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INTRODUCTION |
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HER
STORY |
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QUOTES |
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TRIVIA |
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NICKNAME |
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GALLERY |
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CURIOS |
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VOX
POPULI |
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SHOP |
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Known
to Americans most for her belting rendition of the theme to Goldfinger,
the 1964 edition in the James Bond series (as well as 1971's Diamonds
Are Forever and 1979's Moonraker),
Shirley Bassey was one of the most popular female vocalists in Britain
during the last half of the 20th century.
Known as Bassey
the Belter and also the Tigress
of Tiger Bay, her early career in touring shows and cabaret
brought her a recording contract with Philips by the late '50s.
After
reaching the top of the British charts in 1959 with As
I love you" and later Reach
for the stars/Climb every mountain, Bassey was tapped to
swing the theme song to the third James Bond vehicle. Her voice, brassy
and sexy, conveyed the James Bond myth perfectly and became a big hit in
America. Though later chart placings in the U.S. were few, she continued
to do well in Great Britain, France and the Netherlands into the mid-'70s.
Born in January 1937 in
Tiger Bay, Cardiff, Wales, Shirley Bassey was the youngest of seven children.
Her parents, a Nigerian sailor and an English woman, divorced before she
was three years old, but they kept the family together for the most part,
and Shirley was able to sing duets with her brother at family
get-togethers.
After finishing school, she found a job at a local factory,
and earned extra money singing at men's clubs after-hours. Bassey traveled
around the country in revues during the early '50s, and made her big
breakout in 1955 at a London Christmas show given by comedian Al Read
(though it was promoted by bandleader Jack
Hylton, who had caught Bassey's
act at the nearby Albany Club).
Soon after, Shirley Bassey began appearing
in Read's revue, Such Is Life. The show ran for over a year, and gained
her a recording contract for Philips Records. Banana
boat song hit the British Top Ten in early 1957, followed
by her number one hits, 1959's As I love you
and 1961's Reach for the stars/Climb every mountain.
A 1962 pairing with arranger Nelson Riddle increased her prestige in
America, and a vaunted live show gained her headlining spots in both New
York and Las Vegas during the early '60s. Popular recognition in the
United States came in early 1965, when Goldfinger
hit number eight in the American charts, instantly becoming
her signature song across the Atlantic. (Strangely though, it missed even
the Top 20 in Great Britain.)
Bassey's hits in the U.K.
continued into the mid-'70s, led by Top Ten entries such as Something,
For all we know and Never
never never. After the crowning achievement of her career,
a 1977 Britannia Award for Best Female Solo
Singer in the Last 50 Years, Shirley Bassey gained her own
highly rated BBC-TV show in the late '70s, but gradually slowed down her
busy schedule during the next decade.
Semi-retired to Switzerland by 1981,
she nevertheless emerged quite frequently, spurred by the recording of
several television specials and LPs, including a 1987 date with the
synth-pop group Yello. Bassey became much more visible during the '90s,
opening a nightclub in Cardiff, and touring the world several times.
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