Joanie Sommers

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Joanie Sommers
Background information
Birth name Joan Drost
Born February 12, 1940 (1940-02-12) (age 69), Buffalo, New York, United States
Genre(s) popular music
Years active 1960s-1970s, 1980s

Joanie Sommers (born Joan Drost, Buffalo, New York, February 24, 1941), is an American singer and actress.

[edit] Career

At age ten, Sommers sang Your Cheating Heart on a Buffalo television show and won a prize for her performance.[citation needed] The family moved to California when she was 14.[citation needed] As a student at Venice High School in Los Angeles, she sang at school dances. By the time she was 18, she appeared on the television series 77 Sunset Strip and sang a duet with Edd Byrnes (Kookie's Love Song) and on a solo album (Positively the Most!).[citation needed]

Sommers was a popular singer during the 1960s. In 1962, she reached #7 on the Billboard Hot 100 with the single Johnny Get Angry, released on Warner Bros. Records. (Will Ryan wrote and produced a sequel song, Johnny Got Angry, for Sommers during the 1990s.)[citation needed] She also charted with One Boy from the musical Bye Bye Birdie, which reached #54 in 1960, and When the Boys Get Together, a #94 single in 1962.[citation needed] She appeared on numerous television shows as a singer and as an actress, and acted in two films: Everything's Ducky (1961) and The Lively Set (1964).[citation needed]

Sommers was a game show contestant during the 1960s on such shows as Everybody's Talking, Hollywood Squares, You Don't Say, and The Match Game, as well as Dick Clark's, Where the Action Is.[citation needed]

In the early 1960s, she sang It's Pepsi, For Those Who Think Young in commercials, and she came to be referred to as "The Pepsi Girl".[citation needed] Years later, uncredited, she sang Now You See It, Now You Don't, Oh, Diet Pepsi for the sugar-free companion product.[citation needed]

Her 1965 track, Don't Pity Me (Warner Bros. 5629 - Don't Pity Me / My Block), became a huge Northern Soul hit in the UK and still fills the dance floors whenever played.[citation needed]

In the early 1970s, she withdrew from the music scene in favor of a family life. She began making public appearances again during the 1980s, including two appearances on KCRW's satirical radio program, The Cool & the Crazy, hosted by Art Fraud (Ronn Spencer) and Vic Tripp (Gene Sculatti).

[edit] Album Discography

  • 1959: Positively the Most!
  • 1961: Joanie Sommers
  • 1962: For Those Who Think Young
  • 1962: Johnny Get Angry
  • 1962: Let's Talk About Love
  • 1963: Sommers' Seasons
  • 1964: Softly, the Brazilian Sound
  • 1965: Come Alive!
  • 1982: Dream
  • 1988: Tangerine
  • 1992: A Fine Romance
  • 2004: Here, There and Everywhere!

[edit] External links

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