Ray told this story to Kilgallen biographer Lee Israel in 1976, at which time neither had access to the kinescopes of those live telecasts that date from August 22, 1954 http://www.tv.com/whatand039s-my-line/episode-221/episode/94489/summary.html? tag=ep_guide;summary Detailed description of "What's My Line? " telecast live on August 22, 1954 with Johnnie Ray as mystery guest http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=KC5krcuTmPg Kinescope of live telecast from August 22, 1954 preserved on YouTube and June 9, 1957. http://www.tv.com/whats-my-line/episode-366/episode/95752/summary.html Detailed description of "What's My Line? " telecast live on June 9, 1957 with Johnnie Ray as mystery guest http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=75wJ7ACDXiE Kinescope of live telecast from June 9, 1957 preserved on YouTube Kilgallen was a strong support for Ray during the solicitation trial in Detroit in December 1959, possibly communicating by telephone with the district attorney or judge. Ray's fate was decided by a jury composed entirely of older women, one of whom ran to Ray to console him when he fainted upon hearing the "not guilty" verdict.
Later years and death
Ray drank regularly and his alcoholism caught up with him in 1960, when he was hospitalized for tuberculosis . He recovered but continued drinking, and was diagnosed with cirrhosis at age fifty.cite news |author=Reynolds, Barrett |title=Johnnie Ray: Why I Cry for the Legend Who Should Have Been |url= http://www.retrospectmag.com/articles/2004/48-johnnie-ray.html | work=The Halcyon Weekly Press | date=June 2004 | accessdate=2008-03-04
On February 24, 1990, Ray died of liver failure at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles . He is buried at Hopewell Cemetery near Hopewell, Oregon .
For his contribution to the recording industry, Johnnie Ray has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6201 Hollywood Boulevard .
Partial discography
col-begincol-break 1951
" Cry (Churchill Kohlman song)|Cry " (with The Four Lads )
cquote|The mambo craze is passing and rhythm and blues will pass away too - the sooner the better as far as I'm concerned. NME - June 1955cite book | first= John | last= Tobler | year= 1992 | title= NME Rock 'N' Roll Years | edition= 1st | publisher= Reed International Books Ltd | location= London | page= 15 | id= CN 5585
References
Reflist|2
Further reading
cite book | last=Guinness | first= | edition=16th Edition | title=Guinness Book of British Hit Singles | location=London | publisher=Gullane | year=2003 | isbn=085112190X
Herr, Cheryl (2009) 'Roll-over-Beethoven: Johnnie Ray in context'. http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue? jid=PMU& volumeId=28& issueId=03 Popular Music vol. 28: 3, pp.& nbsp;323–340. Special issue of journal on popular music and disability.
cite book | last=Rice | first=Jo | title=The Guinness Book of 500 Number One Hits | location=Enfield, Middlesex | publisher=Guinness Superlatives | year=1982 | isbn=0851122507
External links
Portal|Biography
http://www.johnnieray.com/ The Johnnie Ray International Fan Club
http://www.tsimon.com/ray.htm Biography
IMDb name|0712877
Oregon Encyclopedia|johnnie_ray
Pop Chronicles|2|2
Persondata|NAME= Ray, Johnnie |ALTERNATIVE NAMES= Ray, John Alvin |SHORT DESCRIPTION= Singer, Songwriter |DATE OF BIRTH= January 10, 1927 |PLACE OF BIRTH= Hopewell, Oregon , United States |DATE OF DEATH= February 24, 1990 |PLACE OF DEATH= Los Angeles, California , United States DEFAULTSORT:Ray, Johnnie Category:1927 births Category:1990 deaths Category:Traditional pop music singers Category:American pop singers Category:American male singers Category:People from Portland, Oregon Category:People from Los Angeles, California Category:LGBT musicians from the United States Category:Deaf musicians Category:Columbia Records artists Category:Groove Records artists Category:Okeh Records artists Category:Liberty Records artists Category:People from Yamhill County, Oregon Category:Songwriters from Oregon Category:People from Dallas, Oregon Category:Cadence Records artists
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