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Patti Page

Clara Ann Fowler (November 8, 1927 – January 1, 2013), known professionally as Patti Page, was an American singer and actress. Primarily known for pop and country music, she was the top-charting female vocalist and best-selling female artist of the 1950s,[1] selling over 100 million records during a six-decade-long career.[2] She was often introduced as "the Singin' Rage, Miss Patti Page". New York WNEW disc-jockey William B. Williams introduced her as "A Page in my life called Patti".

Patti Page
Page in the 1950s
Background information
Birth nameClara Ann Fowler
Born(1927-11-08)November 8, 1927
Claremore, Oklahoma, U.S.
DiedJanuary 1, 2013(2013-01-01) (aged 85)
Encinitas, California, U.S.
GenresTraditional pop, country
Occupation(s)
  • Singer
  • actress
Instrument(s)Contralto vocals
Years active1946–2012
LabelsMercury, Columbia, Epic, Avco, Plantation
Websitewww.misspattipage.com

Page signed with Mercury Records in 1947, and became their first successful female artist, starting with 1948's "Confess". In 1950, she had her first million-selling single "With My Eyes Wide Open, I'm Dreaming", and eventually had 14 additional million-selling singles between 1950 and 1965.

Page's signature song, "Tennessee Waltz", was one of the biggest-selling singles of the 20th century, and is recognized today as one of the official songs of the state of Tennessee. It spent 13 weeks atop the Billboard's best-sellers list in 1950/51. Page had three additional number-one hit singles between 1950 and 1953, "All My Love (Bolero)", "I Went to Your Wedding", and "(How Much Is) That Doggie in the Window?".

Unlike most other pop singers, Page blended country music styles into many of her songs. As a result of this crossover appeal, many of Page's singles appeared on the Billboard Country Chart. In the 1970s, she shifted her style more toward country music and began having even more success on the country charts, ending up as one of the few vocalists to have charted in five separate decades.

With the rise of rock and roll in the 1950s, mainstream popular music record sales began to decline. Page was among the few pop singers who were able to maintain popularity, continuing to have hits well into the 1960s, with "Old Cape Cod", "Allegheny Moon", "A Poor Man's Roses (or a Rich Man's Gold)", and "Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte".

In 1997, Patti Page was inducted into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame. She was posthumously honored with the Lifetime Achievement Grammy Award in 2013.

Early life

Clara Ann Fowler was born on November 8, 1927, in Claremore, Oklahoma (some sources give Muskogee, Oklahoma)[1] into a large and poor family of 11 children (3 boys and 8 girls).[3][4] Her father, B.A. Fowler, worked on the MKT railroad, while her mother, Margaret, and older sisters picked cotton. As she recalled on television many years later, the family lived without electricity, so she could not read after dark. She was raised in Foraker, Hardy, Muskogee, and Avant, Oklahoma,[4][5] before attending Daniel Webster High School in Tulsa, from which she graduated in 1945.[6]

Fowler started her career as a singer with Al Clauser and his Oklahoma Outlaws at radio station KTUL in Tulsa, Oklahoma. At age 18, she became a featured performer on the station for a 15-minute radio program sponsored by the Page Milk Company.[7] As a nod to the show's sponsor, Fowler was referred to on the air as "Patti Page". In 1946, Jack Rael, a saxophone player and manager of the Jimmy Joy Band, came to Tulsa for a one-night stand. Rael heard Page on the radio, liked her voice, and asked her to join the band. After leaving the band, Rael became Page's personal manager.[8]

Page toured the United States with the Jimmy Joy Band in 1946. The following year the band traveled to Chicago, where she sang with a small group led by popular orchestra leader Benny Goodman. This led to Page getting picked up by Mercury Records.[1] She became Mercury's "girl singer".[3]

Music career

Pop success: 1946–1949

Page cut her first two discs ("Every So Often/What Every Woman Knows" and "There's A Man In My Life/The First Time I Kissed You") with the Eddie Getz and George Barnes Orchestras but they failed to chart.[9]

She found success with her third single ("Confess" b/w "Twelve O'Clock Flight"). The arrangement of "Confess" was meant to use a backing chorus, but Mercury would not pay for one since Page had not yet produced a charting single, so if she wanted additional singers she would have to hire them at her own expense. Instead, her manager Jack Rael decided to try an experiment. Bill Putnam, an engineer for Mercury Records, was able to overdub Page's voice by syncing the two master discs together—tape recording was not in use yet and this technique was difficult to pull off.[10][11] Thus, Page became the first pop artist to harmonize her own vocals on a recording. This gimmick got "Confess" to #12 on the Billboard.[1] This technique later was used on Page's biggest hit singles in the 1950s. Page had four more singles chart in 1948-49, with two ("So In Love" and "With My Eyes Wide Open, I'm Dreaming" reaching the top 15. Page also had a top 15 hit on the Billboard country chart in 1949 with "Money, Marbles, and Chalk". After the experiment of "Confess" worked, Page and Rael got more ambitious and began trying four part overdubs.

In 1950, Page had her first million-selling single "With My Eyes Wide Open, I'm Dreaming", another song where she harmonized her vocals. Because she was overdubbing her vocals, Page's name had to be listed on the recording credits as a group. According to one early 1950s chart, Page was credited as the Patti Page Quartet. In mid-1950, Page's single "All My Love (Bolero)" became her first #1 on the Billboard[1] spending five weeks there. That same year, she also had her first top-10 hit with "I Don't Care if the Sun Don't Shine", as well as the top-25 single "Back in Your Own Backyard". With this success, Page earned the privilege of releasing her first LP, the self-titled "Patti Page" which opened with "Confess" and included other of her singles from this period. She also released a Christmas album in 1951; this was reissued five years later with updated cover art on a 12" LP with a few new tracks to fill the run time out.

"Tennessee Waltz": 1950

The success of "Bolero" however was quickly eclipsed by what soon became Page's signature song. "Tennessee Waltz" was written in 1946 by Pee Wee King and Redd Stewart, and was recorded in 1947 by Pee Wee King and His Golden West Cowboys. Their original version made the country charts in 1948. The song was also a hit for Cowboy Copas around the same time. Page was introduced to the song by record producer Jerry Wexler, who suggested that she cover a recent R&B version by the Erskine Hawkins Orchestra. Page liked the song, and she recorded and released it as a single.

"Tennessee Waltz" became a blockbuster hit by complete accident—it was the B-side to "Boogie Woogie Santa Claus" which Mercury had intended to promote during the 1950 holiday season. The label intentionally put "Tennessee Waltz" on the disc to avoid drawing attention away from a planned Christmas hit, as they considered the song a throwaway with no hitmaking potential. To everyone's complete surprise, it went on to spend five weeks at #1 during December 1950-January 1951, while "Boogie Woogie Santa Claus" failed to chart at all and was quickly forgotten. "Tennessee Waltz" also became Page's second single to appear on the country charts, becoming her biggest hit there, reaching number two. The song later became one of the best-selling records of its era, selling 7 million copies in the early 1950s. "Tennessee Waltz" remains the biggest commercial success for the overdubbing technique, pioneered by producer Mitch Miller, which enabled Page to harmonize with herself.[11] "Tennessee Waltz" was the last song to sell one million copies of sheet music. The song was covered by several other singers during the next few months including Jo Stafford and Les Paul and Mary Ford.

The song was featured in the 1970 film Zabriskie Point and in the 1983 film The Right Stuff.[12]

Breakthrough: 1951–1965

 
Page with Frankie Laine, c. 1950s

In 1951, Page covered "Would I Love You (Love You, Love You)", which had been a hit for Doris Day. Page's version was a top-five hit that sold 1 million copies. The next single, "Mockin' Bird Hill", (a cover of the original by Les Paul and Mary Ford) was her fourth million seller. Page had three more top 10 hits on Billboard in 1951, starting with "Mister and Mississippi", which peaked at number eight; "And So to Sleep Again"; and "Detour", which had been recorded and made famous by Spade Cooley, Foy Willing, and Elton Britt. Page's version was the most popular and became her seventh million-selling single.[12] She also released her first studio album in 1951 titled Folk Song Favorites.

In 1952, Page had a third number-one hit with "I Went to Your Wedding", which spent two months at number one. Recorded in a country ballad style, the song was the B-side of "You Belong to Me", also a top-10 hit. "I Went to Your Wedding" was Page's eighth million-selling single in the United States. It displaced Jo Stafford's version of "You Belong to Me" at number one on Billboard's Best Seller chart.[1] She had continued success that year, with three more songs in the top 10, "Come What May", "Once in a While", and "Why Don't You Believe Me".

In 1953, the novelty tune "(How Much Is That) Doggie in the Window?" became Page's fourth number-one hit, selling over 1 million copies and staying on the chart for five months. The song included the sound of a dog barking, which made it popular with a younger audience. It became one of her best-loved songs, but in later years would often be lampooned by rock critics and used to ridicule the state of popular music in the 1950s just prior to rock-and-roll.[12] The song was written by novelty-tune specialist Bob Merrill. It was recorded by Page for the children's album Arfie Goes to School. It was also a UK hit and British singer Lita Roza performed a cover version that made the top 10 there.[13] She had a series of top-20 hits that year. "Changing Partners", a final single, reached the top five, peaking at number three, and staying on the charts for five months. The song was also a country melody, like many of Page's hits at the time.[12]

In 1954, Page had more chart hits, including "Cross Over the Bridge", which again overdubbed Page's vocals and peaked at number two. Other top-10 hits by Page that year included "Steam Heat" (from the Broadway musical The Pajama Game) and "Let Me Go Lover".[13] In 1955, Page had one chart single: "Croce di Oro".

Unlike most other pop singers of her time, Page was able to maintain success into the rock-and-roll era. She had three hits in 1956, including the number-two "Allegheny Moon". In 1957, she had major hits with "A Poor Man's Roses (or a Rich Man's Gold)" (recorded the same year by Patsy Cline) and the top-five hit "Old Cape Cod".

In 1956, Vic Schoen became Patti Page's musical director, producing her on a long string of hits that included "Mama from the Train", "Allegheny Moon", "Old Cape Cod", "Belonging to Someone", and "Left Right Out of Your Heart". Page and Schoen's most challenging project was a recording of Gordon Jenkins narrative-tone poem as Manhattan Tower (recorded September 1956). The album was a success both artistically and commercially, reaching number 18 on the Billboard LP chart, the highest ranking of any of her albums. Schoen's arrangements were more lively and jazzy than the original Jenkins arrangements. Schoen recalled, "Patti was an alto, but I pushed her to reach notes higher than she had sung before for this album. We always enjoyed working together." Page and Schoen continued their collaboration for many years, working together until 1999.

During the 1950s, Page made regular TV appearances, including The Ed Sullivan Show, The Bob Hope Specials, The Steve Allen Show, and The Dean Martin Show. This eventually led to Page having television specials of her own. She later had her own series, beginning with Scott Music Hall in the 1952–53 season and a syndicated series for Oldsmobile[14] in 1955, The Patti Page Show. However, this show only lasted one season, as did The Big Record (1957–58) and The Patti Page Olds Show, sponsored by Oldsmobile (1958–59). Page also began an acting career at this time, beginning with a role on Playhouse 90. Page made her movie debut in 1960 in Elmer Gantry.[14] She also recorded the theme song for Boys Night Out, in which she played the part of Joanne McIllenny.[15] In 1959, Page recorded the title song from the musical The Sound of Music for Mercury Records[16] on the same day that the musical opened on Broadway. The song on her TV show The Patti Page Olds Show helped to promote the Broadway show.[17]

The pop world was becoming less favorable to pre-rock singers by 1960 and it was also a weak time for the "established" ASCAP affiliate record labels such as Columbia, RCA, and Mercury, with indie and regional labels dominating pop during this era, so Page's chart hits dried up.[7] She did not chart again until 1961 with "You'll Answer to Me" and "Mom and Dad's Waltz". Page's last major chart hit was "Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte" from the film of the same name[14] starring Bette Davis and Olivia de Havilland. It peaked at number eight. It was her last top-10 hit (and her first since 1957)[13] and was nominated for a "Best Song" Oscar. She performed it at the 1965 Academy Awards.[18] She also recorded the song in Italian, Spanish, and German for foreign markets.[19]

Adult contemporary and country music: 1966–1982

Before releasing "Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte", Page signed with Columbia Records, where she remained until the end of the decade. She released a few studio albums for Columbia in the 1960s. In 1961, her singles began to chart on the Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks chart. Many of these singles became hits, peaking in the top 20, including cover versions of "You Can't Be True, Dear", "Gentle on My Mind", and "Little Green Apples" (the last being her final appearance on the Billboard). Page, who as an Oklahoma native was well-acquainted with country music, recorded many country songs over the years. Some of these were recorded for Columbia and were released as adult contemporary singles, including David Houston's "Almost Persuaded" and Tammy Wynette's "Stand by Your Man". With Page's viability on the pop charts diminishing as she got older and with a radically changed cultural climate in America during the late 1960s, she decided to focus solely on country recordings. In 1970 she left Columbia and came back to Mercury. In 1973, she returned to working with her former record producer Shelby Singleton.[13]

Working for Mercury, Columbia, and Epic in the 1970s, Page recorded a series of country singles, beginning with 1970's "I Wish I Had a Mommy Like You", which became a top-25 hit, followed by "Give Him Love", which had similar success. In 1971, she released the country music album I'd Rather Be Sorry for Mercury records. In 1973, a duet with country singer Tom T. Hall titled "Hello, We're Lonely" was a top-20 hit, reaching number 14 on the Billboard country chart.

In 1973, Page returned to Columbia Records' affiliate Epic Records. In 1974 and 1975, she released singles for Avco Records, including "I May Not Be Lovin' You" and "Less Than the Song", both of which were minor country hits. After a five-year hiatus, she recorded for Plantation Records in 1980. She had a top-40 hit with Plantation in 1981 titled "No Aces", followed by a series of minor country hits. In the early 1980s, she performed with major symphony orchestras in Cincinnati and Mexico City. .

Later career: 1983–2012

In 1986, Page and arranger Vic Schoen reunited for a stage show in Las Vegas.

In 1988, Page appeared at the Ballroom in New York, marking the first time that she had performed there in nearly 20 years. She received positive reviews from music critics.[13] In the 1990s, Page founded her own record label, C.A.F. Records, which released several records, including a 2003 children's album.[14]

In the early 1990s, Page moved to San Diego, California, and continued to perform live shows at venues across the country.

In 1998, the album Live at Carnegie Hall: The 50th Anniversary Concert was released. The album won Page a Grammy Award the following year for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance, which, despite her prolific career, was her first Grammy.[13]

In 1998, a sample of Patti Page's recording of "Old Cape Cod" formed the basis of Groove Armada's UK hit "At the River". The lines "If you're fond of sand dunes and salty air / Quaint little villages here and there..." sung in Page's multitracked close harmony, are repeated over and over, with the addition of synthesizer bass, slowed-down drums, and a bluesy trombone solo to produce a chill-out track. The success of this track introduced Page's music to another generation of listeners.

In 1999, Vic Schoen reunited with Page to record a CD for a Chinese label.

In 2000, she released the album Brand New Tennessee Waltz. Harmony vocals were provided by popular country stars, including Suzy Bogguss, Alison Krauss, Kathy Mattea, and Trisha Yearwood. The album was promoted at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee, in 2000.[20]

On October 4, 2001, Bob Baines, the mayor of Manchester, New Hampshire, declared the day "Patti Page Day" in the town. Miss Page was in Manchester to perform a sold-out concert at the Palace Theater to benefit Merrimack Valley Assistance Program.[21]

In 2004, she appeared on the PBS Special Magic Moments: The Best of 50s Pop and sang "Tennessee Waltz" and "Old Cape Cod". The DVD includes a backstage interview with Page.

In 2005, she performed a series of engagements at a theatre in Branson, Missouri, starting on September 12.[22]

Until shortly before her death, Page was the host of a weekly Sunday program on the Music of Your Life radio network. Jack White of the White Stripes and she were interviewed in January 2008 after the White Stripes had recorded Page's early 1950s hit "Conquest" on their 2007 studio album Icky Thump. Page and White were put together on the phone during the interview, talking to each other about their views on "Conquest".[23]

Page sang "Summer Me, Winter Me" for Michel Legrand's 50th-anniversary concert at the MGM Grand, and on the recording, it is evident she had forgotten the words.

Page continued to tour actively until September 2012, when she announced on her web page her retirement from performing for health reasons.[24]

Style

During the time of Page's greatest popularity (the late 1940s and 1950s), most of her traditional pop music contemporaries included jazz melodies in their songs. Page also incorporated jazz into some of her songs; however, on most of her recordings, Page favored a country music arrangement.

During the late 1940s, when Page recorded for Mercury Records, its top A&R man was Mitch Miller, who, despite having left Mercury for Columbia Records in 1950, produced most of Page's music. Miller found that the simple-structured melodies and story lines in country songs could be adapted to the pop market. Page, who was born in Oklahoma, felt comfortable using this idea.[11] Many of Page's more successful hits featured a country-music arrangement, including her signature song "Tennessee Waltz", as well as "I Went to Your Wedding" and "Changing Partners". Some of these singles charted on the Billboard country chart during the 1940s, '50s, and early '60s.

Many other artists were influenced by Patti Page, and incorporated country arrangements into their own songs, including The Andrews Sisters and Bing Crosby, who had a number-one hit on the country charts in the late 1940s with "Pistol Packin' Mama".

Personal life

Page was married three times, first to University of Wisconsin student Jack Skiba in May 1948. They moved to New York, but she asked for and received a no-fault divorce in Wisconsin within a year. Her next marriage was to Charles O'Curran, a choreographer, in 1956. O'Curran had been married to actress Betty Hutton. Page and O'Curran adopted a son, Danny, and a daughter, Kathleen. They divorced in 1972.

Page's last marriage was to Jerry Filiciotto in 1990.[25] The couple owned a maple syrup business named The Farm at Wood Hill in Bath, New Hampshire, and resided in Solana Beach, California.[14][26] Filiciotto died on April 18, 2009.

In his autobiography Lucky Me, published in 2011, former baseball player and front-office executive Eddie Robinson claims he dated Page before her second marriage.

Page's longtime collaborator arranger Vic Schoen once recalled, "She was one of the nicest and most accommodating singers I've ever worked with." Schoen and she remained close friends and spoke regularly until his death in 2000.

Death

Page died on January 1, 2013, at the Seacrest Village Retirement Community in Encinitas, California,[27] at the age of 85;[28] she had been suffering from heart and lung disease. She was buried at El Camino Memorial Park in San Diego.[29]

Discography

Partial filmography

Television
Film
  • Elmer Gantry (1960) as Sister Rachel
  • Dondi (1961) as Liz
  • Blue Hawaii (1961) as Woman Paddling Canoe Near Hotel (uncredited)
  • Boys' Night Out (1962) as Joanne McIllenny
  • 2004: The Patti Page Video Songbook[30]
  • 2004: Patti Page – Sings the Hits
  • 2005: In Concert Series: Patti Page

See also

Bibliography

  • Once Upon a Dream: A Personal Chat with All Teenagers (1960)
  • This Is My Song: A Memoir – Patti Page with Skip Press (2009)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Bush, John. "Patti Page biography". Allmusic. Retrieved July 23, 2008.
  2. ^ "Patti Page was a 'Singing Rage' in a phenomenal six-decade career". South Coast Today. February 17, 1999. Retrieved July 23, 2008.
  3. ^ a b . Corporate Artists.com. Archived from the original on June 29, 2003. Retrieved July 23, 2008.
  4. ^ a b 1930 US Census. Source Citation: Year: 1930; Census Place: Foraker, Osage, Oklahoma; Roll: 1922; Page: 1A; Enumeration District: 19; Image: 1054.0; FHL microfilm: 2341656.
  5. ^ "OETA in Depth interview with Patti Page". YouTube. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  6. ^ "Patti Page". Tulsa World. September 21, 1997. Retrieved March 30, 2009.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ a b "Patti Page biography". Country Music Television.
  8. ^ . Verve Music Group.com. Archived from the original on September 6, 2005. Retrieved July 23, 2008.
  9. ^ Patti Page, The Singles 1946-1952, CD A: 1946-1948, JSP Records, JSP2301(A), 2009.
  10. ^ "Singer Patti Page dies at 85". January 3, 2013.
  11. ^ a b c "Contemporary musicians – Patti Page biography". Contemporary Musicians. End Notes.com. Retrieved July 23, 2008.
  12. ^ a b c d . Earthlink.com. Archived from the original on October 16, 2011. Retrieved July 23, 2008.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Biography – Patti Page oldies.com; retrieved 7-23-08.
  14. ^ a b c d e Patti Page profile NNDB.com; retrieved 7-23-08.
  15. ^ Patti Page appearances IMDb.com; retrieved 7-23-08.
  16. ^ "Patti Page – 'The Sound Of Music' / 'Little Donkey'", Discogs.com, accessed December 8, 2015. The song debuted at No. 99 on the Billboard Hot 100. "Hot 100 Ads 16", The Billboard, December 28, 1959, p. 5, accessed December 8, 2015
  17. ^ "Cover versions of The Sound of Music by Patti Page - SecondHandSongs". secondhandsongs.com.
  18. ^ "Lifetime Achievement Award: Patti Page". January 30, 2013.
  19. ^ Patti Page - Topic (January 18, 2017). "Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte (German Version)". Archived from the original on December 21, 2021 – via YouTube.
  20. ^ In Her First Ryman Concert, Patti Page Debuts New Album, Sings Her Classics Country Music Television News & Updates for Patti Page; retrieved 7-23-08.
  21. ^ Interview with Patti Page Classic Bands.com; retrieved 7-23-08.
  22. ^ Patti Page Accepts Six-Week Branson Residency Country Music Television News & Updates; retrieved 7-23-08.
  23. ^ "Jack White, Patti Page share a 'Conquest' and a vision". USA Today. January 1, 2008. Retrieved July 23, 2008.
  24. ^ Miss Patti Page – Appearances 2017-06-26 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 01-03-2012.
  25. ^ Bernard Weinraub,"Patti Page, Proving That Simple Songs Endure", The New York Times, August 12, 2003.
  26. ^ "Jerome J. Filiciotto"[permanent dead link], The Bridge Weekly Sho-case (Woodsville, New Hampshire), April 30, 2009 (retrieved May 6, 2009).
  27. ^ Villasenor, David (July 22, 2012). "Singer Patti Page Dead at 85 | NBC Southern California". NBC Los Angeles. Retrieved January 2, 2013.
  28. ^ "Patti Page". Telegraph. January 3, 2013. Archived from the original on January 12, 2022. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
  29. ^ Stine, Rachel (January 10, 2013). "Friends recall fond memories of singer Patti Page". Thecoastnews.com.
  30. ^ . View.com. Archived from the original on February 23, 2012. Retrieved December 21, 2012.

External links

  • Official website
  • Patti Page at IMDb
  • Interview with Patti Page
  • Pattie Page Relatives Preserve Her Life on YouTube, from Hatteberg's People on KAKE TV news
  • Patti Page Interview NAMM Oral History Library (1995)

patti, page, clara, fowler, november, 1927, january, 2013, known, professionally, american, singer, actress, primarily, known, country, music, charting, female, vocalist, best, selling, female, artist, 1950s, selling, over, million, records, during, decade, lo. Clara Ann Fowler November 8 1927 January 1 2013 known professionally as Patti Page was an American singer and actress Primarily known for pop and country music she was the top charting female vocalist and best selling female artist of the 1950s 1 selling over 100 million records during a six decade long career 2 She was often introduced as the Singin Rage Miss Patti Page New York WNEW disc jockey William B Williams introduced her as A Page in my life called Patti Patti PagePage in the 1950sBackground informationBirth nameClara Ann FowlerBorn 1927 11 08 November 8 1927Claremore Oklahoma U S DiedJanuary 1 2013 2013 01 01 aged 85 Encinitas California U S GenresTraditional pop countryOccupation s SingeractressInstrument s Contralto vocalsYears active1946 2012LabelsMercury Columbia Epic Avco PlantationWebsitewww misspattipage comPatti PageEducationWebster High SchoolKnown forTennessee WaltzAll My Love Bolero I Went to Your Wedding How Much Is That Doggie in the Window Old Cape CodAllegheny MoonPage signed with Mercury Records in 1947 and became their first successful female artist starting with 1948 s Confess In 1950 she had her first million selling single With My Eyes Wide Open I m Dreaming and eventually had 14 additional million selling singles between 1950 and 1965 Page s signature song Tennessee Waltz was one of the biggest selling singles of the 20th century and is recognized today as one of the official songs of the state of Tennessee It spent 13 weeks atop the Billboard s best sellers list in 1950 51 Page had three additional number one hit singles between 1950 and 1953 All My Love Bolero I Went to Your Wedding and How Much Is That Doggie in the Window Unlike most other pop singers Page blended country music styles into many of her songs As a result of this crossover appeal many of Page s singles appeared on the Billboard Country Chart In the 1970s she shifted her style more toward country music and began having even more success on the country charts ending up as one of the few vocalists to have charted in five separate decades With the rise of rock and roll in the 1950s mainstream popular music record sales began to decline Page was among the few pop singers who were able to maintain popularity continuing to have hits well into the 1960s with Old Cape Cod Allegheny Moon A Poor Man s Roses or a Rich Man s Gold and Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte In 1997 Patti Page was inducted into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame She was posthumously honored with the Lifetime Achievement Grammy Award in 2013 Contents 1 Early life 2 Music career 2 1 Pop success 1946 1949 2 2 Tennessee Waltz 1950 2 3 Breakthrough 1951 1965 2 4 Adult contemporary and country music 1966 1982 2 5 Later career 1983 2012 3 Style 4 Personal life 5 Death 6 Discography 7 Partial filmography 8 See also 9 Bibliography 10 References 11 External linksEarly life EditClara Ann Fowler was born on November 8 1927 in Claremore Oklahoma some sources give Muskogee Oklahoma 1 into a large and poor family of 11 children 3 boys and 8 girls 3 4 Her father B A Fowler worked on the MKT railroad while her mother Margaret and older sisters picked cotton As she recalled on television many years later the family lived without electricity so she could not read after dark She was raised in Foraker Hardy Muskogee and Avant Oklahoma 4 5 before attending Daniel Webster High School in Tulsa from which she graduated in 1945 6 Fowler started her career as a singer with Al Clauser and his Oklahoma Outlaws at radio station KTUL in Tulsa Oklahoma At age 18 she became a featured performer on the station for a 15 minute radio program sponsored by the Page Milk Company 7 As a nod to the show s sponsor Fowler was referred to on the air as Patti Page In 1946 Jack Rael a saxophone player and manager of the Jimmy Joy Band came to Tulsa for a one night stand Rael heard Page on the radio liked her voice and asked her to join the band After leaving the band Rael became Page s personal manager 8 Page toured the United States with the Jimmy Joy Band in 1946 The following year the band traveled to Chicago where she sang with a small group led by popular orchestra leader Benny Goodman This led to Page getting picked up by Mercury Records 1 She became Mercury s girl singer 3 Music career EditSee also Patti Page discography Pop success 1946 1949 Edit Page cut her first two discs Every So Often What Every Woman Knows and There s A Man In My Life The First Time I Kissed You with the Eddie Getz and George Barnes Orchestras but they failed to chart 9 She found success with her third single Confess b w Twelve O Clock Flight The arrangement of Confess was meant to use a backing chorus but Mercury would not pay for one since Page had not yet produced a charting single so if she wanted additional singers she would have to hire them at her own expense Instead her manager Jack Rael decided to try an experiment Bill Putnam an engineer for Mercury Records was able to overdub Page s voice by syncing the two master discs together tape recording was not in use yet and this technique was difficult to pull off 10 11 Thus Page became the first pop artist to harmonize her own vocals on a recording This gimmick got Confess to 12 on the Billboard 1 This technique later was used on Page s biggest hit singles in the 1950s Page had four more singles chart in 1948 49 with two So In Love and With My Eyes Wide Open I m Dreaming reaching the top 15 Page also had a top 15 hit on the Billboard country chart in 1949 with Money Marbles and Chalk After the experiment of Confess worked Page and Rael got more ambitious and began trying four part overdubs In 1950 Page had her first million selling single With My Eyes Wide Open I m Dreaming another song where she harmonized her vocals Because she was overdubbing her vocals Page s name had to be listed on the recording credits as a group According to one early 1950s chart Page was credited as the Patti Page Quartet In mid 1950 Page s single All My Love Bolero became her first 1 on the Billboard 1 spending five weeks there That same year she also had her first top 10 hit with I Don t Care if the Sun Don t Shine as well as the top 25 single Back in Your Own Backyard With this success Page earned the privilege of releasing her first LP the self titled Patti Page which opened with Confess and included other of her singles from this period She also released a Christmas album in 1951 this was reissued five years later with updated cover art on a 12 LP with a few new tracks to fill the run time out Tennessee Waltz 1950 Edit The success of Bolero however was quickly eclipsed by what soon became Page s signature song Tennessee Waltz was written in 1946 by Pee Wee King and Redd Stewart and was recorded in 1947 by Pee Wee King and His Golden West Cowboys Their original version made the country charts in 1948 The song was also a hit for Cowboy Copas around the same time Page was introduced to the song by record producer Jerry Wexler who suggested that she cover a recent R amp B version by the Erskine Hawkins Orchestra Page liked the song and she recorded and released it as a single Tennessee Waltz became a blockbuster hit by complete accident it was the B side to Boogie Woogie Santa Claus which Mercury had intended to promote during the 1950 holiday season The label intentionally put Tennessee Waltz on the disc to avoid drawing attention away from a planned Christmas hit as they considered the song a throwaway with no hitmaking potential To everyone s complete surprise it went on to spend five weeks at 1 during December 1950 January 1951 while Boogie Woogie Santa Claus failed to chart at all and was quickly forgotten Tennessee Waltz also became Page s second single to appear on the country charts becoming her biggest hit there reaching number two The song later became one of the best selling records of its era selling 7 million copies in the early 1950s Tennessee Waltz remains the biggest commercial success for the overdubbing technique pioneered by producer Mitch Miller which enabled Page to harmonize with herself 11 Tennessee Waltz was the last song to sell one million copies of sheet music The song was covered by several other singers during the next few months including Jo Stafford and Les Paul and Mary Ford The song was featured in the 1970 film Zabriskie Point and in the 1983 film The Right Stuff 12 Breakthrough 1951 1965 Edit Page with Frankie Laine c 1950s In 1951 Page covered Would I Love You Love You Love You which had been a hit for Doris Day Page s version was a top five hit that sold 1 million copies The next single Mockin Bird Hill a cover of the original by Les Paul and Mary Ford was her fourth million seller Page had three more top 10 hits on Billboard in 1951 starting with Mister and Mississippi which peaked at number eight And So to Sleep Again and Detour which had been recorded and made famous by Spade Cooley Foy Willing and Elton Britt Page s version was the most popular and became her seventh million selling single 12 She also released her first studio album in 1951 titled Folk Song Favorites In 1952 Page had a third number one hit with I Went to Your Wedding which spent two months at number one Recorded in a country ballad style the song was the B side of You Belong to Me also a top 10 hit I Went to Your Wedding was Page s eighth million selling single in the United States It displaced Jo Stafford s version of You Belong to Me at number one on Billboard s Best Seller chart 1 She had continued success that year with three more songs in the top 10 Come What May Once in a While and Why Don t You Believe Me In 1953 the novelty tune How Much Is That Doggie in the Window became Page s fourth number one hit selling over 1 million copies and staying on the chart for five months The song included the sound of a dog barking which made it popular with a younger audience It became one of her best loved songs but in later years would often be lampooned by rock critics and used to ridicule the state of popular music in the 1950s just prior to rock and roll 12 The song was written by novelty tune specialist Bob Merrill It was recorded by Page for the children s album Arfie Goes to School It was also a UK hit and British singer Lita Roza performed a cover version that made the top 10 there 13 She had a series of top 20 hits that year Changing Partners a final single reached the top five peaking at number three and staying on the charts for five months The song was also a country melody like many of Page s hits at the time 12 In 1954 Page had more chart hits including Cross Over the Bridge which again overdubbed Page s vocals and peaked at number two Other top 10 hits by Page that year included Steam Heat from the Broadway musical The Pajama Game and Let Me Go Lover 13 In 1955 Page had one chart single Croce di Oro Unlike most other pop singers of her time Page was able to maintain success into the rock and roll era She had three hits in 1956 including the number two Allegheny Moon In 1957 she had major hits with A Poor Man s Roses or a Rich Man s Gold recorded the same year by Patsy Cline and the top five hit Old Cape Cod Old Cape Cod source source Old Cape Cod 1957 Page overdubbed her own vocals illustrated by the tight harmonies in this sample Problems playing this file See media help In 1956 Vic Schoen became Patti Page s musical director producing her on a long string of hits that included Mama from the Train Allegheny Moon Old Cape Cod Belonging to Someone and Left Right Out of Your Heart Page and Schoen s most challenging project was a recording of Gordon Jenkins narrative tone poem as Manhattan Tower recorded September 1956 The album was a success both artistically and commercially reaching number 18 on the Billboard LP chart the highest ranking of any of her albums Schoen s arrangements were more lively and jazzy than the original Jenkins arrangements Schoen recalled Patti was an alto but I pushed her to reach notes higher than she had sung before for this album We always enjoyed working together Page and Schoen continued their collaboration for many years working together until 1999 During the 1950s Page made regular TV appearances including The Ed Sullivan Show The Bob Hope Specials The Steve Allen Show and The Dean Martin Show This eventually led to Page having television specials of her own She later had her own series beginning with Scott Music Hall in the 1952 53 season and a syndicated series for Oldsmobile 14 in 1955 The Patti Page Show However this show only lasted one season as did The Big Record 1957 58 and The Patti Page Olds Show sponsored by Oldsmobile 1958 59 Page also began an acting career at this time beginning with a role on Playhouse 90 Page made her movie debut in 1960 in Elmer Gantry 14 She also recorded the theme song for Boys Night Out in which she played the part of Joanne McIllenny 15 In 1959 Page recorded the title song from the musical The Sound of Music for Mercury Records 16 on the same day that the musical opened on Broadway The song on her TV show The Patti Page Olds Show helped to promote the Broadway show 17 The pop world was becoming less favorable to pre rock singers by 1960 and it was also a weak time for the established ASCAP affiliate record labels such as Columbia RCA and Mercury with indie and regional labels dominating pop during this era so Page s chart hits dried up 7 She did not chart again until 1961 with You ll Answer to Me and Mom and Dad s Waltz Page s last major chart hit was Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte from the film of the same name 14 starring Bette Davis and Olivia de Havilland It peaked at number eight It was her last top 10 hit and her first since 1957 13 and was nominated for a Best Song Oscar She performed it at the 1965 Academy Awards 18 She also recorded the song in Italian Spanish and German for foreign markets 19 Adult contemporary and country music 1966 1982 Edit Before releasing Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte Page signed with Columbia Records where she remained until the end of the decade She released a few studio albums for Columbia in the 1960s In 1961 her singles began to chart on the Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks chart Many of these singles became hits peaking in the top 20 including cover versions of You Can t Be True Dear Gentle on My Mind and Little Green Apples the last being her final appearance on the Billboard Page who as an Oklahoma native was well acquainted with country music recorded many country songs over the years Some of these were recorded for Columbia and were released as adult contemporary singles including David Houston s Almost Persuaded and Tammy Wynette s Stand by Your Man With Page s viability on the pop charts diminishing as she got older and with a radically changed cultural climate in America during the late 1960s she decided to focus solely on country recordings In 1970 she left Columbia and came back to Mercury In 1973 she returned to working with her former record producer Shelby Singleton 13 Working for Mercury Columbia and Epic in the 1970s Page recorded a series of country singles beginning with 1970 s I Wish I Had a Mommy Like You which became a top 25 hit followed by Give Him Love which had similar success In 1971 she released the country music album I d Rather Be Sorry for Mercury records In 1973 a duet with country singer Tom T Hall titled Hello We re Lonely was a top 20 hit reaching number 14 on the Billboard country chart In 1973 Page returned to Columbia Records affiliate Epic Records In 1974 and 1975 she released singles for Avco Records including I May Not Be Lovin You and Less Than the Song both of which were minor country hits After a five year hiatus she recorded for Plantation Records in 1980 She had a top 40 hit with Plantation in 1981 titled No Aces followed by a series of minor country hits In the early 1980s she performed with major symphony orchestras in Cincinnati and Mexico City Later career 1983 2012 Edit In 1986 Page and arranger Vic Schoen reunited for a stage show in Las Vegas In 1988 Page appeared at the Ballroom in New York marking the first time that she had performed there in nearly 20 years She received positive reviews from music critics 13 In the 1990s Page founded her own record label C A F Records which released several records including a 2003 children s album 14 In the early 1990s Page moved to San Diego California and continued to perform live shows at venues across the country In 1998 the album Live at Carnegie Hall The 50th Anniversary Concert was released The album won Page a Grammy Award the following year for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance which despite her prolific career was her first Grammy 13 In 1998 a sample of Patti Page s recording of Old Cape Cod formed the basis of Groove Armada s UK hit At the River The lines If you re fond of sand dunes and salty air Quaint little villages here and there sung in Page s multitracked close harmony are repeated over and over with the addition of synthesizer bass slowed down drums and a bluesy trombone solo to produce a chill out track The success of this track introduced Page s music to another generation of listeners In 1999 Vic Schoen reunited with Page to record a CD for a Chinese label In 2000 she released the album Brand New Tennessee Waltz Harmony vocals were provided by popular country stars including Suzy Bogguss Alison Krauss Kathy Mattea and Trisha Yearwood The album was promoted at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville Tennessee in 2000 20 On October 4 2001 Bob Baines the mayor of Manchester New Hampshire declared the day Patti Page Day in the town Miss Page was in Manchester to perform a sold out concert at the Palace Theater to benefit Merrimack Valley Assistance Program 21 In 2004 she appeared on the PBS Special Magic Moments The Best of 50s Pop and sang Tennessee Waltz and Old Cape Cod The DVD includes a backstage interview with Page In 2005 she performed a series of engagements at a theatre in Branson Missouri starting on September 12 22 Until shortly before her death Page was the host of a weekly Sunday program on the Music of Your Life radio network Jack White of the White Stripes and she were interviewed in January 2008 after the White Stripes had recorded Page s early 1950s hit Conquest on their 2007 studio album Icky Thump Page and White were put together on the phone during the interview talking to each other about their views on Conquest 23 Page sang Summer Me Winter Me for Michel Legrand s 50th anniversary concert at the MGM Grand and on the recording it is evident she had forgotten the words Page continued to tour actively until September 2012 when she announced on her web page her retirement from performing for health reasons 24 Style EditDuring the time of Page s greatest popularity the late 1940s and 1950s most of her traditional pop music contemporaries included jazz melodies in their songs Page also incorporated jazz into some of her songs however on most of her recordings Page favored a country music arrangement During the late 1940s when Page recorded for Mercury Records its top A amp R man was Mitch Miller who despite having left Mercury for Columbia Records in 1950 produced most of Page s music Miller found that the simple structured melodies and story lines in country songs could be adapted to the pop market Page who was born in Oklahoma felt comfortable using this idea 11 Many of Page s more successful hits featured a country music arrangement including her signature song Tennessee Waltz as well as I Went to Your Wedding and Changing Partners Some of these singles charted on the Billboard country chart during the 1940s 50s and early 60s Many other artists were influenced by Patti Page and incorporated country arrangements into their own songs including The Andrews Sisters and Bing Crosby who had a number one hit on the country charts in the late 1940s with Pistol Packin Mama Personal life EditPage was married three times first to University of Wisconsin student Jack Skiba in May 1948 They moved to New York but she asked for and received a no fault divorce in Wisconsin within a year Her next marriage was to Charles O Curran a choreographer in 1956 O Curran had been married to actress Betty Hutton Page and O Curran adopted a son Danny and a daughter Kathleen They divorced in 1972 Page s last marriage was to Jerry Filiciotto in 1990 25 The couple owned a maple syrup business named The Farm at Wood Hill in Bath New Hampshire and resided in Solana Beach California 14 26 Filiciotto died on April 18 2009 In his autobiography Lucky Me published in 2011 former baseball player and front office executive Eddie Robinson claims he dated Page before her second marriage Page s longtime collaborator arranger Vic Schoen once recalled She was one of the nicest and most accommodating singers I ve ever worked with Schoen and she remained close friends and spoke regularly until his death in 2000 Death EditPage died on January 1 2013 at the Seacrest Village Retirement Community in Encinitas California 27 at the age of 85 28 she had been suffering from heart and lung disease She was buried at El Camino Memorial Park in San Diego 29 Discography EditMain article Patti Page discography See also List of songs recorded by Patti PagePartial filmography EditTelevisionPatti Page s Music Hall CBS 1952 1953 The Patti Page Show syndicated by Screen Gems 1955 56 78 15 minute episodes which were edited into 31 half hour episodes The Big Record Show CBS 1957 1958 The Patti Page Oldsmobile Show ABC 1958 1959 What s My Line CBS September 22 1957 Episode 381 Season 9 Ep 4 Mystery Guest Appointment with Adventure Paris Venture CBS February 26 1956 The United States Steel Hour Upbeat CBS 1957 FilmElmer Gantry 1960 as Sister Rachel Dondi 1961 as Liz Blue Hawaii 1961 as Woman Paddling Canoe Near Hotel uncredited Boys Night Out 1962 as Joanne McIllenny 2004 The Patti Page Video Songbook 30 2004 Patti Page Sings the Hits 2005 In Concert Series Patti PageSee also EditList of the best selling music artists List of popular music performersBibliography EditOnce Upon a Dream A Personal Chat with All Teenagers 1960 This Is My Song A Memoir Patti Page with Skip Press 2009 References Edit a b c d e f Bush John Patti Page biography Allmusic Retrieved July 23 2008 Patti Page was a Singing Rage in a phenomenal six decade career South Coast Today February 17 1999 Retrieved July 23 2008 a b Patti Page biography Corporate Artists com Archived from the original on June 29 2003 Retrieved July 23 2008 a b 1930 US Census Source Citation Year 1930 Census Place Foraker Osage Oklahoma Roll 1922 Page 1A Enumeration District 19 Image 1054 0 FHL microfilm 2341656 OETA in Depth interview with Patti Page YouTube Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved April 28 2010 Patti Page Tulsa World September 21 1997 Retrieved March 30 2009 permanent dead link a b Patti Page biography Country Music Television Biography Patti Page Verve Music Group com Archived from the original on September 6 2005 Retrieved July 23 2008 Patti Page The Singles 1946 1952 CD A 1946 1948 JSP Records JSP2301 A 2009 Singer Patti Page dies at 85 January 3 2013 a b c Contemporary musicians Patti Page biography Contemporary Musicians End Notes com Retrieved July 23 2008 a b c d Patti Page The Singing Rage Earthlink com Archived from the original on October 16 2011 Retrieved July 23 2008 a b c d e f Biography Patti Page oldies com retrieved 7 23 08 a b c d e Patti Page profile NNDB com retrieved 7 23 08 Patti Page appearances IMDb com retrieved 7 23 08 Patti Page The Sound Of Music Little Donkey Discogs com accessed December 8 2015 The song debuted at No 99 on the Billboard Hot 100 Hot 100 Ads 16 The Billboard December 28 1959 p 5 accessed December 8 2015 Cover versions of The Sound of Music by Patti Page SecondHandSongs secondhandsongs com Lifetime Achievement Award Patti Page January 30 2013 Patti Page Topic January 18 2017 Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte German Version Archived from the original on December 21 2021 via YouTube In Her First Ryman Concert Patti Page Debuts New Album Sings Her Classics Country Music Television News amp Updates for Patti Page retrieved 7 23 08 Interview with Patti Page Classic Bands com retrieved 7 23 08 Patti Page Accepts Six Week Branson Residency Country Music Television News amp Updates retrieved 7 23 08 Jack White Patti Page share a Conquest and a vision USA Today January 1 2008 Retrieved July 23 2008 Miss Patti Page Appearances Archived 2017 06 26 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 01 03 2012 Bernard Weinraub Patti Page Proving That Simple Songs Endure The New York Times August 12 2003 Jerome J Filiciotto permanent dead link The Bridge Weekly Sho case Woodsville New Hampshire April 30 2009 retrieved May 6 2009 Villasenor David July 22 2012 Singer Patti Page Dead at 85 NBC Southern California NBC Los Angeles Retrieved January 2 2013 Patti Page Telegraph January 3 2013 Archived from the original on January 12 2022 Retrieved May 19 2013 Stine Rachel January 10 2013 Friends recall fond memories of singer Patti Page Thecoastnews com Patti Page DVD Patti Page Music Video DVD Compilation Singing Rage DVD View com Archived from the original on February 23 2012 Retrieved December 21 2012 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Patti Page Official website Patti Page at IMDb Interview with Patti Page Songwriters Hall of Fame article on Patti Page Pattie Page Relatives Preserve Her Life on YouTube from Hatteberg s People on KAKE TV news Patti Page Interview NAMM Oral History Library 1995 Portal United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Patti Page amp oldid 1143410923, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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