Alma Cogan
This article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience.(December 2012) |
Alma Cogan | |
---|---|
Birth name | Alma Angela Cohen |
Born | Whitechapel, East London, England | 19 May 1932
Died | 26 October 1966 | (aged 34)
Genres | Traditional pop |
Years active | 1952–1966 |
Labels | HMV, EMI Columbia |
Website | Alma Cogan International Fan Club |
Alma Cogan (19 May 1932 – 26 October 1966)[1] was an English singer of traditional pop music in the 1950s and early 1960s. Dubbed "The Girl With the Laugh/Giggle/Chuckle In Her Voice",[2] she was the highest paid British female entertainer of her era. Throughout the mid-1950s, she was the most consistently successful female singer in the UK.[3]
Childhood, early musical career
She was born Alma Angela Cohen in Whitechapel, London, of Russian-Romanian Jewish descent.[4] Her father's family, the Kogins, arrived in England from Russia, while her mother’s family were refugees from Romania.[5] Cogan's parents Mark and Fay Cohen had another daughter, the actress Sandra Caron[6] and one son. Mark's work as a haberdasher entailed frequent relocations. One of Cogan's early homes was over his shop in Worthing, Sussex.
Although Jewish, she attended St Joseph's Convent School in Reading.[7] Her father was a singer, but it was Cogan's mother who had show business aspirations for both her daughters (she had named Cogan after silent screen star Alma Taylor). Cogan first performed in public at a charity show at the Palace Theatre in Reading, and at eleven, competed in the "Sussex Queen of Song" contest held at a Brighton hotel, winning a prize of five pounds.
At fourteen, she was recommended by Vera Lynn for a variety show at the Grand Theatre in Brighton. At sixteen, she was told by bandleader Ted Heath "You've got a good voice, but you're far too young for this business. Come back in five years time"; Heath would later say: "'Letting her go was one of the biggest mistakes of my life."[8] But Cogan found work singing at tea dances, while also studying dress design at Worthing Art College, and was soon appearing in the musical High Button Shoes and a revue Sauce Tartare.[9] In 1949, she became resident singer at the Cumberland Hotel, where she was spotted by Walter Ridley of HMV, who became her coach.
'Girl with the giggle'
Cogan's first release was "To Be Worthy Of You"/"Would You" recorded on her twentieth birthday.[citation needed] This led to her appearing regularly on the BBC's radio show Gently Bentley, and then becoming the vocalist for Take It From Here.
In 1953, while recording "If I Had A Golden Umbrella", she broke into a giggle, and then played up the effect on later recordings. Soon she was dubbed "The girl with the giggle in her voice".
Many of Cogan's recordings would be covers of US hits, notably by Rosemary Clooney, Teresa Brewer, Georgia Gibbs, Joni James and Dinah Shore. One of these covers, Bell Bottom Blues became her first hit, reaching #4 on 3 April 1954.[10] Cogan would appear in the UK Singles Chart eighteen times in the 1950's, with "Dreamboat" reaching #1. Other hits from this period include "I Can't Tell a Waltz from a Tango", Why Do Fools Fall in Love, Sugartime and The Story of My Life. Cogan's first album I Love to Sing was released in 1958.
Cogan was one of the first UK record artists to appear frequently on Television, where her powerful voice could be showcased along with her bubbly personality and dramatic costumes. These hooped skirts with sequins and figure-hugging tops were reputedly designed by herself and never worn twice. Cliff Richard recalls: "My first impression of her was definitely frocks – I kept thinking, how many can this woman have? Almost every song had a different costume. The skirts seemed to be so wide – I don't know where they hung them up!"[11][12] Cogan topped the annual NME reader's poll as "Outstanding British Female Singer" four times between 1956 and 1960.
Too square for the Sixties
The UK musical revolution of the 1960's, symbolised by the rise of the Beatles, suddenly made Cogan unfashionable. John Lennon's wife Cynthia recalled "John and I had thought of Alma [as] out of date and unhip." This view was confirmed by Lionel Blair in the 1991 BBC documentary Alma Cogan: The Girl with the Giggle in Her Voice, when he said she was perceived as 'square'. Her highest 60's chart ranking would be #26 with We Got Love, and most of her successes at this time were abroad, notably in Sweden and Japan, as she was good at singing in foreign languages. Singer Eddie Grassham told the BBC that Cogan was especially disappointed that her 1963 cover of The Exciters' US hit "Tell Him" did not return her to the UK charts.
Still she remained a popular figure on the show-business scene, being offered the part of Nancy in Oliver!, appearing on the teenage hit-show Ready Steady Go!, and headlining at the Talk of the Town.
Illness, early death
Cogan tried to update her image by recording some Beatles numbers and a spin-off from The Man from U.N.C.L.E. ("Love Ya Illya"). But by 1965, record producers were becoming dissatisfied with Cogan's work, and it was clear that her health was failing. Her friend and colleague Anne Shelton attributed this decline to some 'highly experimental' injections she took to lose weight, claiming that Cogan was never well again after that.[13]
In early 1966, Cogan embarked on a series of club dates in the north of England, but collapsed after two performances and returned to London where she was treated for stomach cancer.[12] In August, she made her final TV appearance on the guest-spot of International Cabaret. The next month, she collapsed while touring Sweden to promote Hello Baby, recorded exclusively for the Swedish market. At London's Middlesex Hospital, she succumbed to ovarian cancer on 26 October at the age of 34.
In deference to family custom, her death was observed with traditional Hebraic rites, with burial at Bushey Jewish Cemetery in Hertfordshire.
Personal life
Cogan lived with her widowed mother in Kensington High Street (44 Stafford Court), a lavishly-decorated ground-floor flat, which became a legendary party-venue. Regular visitors included Princess Margaret, Noël Coward, Cary Grant, Audrey Hepburn, Michael Caine, Frankie Vaughan, Bruce Forsyth, Roger Moore and a host of other celebrities..[12]
Having never married, Cogan remains a sexual enigma, and the subject of conflicting rumours long after her death. These include lesbianism, sex-phobia, and a long romance with John Lennon. She enjoyed the company of gay men, and was once believed to be engaged to Lionel Bart. At her death she was supposedly engaged to nightclub-owner Brian Morris, yet no announcement was ever made.
She was close friends with the Beatles - ironically, since they had largely eclipsed her fame, and the teenage Lennon used to mimic her savagely in Sugartime. Paul McCartney first played the melody of Yesterday at Cogan's piano, and also played tambourine on her recording of "I Knew Right Away".
In a Daily Mail interview, Cogan's sister Sandra, who was briefly linked to McCartney[14] , claimed that Cogan had a serious romance with Lennon that had to be kept secret because of her family's strict Jewish faith.[15]
Legacy
The novel Alma Cogan by Gordon Burn presents an imaginary middle-aged Cogan looking back on life and fame in the 1980's. It claimed to be based on true events and real people, except for her early death, and won the Whitbread Book Award in 1991. Partly-adapted from this novel was the BBC Radio 4 series Stage Mother, Sequinned Daughter (2002) by Annie Caulfield. Cogan's sister Sandra felt that it misrepresented both Cogan and her mother, and tried unsuccessfully to get it banned. Eventually the Broadcasting Standards Commission ruled that the BBC apologize to Sandra for failing to respect the feelings of the surviving family members. [16]
The 1996 hit Alma Matters by Morrissey – who is known for his appreciation for cultural icons – has been interpreted as being about Cogan.[17]
A blue plaque commemorating Cogan was installed by the entrance of her longtime residence, 44 Stafford Court, on 4 November 2001.
The 2011 British film In Love with Alma Cogan features a struggling seaside theatre-owner trying to shake-off the ghost of Alma Cogan, who had performed there in his youth.
Recordings
Singles (UK releases)
- 1952 – "To Be Worthy Of You" / "Would You"
- 1952 – "To Be Loved By You" / "The Homing Waltz" (duet with Les Howard)
- 1952 – "Meet Me on the Corner"
- 1952 – "Waltz of Paree" / "Pretty Bride"
- 1952 – "Half as Much" (cover of Rosemary Clooney) / "Blue Tango"
- 1952 – "I Went to Your Wedding" (cover of Patti Page) / "You Belong to Me" (cover of Jo Stafford)
- 1952 – "If'n" (duet with Denny Dennis)
- 1952 – "Take Me In Your Arms and Hold Me" / "Wyoming Lullaby"
- 1953 – "Till I Waltz Again with You" (cover of Teresa Brewer) / "Happy Valley Sweetheart"
- 1953 – "If I Had a Penny" / "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me" (cover of Karen Chandler)
- 1953 – "On The First Warm Day" / (Les Howard solo)
- 1953 – "Till They've All Gone Home" / "Hug Me A Hug"
- 1953 – "If I Had a Golden Umbrella" / "Mystery Street"
- 1953 – "My Love, My Love" (cover of Joni James) / "Wasted Tears"
- 1953 – "Over and Over Again" / "Isn't Life Wonderful" (duets with Les Howard)
- 1954 – "Ricochet (Rick-O-Shay)" (cover of Teresa Brewer) / "The Moon Is Blue"
- 1954 – "Bell Bottom Blues" (cover of Teresa Brewer) / "Love Me Again" – UK #4
- 1954 – "Make Love to Me" (cover of Jo Stafford) / "Said the Little Moment"
- 1954 – "Little Shoemaker" (cover of The Gaylords) / "Chiqui-Chaqui (Chick-ee Chock-ee)"
- 1954 – "Jilted" (cover of Teresa Brewer) / "Do, Do, Do, Do, Do, Do It Again" (duets with Frankie Vaughan)
- 1954 – "Little Things Mean a Lot" (cover of Kitty Kallen) / "Canoodlin' Rag" – UK #11
- 1954 – "Skinnie Minnie" (cover of Teresa Brewer) / "What Am I Going To Do, Ma"
- 1954 – "This Ole House" (cover of Rosemary Clooney) / "Skokiaan" (one of many versions of the song)
- 1954 – "I Can't Tell a Waltz from a Tango" (cover of Patti Page) / "Christmas Cards" – UK #6
- 1954 – "(Don't Let The) Kiddygeddin'" / "Mrs Santa Claus"
- 1955 – "Paper Kisses" / "Softly Softly"
- 1955 – "Mambo Italiano" (cover of Rosemary Clooney) / "The Naughty Lady of Shady Lane" (cover of the Ames Brothers)
- 1955 – "Tweedle Dee" (cover of Lavern Baker) / "More Than Ever Now"
- 1955 – "Tika Tika Tok" / "Chee Chee Oo Chee"
- 1955 – "Dreamboat" / "Irish Mambo" – UK #1
- 1955 – "Where Will The Dimple Be?" (cover of Rosemary Clooney) / "Keep Me in Mind"
- 1955 – "Got'n Idea" / "Give A Fool A Chance"
- 1955 – "The Banjo's Back in Town" / "Go On By" – UK #17 / UK #16
- 1955 – "Hernando's Hideaway" (one of many covers) / "Blue Again"
- 1955 – "Never Do a Tango with an Eskimo" / "Twenty Tiny Fingers" – UK #6 / UK #17
- 1956 – "Love and Marriage" (cover of Frank Sinatra) / "Sycamore Tree"
- 1956 – "Willie Can" / "Lizzie Borden" – UK 13
- 1956 – "Don't Ring-A Da Bell" / "Bluebell"
- 1956 – "It's All Been Done Before" (duet with Ronnie Hilton) / "No Other Love" (Ronnie Hilton solo)
- 1956 – "Why Do Fools Fall in Love" (cover of Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers) / "The Birds and the Bees" – UK #22 / UK #25
- 1956 – "Mama, Teach Me to Dance" / "I'm in Love Again"
- 1956 – "In the Middle of the House" (cover of Rusty Draper) / "Two Innocent Hearts" – UK #20
- 1957 – "You, Me, and Us" / "Three Brothers" – UK #18
- 1957 – "Whatever Lola Wants (Lola Gets)" / "Lucky Lips" – UK #26
- 1957 – "Chantez, Chantez" (cover of Dinah Shore) / "Funny Funny Funny"
- 1957 – "Fabulous" / "Summer Love" (cover of Joni James)
- 1957 – "That's Happiness" / "What You've Done To Me"
- 1957 – "Party Time" / "Please Mister Brown"
- 1958 – "The Story of My Life" (cover of Marty Robbins / Michael Holliday) / "Love Is" – UK #25
- 1958 – "Sugartime" (cover of The McGuire Sisters) / "Gettin' Ready for Freddy" – UK #16
- 1958 – "Stairway of Love" (cover of Michael Holliday) / "Comes Love"
- 1958 – "Sorry Sorry Sorry" / "Fly Away Lovers"
- 1958 – "There's Never Been a Night" / "If This Isn't Love"
- 1959 – "Last Night on the Back Porch" / "Mama Says" – UK #27
- 1959 – "Pink Shoelaces" (cover of Dodie Stevens) / "The Universe"
- 1959 – "We Got Love" / "I Don't Mind Being All Alone" – UK #26
- 1960 – "Dream Talk" / "O Dio Mio" – UK #48
- 1960 – "The Train of Love" / "The 'I Love You' Bit" (duet with Oscar Nebish, aka Lionel Bart) – UK #27
- 1960 – "Just Couldn't Resist Her With Her Pocket Transistor" / "Must Be Santa"
- 1961 – "Cowboy Jimmy Joe" / "Don't Read The Letter" – UK #37
- 1961 – "With You In Mind" / "Ja-Da"
- 1961 – "All Alone" / "Keep Me in Your Heart"
- 1961 – "She's Got You" (cover of Patsy Cline) / "In the Shade of the Old Apple Tree"
- 1962 – "Goodbye Joe" / "I Can't Give You Anything but Love, Baby"
- 1963 – "Tell Him" (cover of The Exciters) / "Fly Me to the Moon"
- 1963 – "Hold Out Your Hand You Naughty Boy" / "Just Once More"
- 1964 – "Tennessee Waltz" (cover of Patti Page) / "I Love You Too Much"
- 1964 – "It's You" / "I Knew Right Away"
- 1964 – "Snakes And Snails" / "How Many Nights, How Many Days"
- 1965 – "Eight Days a Week" / "Help!" (each a cover of a Beatles song)
- 1965 – "Love Is A Word" / "Now That I've Found You"
- 1966 – "Now That I've Found You" / "More"
- 1966 – "Love Ya Illya" / "I Know You" (under the name Angela and the Fans)[18]
Albums
- 1958 – I Love to Sing
- 1961 – With You In Mind
- 1962 – How About Love?
- 1965 – Oliver! with Stanley Holloway and Violet Carson
- 1967 – Alma
Biography
- Alma Cogan: The Girl With The Laugh In Her Voice by Sandra Caron (Alma's sister) – ISBN 0-7475-0984-0
References
- ^ "Dead Rock Stars Club @ efortress.com". Users.efortress.com. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
- ^ "Alma Cogan – Biography". Archived from the original on 28 February 2008. Retrieved 12 February 2008.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Rice, Jo (1982). The Guinness Book of 500 Number One Hits (1st ed.). Enfield, Middlesex: Guinness Superlatives Ltd. p. 20. ISBN 0-85112-250-7.
- ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography - Subscription based
- ^ Mantel, Hilary (1992-09-24). "On the Edge". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved 2011-03-14.
{{cite web}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ The "Tail Pieces by the Alley Cat" column in NME dated 14 September 1956 cites Sandra Caron's age as 19.
- ^ "Alma Cogan". mp3.com. Retrieved 26 November 2007.
- ^ "Jukebox Jumpers". Jukeboxjumpers.multiply.com. Retrieved 2012-12-15.
- ^ "Audrey.hepburn.free.fr". Audrey.hepburn.free.fr. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
- ^ "Chartstats.com". Chartstats.com. 1954-03-27. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
- ^ Vandyke, Alan. "Lastingtribute.co.uk". Lastingtribute.co.uk. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
- ^ a b c "AMG". Retrieved 23 May 2009.
- ^ "Dailymail.co.uk". London: Dailymail.co.uk. 7 November 2006. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
- ^ "Sentstarr.tripod.com". Sentstarr.tripod.com. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
- ^ Daily Mail, 07 November 2006. John Lennon's secret lover by Michael Thornton.
- ^ Telegraph.co.uk
- ^ "Motorcycleaupairboy.com". Motorcycleaupairboy.com. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
- ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 113. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.