Margaret Whiting
American recording artist; singer

Margaret Whiting

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American recording artist; singer
Gender:
Female
Work field:
Birth:
22 July 1924(Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan, USA)
Death:
10 January 2011(Lillian Booth Actors Home, Englewood, Bergen County, USA)
Star sign:
Instruments:
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The details
Biography

Introduction

Margaret Eleanor Whiting (July 22, 1924 – January 10, 2011) was an American popular music and country music singer who gained popularity in the 1940s and 1950s.

Biography

Youth

Whiting was born in Detroit, but her family moved to Los Angeles in 1929, when she was five years old. Her father, Richard, was a composer of popular songs, including the classics "Hooray for Hollywood", "Ain't We Got Fun?", and "On the Good Ship Lollipop". Her sister, Barbara Whiting, was an actress (Junior Miss, Beware, My Lovely) and singer.

An aunt, Margaret Young, was a singer and popular recording artist in the 1920s. Whiting's singing ability was noticed at an early age and at seven she sang for singer-lyricist Johnny Mercer, with whom her father had collaborated on some popular songs, including "Too Marvelous for Words". In 1942, Mercer co-founded Capitol Records and signed Margaret to one of Capitol's first recording contracts.

Recording career

Whiting's first recordings were as featured singer with various orchestras:

  • "That Old Black Magic", with Freddie Slack and His Orchestra (1942)
  • "Moonlight in Vermont", with Billy Butterfield's Orchestra (1943) It sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold disc by the RIAA.
  • "It Might as Well Be Spring", with Paul Weston and His Orchestra (1945)

In 1945, Whiting began to record under her own name, making such recordings as:

  • "All Through the Day" (1945, becoming a bestseller in the spring of 1946)
  • "In Love in Vain" (1945)
(these two from the movie "Centennial Summer")
  • "Guilty" (1946)
  • "Pretending" (1946)
  • "Oh, But I Do" (1946)
  • "A Tree in the Meadow" (a number 1 hit in the summer of 1948)
  • "Slippin' Around", a duet with country music star Jimmy Wakely (a number 1 hit in 1949)
  • "Baby, It's Cold Outside" (duet with Johnny Mercer, 1949)
  • "Blind Date", a novelty record with Bob Hope (1950)
  • "Far Away Places" (1949)
  • "Silver Bells" (duet with Jimmy Wakely, 1951)

Until the mid-1950s Whiting continued to record for Capitol, but as she ceased to record songs that charted as hits, she switched to Dot Records in 1957 and to Verve Records in 1960. Whiting returned to Capitol in the early 1960s and then signed with London Records in 1966. On London, Whiting landed one last major hit single in 1966, "The Wheel of Hurt", which hit #1 on the Easy Listening singles chart. Her final solo albums were made for Audiophile (1980, 1982, 1985) and DRG Records (1991). Her distinguished conductors and musical arrangers through the years included Buddy Bregman, Frank DeVol, Russell Garcia, Johnny Mandel, Billy May, Marty Paich, Nelson Riddle, Pete Rugolo, and Paul Weston.

Radio career

Whiting co-starred on the 15-minute musical programs The Jack Smith Show and Club Fifteen. She also was a vocalist on The Eddie Cantor Show and was in the cast of The Philip Morris Follies of 1946 and The Railroad Hour. Additionally, she was hostess on the Spotlight Revue and a featured singer on the transcribed Barry Wood Show. She also appeared in the part of a young Sophie Tucker, in the Lux Radio Theater production "No Time For Heartaches".

Television career

Margaret and Barbara Whiting starred as themselves in the situation comedy Those Whiting Girls. The show, produced by Desilu Productions, aired on CBS as a summer replacement series (in place of I Love Lucy) between July, 1955 and September, 1957.

Margaret Whiting was a regular guest on variety shows and talk shows throughout the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, including Faye Emerson's Wonderful Town, when the musical series focused on Whiting's hometown of Detroit; The Big Record, The Bob Hope Show, The Colgate Comedy Hour, The Tony Martin Show, The David Frost Show, The Ed Sullivan Show, The George Jessel Show, The Guy Mitchell Show, The Jonathan Winters Show, The Merv Griffin Show, The Mike Douglas Show, The Nat King Cole Show, Over Easy, The Pat Boone Chevy Showroom, The Patti Page Show, The Red Skelton Hour, The Steve Allen Show, The Ford Show Starring Tennessee Ernie Ford, The Texaco Star Theater, The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, The Virginia Graham Show, and The Voice of Firestone.

In 1960, Whiting appeared as Vinnie Berkeley in one of the last episodes, "Martial Law", of the ABC/Warner Brothers western series, Colt .45. Paul Picerni was cast in the same segment as Duke Blaine.

In 1984, Whiting appeared in the television musical movie Taking My Turn. It was basically a filmed version of the 1983 off-Broadway show in which she appeared. This ensemble show also included Marni Nixon, Tiger Haynes, and Cissy Houston among others. The music was composed by Gary William Friedman with lyrics by Will Holt. The revue was centered on issues regarding aging. The stage production opened at New York City's Entermedia Theatre on June 9, 1983. It went on to win the 1984 Outer Critic's Circle Award for Best Lyrics/Music and was nominated for the 1984 Drama Desk Award for Best Musical (losing to Stephen Sondheim's Sunday In the Park With George). A cast recording of the stage production was released and subsequently re-released on CD.

In the 2000s, Whiting was interviewed in several documentaries about singers and songwriters of her era, including Judy Garland: By Myself (2004), Fever: The Music of Peggy Lee (2004), Anita O'Day: The Life of a Jazz Singer (2007), Johnny Mercer: The Dream's on Me (2009), The Andrews Sisters: Queens of the Music Machines (2009) and Michael Feinstein's American Songbook (2010).

Cabaret Master Teacher

From 1989 through 2001, Whiting was the Artistic Director of the annual Cabaret and Performance Conference at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center in Waterford Connecticut.With other performers such as Julie Wilson and Anne Francine as well as musical directors like Tex Arnold, she spent 10 days instructing selected professionals and amateurs in the cabaret performance process.

Marriages

Whiting was married four times, and had one child:

  • Hubbell Robinson Jr., a writer, producer, and television executive (married December 29, 1948 – divorced August 18, 1949)
  • Lou Busch, a ragtime pianist known as "Joe 'Fingers' Carr" (divorced; one daughter, Deborah, born 1950)
  • John Richard Moore, a founder of Panavision (married 1958 – divorced)
  • Jack Wrangler (John Stillman), 1970s and 1980s gay pornography film actor (married 1994, when Whiting was 70 and he was 48 – until his death from emphysema April 7, 2009)

Death

Whiting died on January 10, 2011, aged 86, from natural causes at the Lillian Booth Actors Home in Englewood, New Jersey.

Discography

Albums

Year Album US Pop LPs Label
1949 South Pacific (with Peggy Lee & Gordon MacRae) 4 Capitol
1950 Margaret Whiting Sings Rodgers and Hart
1954 Love Songs by Margaret Whiting
1956 Margaret Whiting Sings for the Starry-Eyed
1957 Goin' Places Dot
1958 Margaret
1959 Margaret Whiting's Great Hits
Ten Top Hits
1960 Just a Dream
Margaret Whiting Sings the Jerome Kern Songbook Verve
Broadway, Right Now! (with Mel Tormé)
1961 Past Midnight MGM
1967 The Wheel of Hurt 109 London
Maggie Isn't Margaret Anymore
1968 Pop Country
1980 Too Marvelous for Words Audiophile
1982 Come a Little Closer
1985 The Lady's in Love with You
1991 Then and Now DRG

Singles

Unrelated B-sides not shown

Year Single (A-side, B-side)
Contributing Artist Chart Positions Album
1942 "That Old Black Magic"
Freddie Slack & His Orchestra 10 Non-album tracks
1944 "Silver Wings in the Moonlight"
Freddie Slack & His Orchestra 19
"My Ideal" Billy Butterfield & His Orchestra 12 Margaret Whiting Sings
"Moonlight in Vermont" 15 Love Songs
1945 "It Might as Well Be Spring"
Paul Weston & His Orchestra 6 Margaret Whiting Sings
1946 "All Through the Day" / Carl Kress orchestra 11 Non-album tracks
"In Love in Vain" 12
"Come Rain or Come Shine"
Paul Weston orchestra 17 Love Songs
"Along with Me"
Jerry Gray orchestra 13 Non-album tracks
"Passe"
12
"Guilty" / 4 Margaret Whiting Sings
"Oh, But I Do" 7 Non-album tracks
1947 "Beware My Heart"
Frank De Vol orchestra 21
"Spring Isn't Everything"
"Old Devil Moon" / 11 Margaret Whiting Sings
"Ask Anyone Who Knows" 21 Non-album track
"Little Girl Blue"
25 Margaret Whiting Sings Rodgers and Hart
"Don't Tell Me"
Non-album tracks
"You Do"
5
"Lazy Countryside" / 21
"So Far" 14
"Pass That Peace Pipe" / 8
1948 "Let's Be Sweethearts Again" 22
"But Beautiful" / 21
"Now Is The Hour" 2
"What's Good About Goodbye"
29
"Please Don't Kiss Me"
23
"It's You or No One"
"A Tree in the Meadow"
1 Love Songs
"What Did I Do"
Non-album tracks
"Far Away Places"
2
"My Dream Is Yours"
1949 "Forever and Ever"
5
"It's a Big, Wide, Wonderful World" Jack Smith
"Comme Ci, Comme Ca"
"When Is Sometime"
"A Wonderful Guy"
12 Love Songs
"Baby, It's Cold Outside"
Johnny Mercer 3 Non-album tracks
"Slippin' Around" / Jimmy Wakely 1 1
"Wedding Bells" 30 6
"Everytime I Meet You"
"Let's Take an Old-Fashioned Walk"
Frank De Vol orchestra
"Dime a Dozen"
19
"St. Louis Blues"
Frank De Vol orchestra
"Festival of Roses"
Frank De Vol orchestra
"The Sun Is Always Shining"
Frank De Vol orchestra
"Lucky Us"
Bob Hope
Billy May orchestra
"I'll Never Slip Around Again"
Jimmy Wakely 8 2 I'll Never Slip Around Again
"Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas"
Frank De Vol orchestra
B: The Mellomen
Non-album tracks
1950 "Broken Down Merry Go Round" / Jimmy Wakely 12 2
"The Gods Were Angry With Me" 17 3
"You're an Old Smoothie"
Love Songs
"I Said My Pajamas (and Put on My Prayers)"
Frank De Vol 21 Non-album tracks
"My Foolish Heart"
Frank DeVol orchestra 17
"Let's Go to Church (Next Sunday Morning)"
Jimmy Wakely 13 2
"A-Razz-a-Ma-Tazz"
Frank De Vol & Les Baxter Chorus
"Shawl of Calway Grey"
"Blind Date"
Bob Hope 16
"Close Your Pretty Eyes"
Jimmy Wakely I'll Never Slip Around Again
"I Didn't Know What Time It Was
Frank De Vol orchestra Margaret Whiting Sings Rodgers and Hart
"I've Forgotten You"
Les Baxter Chorus Non-album tracks
"Friendly Star"
Frank De Vol orchestra
"I'm In Love With You"
Dean Martin
"I've Never Been In Love Before"
Frank De Vol orchestra Love Songs
"A Bushel and A Peck"
Jimmy Wakely 6 6 Non-album tracks
"Christmas Candy"
1951 "Once You Find Your Guy"
"Let's Go To Church"
Jimmy Wakely I'll Never Slip Around Again
"Faithful"
Frank De Vol orchestra Non-album tracks
"Sing You Sinners"
"Make The Man Love Me"
Lou Busch orchestra
"Something Wonderful"
"When You and I Were Young, Maggie, Blues"
Jimmy Wakely 20 7 I'll Never Slip Around Again
"Everlasting"
Lou Busch orchestra Non-album tracks
"Good Morning, Mr. Echo"
14
"I Don't Want To Be Free"
Jimmy Wakely 5 I'll Never Slip Around Again
1952 "I'll Walk Alone"
Lou Busch orchestra 29 Non-album tracks
"Outside Of Heaven"
22
1953 "Try Me One More Time"
"Why Don't You Believe Me?"
Lou Busch orchestra 29
"Singing Bells"
"Gomen-Nasai"
Jimmy Wakely
"Something Wonderful Happens"
"The Night Holds No Fear"
"There's A Silver Moon On The Golden Gate"
Jimmy Wakely
1954 "Moonlight In Vermont" Lou Busch orchestra 29
"Joey"
Nelson Riddle orchestra
"An Affair Of The Heart"
"All I Want Is All There Is and Then Some"
"My Own True Love"
1955 "Allah Be Prais'd"
"A Man"
David Cavanaugh orchestra
"Lover Lover"
Frank De Vol
1956 "Old Enough"
Frank De Vol
"True Love"
A: Buddy Bregman
B: Frank De Vol
"The Money Tree"
Billy May orchestra 20
1957 "Speak For Yourself John"
Billy Vaughn orchestra Just A Dream
"I Can't Help It (If I'm Still in Love with You)"
A: Billy Vaughan
B: Milton Rogers
74 Margaret
"Silver Bells"
Jimmy Wakely Non-album tracks
1958 "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry"
Margaret
"Just A Dream"
Just A Dream
"I Love You Because"
Margaret
1959 "I'm Alone Because I Love You"
Just A Dream
"Half As Much"
Non-album tracks
1960 "Why Was I Born"
Margaret Whiting Sings The Jerome Kern Songbook
1961 "What's New At The Zoo"
Mel Torme Broadway, Right Now!
"On Second Thought"
Non-album tracks
1966 "Somewhere There's Love"
29 The Wheel Of Hurt
"The Wheel Of Hurt"
Arnold Goland orchestra 26 1
1967 "Just Like A Man"
132 29 Maggie Isn't Margaret Anymore
"Only Love Can Break A Heart"
Arnold Goland orchestra 96 4
"I Almost Called Your Name"
108 4 Pop Country
1968 "I Hate To See Me Go" / 127 27
"It Keeps Right On A-Hurtin'" 115 28
"Faithfully"
117 19 Non-album tracks
"Can't Get You Out Of My Mind"
124 11
1969 "Where Was I"
24
"At The Edge Of The Ocean"
1970 "(Z Theme) Life Goes On"
14
"Until It's Time For You To Go"
32

Sources

  • Margaret Whiting on IMDb
  • Pop ranking from Joel Whitburn's Pop Memories 1890–1954, published in 1986 by Record Research Inc., Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin.
  • Contributing artists from booklet with the "My Ideal" four CD set by Jasmine Records in 2007; confirmed by Time-Life Music tape set "Late 40s" released in 1991, and by Joel Whitburn's Pop Memories 1890–1954. Some Internet sources give Tex Beneke's orchestra as accompanyingWhiting's hit, "A Wonderful Guy", but Beneke claimed Claire Chatwin was the singer on his version: see his album, "Here's To The Ladies Who Sang With The Band" – the latter can also be found here