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Birth Name: Petula Sally
Olwen Clark
Born: November 15 1932 (Age 77)
Born to English father Leslie Norman Clark and Welsh mother Doris (née
Phillips), both nurses, in Epsom, Surrey, England, she was christened Petula
Sally Olwen Clark. Her father Leslie coined her first name, jokingly alleging it
was a combination of the names of two former girlfriends, Pet and Ulla. As a
child, she sang in the chapel choir and showed a talent for mimicry, frequently
impersonating Vera Lynn, Carmen Miranda, and Sophie Tucker for the amusement of
family and friends. Her father introduced her to theatre when he took her to see
Flora Robson in a 1938 production of Mary Tudor; she later recalled that after
the performance "I made up my mind then and there I was going to be an actress .
. . I wanted to be Ingrid Bergman more than anything else in the world."
However, her first public performances were as a singer, performing with an
orchestra in the entrance hall of Bentalls Department Store in Kingston upon
Thames for a tin of toffee and a gold wristwatch, in 1939.
In October 1942, Clark made her radio debut while attending a BBC broadcast with
her father, hoping to send a message to an uncle stationed overseas. During an
air raid, the producer requested that someone perform to settle the jittery
audience, and she volunteered a rendering of "Mighty Lak a Rose" to an
enthusiastic response in the theatre. She then repeated her performance for the
broadcast audience, launching a series of some 500 appearances in programmes
designed to entertain the troops. In addition to radio work, Clark frequently
toured the United Kingdom with her fellow child performer Julie Andrews. Clark
became known as "Britain's Shirley Temple", and she was considered a mascot by
the British Army, whose troops plastered her photos on their tanks for good luck
as they advanced into battle.
In 1944, while performing at London's Royal Albert Hall, Clark was discovered by
film director Maurice Elvey, who cast her as precocious orphaned waif Irma in
his weepy war drama Medal for the General. In quick succession, she starred in
Strawberry Roan, I Know Where I'm Going!, London Town, and Here Come the
Huggetts, the first in a series of Huggett Family films based on a British radio
series. Although most of the films she made in the U.K. during the 1940s and
1950s were B-movies, she worked with Anthony Newley in Vice Versa (directed by
Peter Ustinov) and Alec Guinness in The Card.
In 1945, Clark was featured in the comic strip Radio Fun, in which she was
billed as "Radio's Merry Mimic".
In 1946, Clark launched her television career with an appearance on a BBC
variety show, Cabaret Cartoons, which led to her being signed to host her own
afternoon series, titled simply Petula Clark. A second, Pet's Parlour, followed
in 1949. In later years, she starred in This is Petula Clark (1966-67) and The
Sound of Petula (1972-74).
In 1949, Clark branched into recording with her first release, "Put Your Shoes
On, Lucy," for EMI. Because neither EMI nor Decca, for whom she also had
recorded, were keen to sign her to a long-term contract, her father, whose own
theatrical ambitions had been thwarted by his parents, teamed with Alan A.
Freeman to form Polygon Records in order to better control her singing career.
She scored a number of major hits in the U.K. during the 1950s, including "The
Little Shoemaker" (1954), "Majorca" (1955), "Suddenly There's a Valley" (1955)
and "With All My Heart" (1956). Although Clark released singles in the United
States as early as 1951 (the first was "Tell Me Truly" b/w "Song Of The Mermaid"
on the Coral label), it would take thirteen years before the American
record-buying public would discover her.
In 1955 Clark became linked romantically with Joe "Mr Piano" Henderson.
Speculation that the couple planned to marry became rife. However, with the
increasing glare of being in the public spotlight, and Clark's growing fame (her
career in France was just beginning), Henderson — reportedly not wanting to end
up as "Mr. Petula Clark" — decided to end the relationship.Their professional
relationship continued for a couple of years, professionally culminating in the
BBC Radio series Pet and Mr. Piano, the last time they worked together,[8]
although they remained on friendly terms. In 1962 he penned a ballad about their
break-up, called "There's Nothing More To Say", for Clark's LP In Other Words.
Near the end of 1955, Polygon Records was sold to Nixa Records, then part of Pye
Records, which lead to the establishment of Pye Nixa Records (subsequently
simply Pye). This turn of events effectively signed Clark to the Pye label in
the U.K., for whom she would record for the remainder of the 1950s, throughout
the 1960s, and early into the 1970s.
In 1958, Clark was invited to appear at the Paris Olympia where, despite her
misgivings and a bad cold, she was received with acclaim. The following day she
was invited to the office of Vogue Records to discuss a contract. It was there
that she met publicist Claude Wolff, to whom she was attracted immediately, and
when told he would work with her if she signed with the label, she agreed. Her
initial French recordings were huge successes, and in 1960 she embarked on a
concert tour of France and Belgium with Sacha Distel, who remained a close
friend until his death in 2004. Gradually she moved further into the continent,
recording in German, French, Italian and Spanish, and establishing herself as a
multi-lingual performer.
1962 EP
In June 1961, Clark married Wolff, first in a civil ceremony in Paris, then a
religious one in her native England. Wanting to escape the strictures of child
stardom imposed upon her by the British public, and anxious to escape the
influence of her father, she relocated to France, where she and Wolff had two
daughters, Barbara Michelle and Katherine Natalie, in quick succession. (Their
son Patrick was born in 1972.) While Clark focused on her new career in France,
she continued to achieve hit records in the U.K. into the early 1960s,
developing a parallel career on both sides of the Channel. Her 1961 recording of
"Sailor" became her first #1 hit in the U.K., while such follow-up recordings as
"Romeo" and "My Friend the Sea" landed her in the British Top Ten later that
year. In France, "Ya Ya Twist" (a French-language cover of the Lee Dorsey rhythm
and blues song "Ya Ya" and the only successful recording of a twist song by a
female) and "Chariot" (the original version of "I Will Follow Him") became smash
hits in 1962, while German and Italian versions of her English and French
recordings charted as well. Her recordings of several Serge Gainsbourg songs
also were big sellers.
In 1964, Clark scored the French crime caper A Couteaux Tirés (aka Daggers
Drawn) and made a cameo appearance as herself in the movie. Although it was only
a mild success, it added a new dimension — that of film composer — to her
career. Additional film scores she composed include Animato (1969), La bande à
Bebel (1966), and Pétain (1989). Six themes from the latter were released on the
CD In Her Own Write in 2007.
In 1963 and 1964, Clark's British recording career foundered. The
composer-arranger Tony Hatch, who had been assisting her with her work for Vogue
Records in France and Pye Records in the U.K., flew to her home in Paris with
new song material he hoped would interest her, but she found none of it
appealing. Desperate, he played for her a few chords of an incomplete song that
had been inspired by his recent first trip to New York City, which he suggested
might be offered to The Drifters. Upon hearing the melody, Clark told him that
if he could write lyrics as good as the melody, she wanted to record the tune as
her next single. Thus "Downtown" came into being.
During the early 1970's Clark had chart singles on both sides of the Atlantic
with: "Melody Man" (1970); "The Song Of My Life" (1971); "I Don't Know How To
Love Him" (1972), "The Wedding Song (There Is Love)" (1972) and "Loving Arms"
(1974).
Throughout the 1960s and 70s, Clark toured in concerts extensively throughout
the States, and she often appeared in supper clubs such as the Copacabana in New
York City, the Ambassador Hotel's Cocoanut Grove in Los Angeles, and the Empire
Room at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, where she consistently broke house attendance
records. During this period, she also appeared in print and radio ads for the
Coca Cola Corp., television commercials for Plymouth automobiles, print and TV
spots for Burlington Industries, television and print ads for Chrysler Sunbeam,
and print ads for Sanderson Wallpaper in the U.K.
In 1954, Clark had starred in a stage production of The Constant Nymph, but it
wasn't until 1981, at the urging of her children, that she returned to
legitimate theatre, starring as Maria von Trapp in The Sound of Music in
London's West End. Opening to rave reviews and what was then the largest advance
sale in British theatre history, Clark — proclaimed by Maria Von Trapp herself
as "the best Maria ever" — extended her initial six-month run to thirteen to
accommodate the huge demand for tickets. In 1983, she took on the title role
in George Bernard Shaw's Candida. Later stage work includes Someone Like You in
1989 and 1990, for which she composed the score; Blood Brothers, in which she
made her Broadway debut in 1993 at the Music Box Theatre, followed by the
American tour; and Andrew Lloyd Webber's Sunset Boulevard, appearing in both the
West End and American touring productions from 1995 through 2000. In 2004, she
repeated her performance of Norma Desmond in a production at the Cork Opera
House in the Republic of Ireland, which was later broadcast by the BBC. With
more than 2500 performances, she has played the role more often than any other
actress.
In 1992 Clark released "Oxygen", a single produced by Nik Kershaw.
In both 1998 and 2002, Clark toured extensively throughout the U.K. In 2000, she
presented a self-written one-woman show, highlighting her life and career, to
large critical and audience acclaim at the St. Denis Theater in Montreal. A 2003
concert appearance at the Olympia in Paris has been issued in both DVD and
compact disc formats. In 2004, she toured Australia and New Zealand, appeared at
the Hilton in Atlantic City, the Hummingbird Centre in Toronto, Humphrey's in
San Diego, and the Mohegan Sun in Connecticut, and participated in a
multi-performer tribute to the late Peggy Lee at the Hollywood Bowl. Following
another British concert tour in early spring 2005, she appeared with Andy
Williams in his Moon River Theater in Branson, Missouri, for several months, and
she returned for another engagement in the fall of 2006, following scattered
concert dates throughout the U.S. and Canada.
In November 2006, Clark was the subject of a BBC Four documentary entitled
Petula Clark: Blue Lady and appeared with Michael Ball and Tony Hatch in a
concert at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane broadcast by BBC Radio the following
month. In December that year she made her first appearance in Iceland. Duets, a
compilation including Dusty Springfield, Peggy Lee, Dean Martin, Bobby Darin,
and the Everly Brothers, among others, was released in February 2007, and
Solitude and Sunshine, a studio recording of all new material by composer Rod
McKuen, was released in July of that year. She was the host of the March 2007
PBS pledge-drive special My Music: The British Beat, an overview of music's
British invasion of the United States in the 1960s, followed by a number of
concert dates throughout the U.S., the U.K., Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
She can be heard on the soundtrack of the 2007 independent film Downtown: A
Street Tale. Une Baladine (in English, a wandering minstrel), an authorized
pictorial biography by Francoise Piazza, was published in France and Switzerland
in October 2007, and the following month Clark promoted it in bookshops and at
book fairs.
Clark was presented with the 2007 Film & TV Music Award for Best Use of a Song
in a Television Program for "Downtown" in the ABC series Lost. She completed a
concert tour of England and Wales in Summer 2008, followed by concerts in
Switzerland and the Philippines. Then & Now, a compilation of greatest hits and
several new Clark compositions, entered the British album charts in June 2008
and won Clark her first-ever Silver Disc for an album. Open Your Heart: A Love
Song Collection, a compilation of previously unreleased material and new and
remixed recordings, was released in January 2009. Additionally, her 1969 NBC
special Portrait of Petula, already released on DVD for Region 2 viewers, is
also being produced for Region 1. A collection of holiday songs titled This Is
Christmas, which includes some new Clark compositions in addition to previously
released material, was released in November 2009.
In 1998, Clark was honoured by Queen Elizabeth II by being made a Commander of
the Order of the British Empire.
In 2010, Clark became the President of the Hastings Musical Festival, which has
been highly respected since its inception over 100 years ago in Hastings, UK.
Copyright © 2010 Zoupit Radio.com Email:
mymusic@zoupitradio.com

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