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Born
November 15, with "a voice as sweet as chapel bells," Petula
Clark first broke into the limelight during World War II
when as a child she entertained the troops, both on
radio
and in concert. She is said to have performed in over 200 shows
for the forces all over England before the age of nine and by
war's end, Petula Clark--the British "Shirley Temple" who had
come to represent childhood itself--was so popular in England
she was asked to sing at a national victory celebration at
Trafalgar Square. In 1944, Petula made her first movie and has
since appeared in over 30 British and American
films.
Throughout the forties and fifties Petula was a regular guest on
a vast number of radio shows and became something of a
television "pioneer" in England, first appearing on
experimental TV in the forties and later as host of several of
her own television series during the very early years of British
programming, with Pet's Parlour being her longest running
and most popular. Although she sang regularly in concert, on
radio and TV all through the forties, it wasn't until 1949 that
she recorded her first song
Music, Music, Music and that pretty much sums up
her very prolific recording career. |
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She has
never stopped
recording — 50 plus years and over a
1,000
songs and still counting! Her first hits were
children's songs like
Where Did My Snowman Go (1952) and
The
Little Shoemaker (1954). To date, she has sold well
in excess of 68 million records.
In answer to the rock-and-roll craze of the late fifties, Petula
recorded Sailor, Romeo and My Friend The Sea
and was back on the
charts again. In 1957, she was invited to sing at the
famed Olympia theatre in France. After one song the French crowd
went wild, and an entirely new career was launched. |
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Asked to
record in French, Petula declined at first but was quickly
persuaded to do so by Frenchman Claude Wolff with whom she fell
madly in love - they were married in June 1961. (They have three
children, daughters Barbara and Catherine and son Patrick and a
granddaughter and grandson.) By the early sixties, Petula found
herself reinvented as a
French chanteuse, even rivaling the legendary Piaf--during
Piaf's own lifetime. (She is still classified as a "French"
singer |
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on the
shelves in French and French-Canadian record stores.) In
addition to her newfound French pop star status, Petula also
began to enjoy success with the songs that she had begun to
record in
German and Italian. By the mid-sixties she'd
established herself as superstar throughout Europe with Number
One tunes sung in different languages in different countries all
across the Continent. (Interesting to note, each of her early
European hits were with entirely different songs--a feat not
duplicated by any other singer since!) |
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Urged by her friends in Britain to record
something in English, Petula allowed Tony Hatch to visit her in
Paris where he presented his new song, Downtown. Petula
recorded it and the rest is music history. Downtown
skyrocketed to number 1 in the USA, launching Petula's American
career and earning her a
Grammy in 1964. She quickly followed with I Know A
Place which went to number 3 and earned Petula her second
Grammy in 1965. Numerous top 40 hits followed. All told, Pet has
had 15 top 40 hits in the USA (two #1 hits). Internationally,
Petula Clark has
charted
in the top 40 somewhere, sometime, with 159 recordings!
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In the
sixties, she starred in two Hollywood musicals (Finian's
Rainbow and Goodbye Mr. Chips) opposite the likes of
Fred Astaire and Peter O'Toole. Throughout the sixties she made
numerous TV appearances both as a guest star and as the host of
two popular variety series for British television, as well as
three of her own
American TV specials. She also continued a highly
successful concert career, beginning with a sellout season at
the
Copacabana in 1966, at
Caesar's Palace in Vegas and at the
Cocoanut Grove in Los Angeles before a star-studded
audience that included Barbra Streisand and Frank Sinatra. |
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By the seventies she'd been well established
as a
Vegas superstar--garnering critical acclaim by both
critics and the American public. She gave a series of concerts
in France and Canada, made appearances on
European TV, hosted two more popular variety series in
England (for which she was awarded
"Most Popular TV Star" by the TV Times) and
continued to be a much sought after guest star on
American television. |
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In the eighties she found fame as a country
recording star with her top-10 hit
Natural Love, before reinventing herself as a
highly successful stage star in London's West End, beginning
with the role of Maria in
The Sound of Music and continuing with the
production of her own musical
Someone
Like You, for which she wrote the music.
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In the
nineties Petula made her Broadway debut, starring opposite David
and Shaun Cassidy in the highly successful production of
Blood Brothers followed by a well-received American
tour of the same production. In 1998 Petula returned to England,
where she was presented with a prestigious
CBE
by her Majesty the Queen of England, in honor of Petula's
legendary career. As of September 2000, Petula's most recent
appearance on the stage was in Andrew Lloyd Webber's
Sunset Boulevard, in the starring role of Norma
Desmond, a role she has now played more than any other actress
to date. After appearing at the Adelphi Theatre in London's West
End she embarked on a national tour of most major cities in the
U.S. with the musical. |
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On October
28, 2000 Petula presented a new
one-woman show — a concert highlighting her life and
career— to tremendous acclaim. The show made its debut at the
St. Denis Theatre in Montreal, Canada.
In May 2001 she was spotlighted in a
2-hour concert spectacular as the finale to the
month-long Virginia Arts Festival. The show was taped by PBS and
was broadcast nationwide as part of the PBS pledge drives in
December 2001. A companion documentary by MPI Home Video,
"Petula
Clark: This Is My Song" was also broadcast on many PBS
stations nationwide. Petula's extraordinary life is chronicled
in this all-new biography featuring the stories behind her
upbeat, ever-popular music, including her signature song, the
Grammy Award-winning "Downtown." Petula's remembrances, taped in
Norfolk, VA, at the time of the concert, offer a candid and
insightful look into her long and fascinating life in show
business.
Early 2002 saw Petula performing in concert in California at the
Richard and Karen
Carpenter Center for the Performing Arts and also appearing
in Los Angeles in March for a
tribute show to legendary composer, Johnny Mercer. She then
embarked on a 24-city tour of the UK to coincide with her newest
UK album,
"The Ultimate Collection," which charted in the Top 20.
In 2003, she was the recipient of the
Grammy Hall of Fame Award for her timeless recording of
"Downtown" and hit the Top 20 in French Canada - while preparing
appearances in France to promote another new release,
"Kaleidoscope." In September, her return to Paris in a
performance at the legendary
Olympia Theatre --after an absence of 38 years-- was a
smashing success. . Petula rang out 2003 and welcomed in 2004
with
two concert performances in Vevey, Switzerland.
In early March 2004 Petula headed to Australia and New Zealand
for a sold-out
12-date tour of major cities. Early April saw her her
on U.S. shores for a highly successful 5-night slate of
performances at the
Atlantic City Hilton Casinoo in New Jersey. On April 23
and 24 she reprised her role as Norma Desmond in Cork, Ireland
with the world-renowned BBC Concert Orchestra for a
radio broadcast concert performance of "Sunset Boulevard"
opposite Michael Ball. July 12 saw her returning to North
America with an evening of song at the Hummingbird Centre in
Toronto, Canada then on to Los Angeles where she appeared at the
world-famous Hollywood Bowl in a various artists tribute to the
legendary Peggy Lee. San Diego received a visit on July 15 at
Humphrey's By The Bay and Miss Clark will once again return to
the U.S. in late September for a series of concerts in the
cabaret theater at the Mohegan Sun Casino in Connecticut.
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