Died On This Date (October 18, 2000) Julie London / Popular Torch Singer & Actress

Julie London (Born Gayle Peck)
September 26, 1926 – October 18, 2000

JulieLondonAlthough Julie London was a successful torch singer during the ’50s, she is perhaps best remembered for her role as nurse Dixie McCall alongside her husband, Bobby Troup on the popular ’70s television drama, Emergency!.  London’s name, or perhaps body, first became familiar to American G.I.s thanks to her pin-up photos during WWII.  At the time, she was married to her first husband, actor Jack Webb of Dragnet fame.   She began singing professionally in the mid ’50s, recording over thirty albums over the course of her career.  No less than Billboard magazine named her the most popular female vocalist in 1955, 1956 and 1957.   Her most popular record “Cry Me a River” which was produced by Troup sold over a million copies.  London reached a whole new generation of music fans in her later years thanks to “Cry Me a River’s” appearance in the 2000 film, Passion of Mind, and again in the 2006 blockbuster, V is For Vendetta.  Her recordings were also prominently featured in Six Feet Under and a 2008 British Airways ad campaign.   Julie London was beloved for her sexy smoky voice that happened to be a by-product of years of heavy smoking that ultimately lead to her poor health in later years and death at the age of 74.

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Julie London

Died On This Date (October 18, 2008) Dave McKenna / Respected Jazz Pianist

Dave McKenna
May 30, 1930 – October 18, 2008

Dave McKenna was a respected swing jazz pianist who worked with, among others, Gene Krupa, Stan Getz, Rosemary Clooney, Tony Bennett, and Eddie Condon.  A lifelong fan of the Boston Red Sox, McKenna was known to listen to Sox games on a transistor radio while performing.  He died of cancer at the age of 78.

Thanks to Craig Rosen of Number1Albums

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Dave McKenna

Died On This Date (October 18, 2008) Dee Dee Warwick / Soul Singer; Sister of Dionne Warwick

Dee Dee Warwick
September 25, 1945 – October 18, 2008

One of Dee Dee Warwick’s earliest gigs was in the Gospelaires, a singing trio with sister, Dionne Warwick and aunt Cissy Houston.   After a 1959 performance at the legendary Apollo Theater, the Warwick sisters were asked to do some session singing, a practice they continued for several years.  Dee Dee recorded her first solo record in 1963 with Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller at the helm.  She continued to make Top 40 R&B hit records throughout the ’60s and early ’70s, with her version of future-Supremes hit, “I’m Gonna Make You Love Me,” being arguably her best known.  Dee Dee suffered from drug addiction through much of her later life, perhaps hampering her career during those years.  She passed away at the age of 63.

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Dee Dee Warwick

Died On This Date (October 17, 1991) Tennessee Ernie Ford / Country Music Icon

Tennessee Ernie Ford
February 13, 1919 – October 17, 1991

Tennessee Ernie Ford was a multi-faceted entertainer who found success as a country and gospel singer as well as a radio and television personality during the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s.  Over the course of his career, Ford released numerous country, gospel and pop hits, many defining their genres.  One in particular, a cover of Merle Travis’ “Sixteen Tons,” became his signature song after it spent nearly a dozen weeks at the top of the country charts and over two months atop the pop charts.  No honest country collection of the era is complete without it.  Ford soon became a household name and a familiar face in people’s living rooms thanks to television.  He was cast as the semi-regular guest, Cousin Ernie on I Love Lucy and hosted his own Tennesse Ernie Ford Show.  Tennessee Ernie Ford was 72 years old when he died of liver failure.  It was the 36th anniversary of the release of “Sixteen Tons.”

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