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BIOGRAPHY Perry Como was born Pierino
Ronald Como in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania on May 18, 1912, the son of Pietro
Como, a mill hand, and Lucia Travaglini Como, immigrants from Palena,
Italy. The seventh of thirteen children, Perry Como earned a few cents a |
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in Cleveland in 1933, Como auditioned for Freddie Carlone's band and was
hired at twenty-five dollars a week. That same year Como married his
high school sweetheart, Roselle Belline, the daughter of French
immigrants; they had three children, whom they sheltered from the
celebrity world of show business. "Roselle always stood by
me," Como remarked. She died in August 1998, two weeks after
celebrating their sixty-fifth wedding anniversary.
Hollywood filmmakers lured Como to the silver screen, but his career in the motion picture industry was brief and unrewarding. Three of his movies, Something for the Boys (1944), Doll Face (1945) and If I'm Lucky (1946), remain memorable because they featured Carmen Miranda . "I was wasting their time and they were wasting mine," Como admitted. Television, however, seemed made for his singing style and personality. His baritone voice, intimate and personal, complemented his affability and sincerity. Television viewers liked his friendliness. On 14 May 2001 the Washington Post noted in retrospect: "What Perry Como did week after week on his TV shows was not so much sing to his fans as have a continuing conversation with them, a conversation in song."
Como was one of the most successful performers of the twentieth century. Along with nonsense tunes like "Hot Diggity Dog Ziggity Boom," lighthearted songs like "Papa Loves Mambo," and even a rock-and-roll number, "Juke Box Baby," he left an enduring legacy as an interpreter of the romantic ballad. In 1943 in the midst of a strike by the American Federation of Musicians, Como recorded with only vocal accompaniment "Goodbye Sue" for the RCA Victor label. Among his most popular romantic ballads are "Dream Along with Me," "Don't Let the Stars Get in Your Eyes," "Temptation," "Because," "Till the End of Time," "Prisoner of Love," "And I Love You So," and "It's Impossible." Often accompanied by the Mitchell Ayres Orchestra and the Ray Charles Singers, Como sold more than one hundred million records and had fourteen tunes that were ranked number one musical hits. In 1946 he was named top-selling male singer by Billboard. As late as 1973 he received a Grammy award nomination as best male pop vocalist for "And I Love You So." His achievements during the rock-and-roll era, when ballad crooners were falling by the wayside, were particularly remarkable. During the final years of his long life Como spent most of his time at his home in Jupiter Inlet Beach Colony near Palm Beach, Florida, golfing, fishing, and taking long walks with his wife. Near the time of his death he had become a great-grandfather. He devoted himself to various charities, including his annual golf benefits at Duke University in North Carolina, and even found time to visit radio stations that carried Weekend with Perry, a weekly program syndicated throughout the United States. Combining a gentle voice with a pleasant personality, Como celebrated in life and in song romantic love and lifelong fidelity. He parlayed these values and his ability to express them in song into one of the most successful careers in twentieth-century popular entertainment. Perry Como died in his sleep on May 12, 2001 --a national treasure was lost. More biographical information can be found by following the links on the tribute page. Biography adapted from the American National Biography Online www.anb.org
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