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Cab Calloway

Personal Profile

Cab Calloway
  • Birth Name:
    Cabell Calloway III
  • Date of Birth:
    December 25, 1907
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Capricorn
  • Place of Birth:
    Rochester, New York, U.S.
  • Place of Death:
    Hockessin, Delaware, U.S.
  • Date of Death:
    November 18, 1994
  • Height:
    5' 10"
  • Sex:
    Male
  • Hair Color:
    White
  • Eye Color:
    Brown
  • Nationality:
    American
  • Religion:
    Christianity
  • Education:

    Frederick Douglass High School

    Lincoln University

Family

Cab Calloway
  • Father:
    Cabell Calloway II
  • Mother:
    Martha Eulalia Reed
  • Sister:
    Blanche
  • Spouse:
    Wenonah Betty Conacher - Divorced
    Zulme Nuffie MacNeal
  • Daughter:
    Chris Calloway

Career

Cab Calloway

Trivia

Cab Calloway
  • The artist records "Minnie the Moocher". The record was the first jazz album to sell a million copies. [3 March 1931]
  • Scored two notable Broadway successes: In Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess" (1952), opposite Leontyne Price and William Warfield, and "Hello, Dolly!" (1967), opposite Pearl Bailey and daughter Chris Calloway.
  • Father of singer/actress Chris Calloway.
  • Former bandleader of the famous Harlem Cotton Club in the 30s
  • Cab Calloway School of the Arts opened in 1992 in Wilmington Delaware, was named after him.
  • He was awarded the American National Medal of the Arts in 1993 by the National Endowment of the Arts in Washington, D.C.
  • Was the inspiration for the character of Oogie Boogie in Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993).
  • The oldest featured actor to appear in The Blues Brothers (1980), Calloway outlived co-players John Candy by more that 4 months and John Belushi by better than 12 years and 7 months.
  • Once performed the role of Sportin' Life in "Porgy and Bess" at Kansas City's Starlight Theater.

Quotes

Cab Calloway
  • "90%, 100% are going there to hear the singing. The story is another thing. Nobody`s interested in the story. Happiness is happiness."
  • "A movie and a stage show are two entirely different things. A picture, you can do anything you want. Change it, cut out a scene, put in a scene, take a scene out. They don`t do that on stage."
  • "At times as a performer they segregated us in some of theatres."
  • "Bubbles was a very good dancer. Tremendous dancer. He was one of our leading dancers of the country at that time. And, of course, he didn`t have much of a voice."
  • "Charleston was a good town. It was a nice town. I played there years ago before Porgy and Bess. And I think the conception wasn`t bad. It was good."
  • "Everybody did something. It was very entertaining. We had a lot of fun. Lot of fun. And there was no segregation, that I could see. I never saw any."
  • "Everybody that you could name would join in our audiences from, Laguardia on down. Everybody came. Everybody came to the Cotton Club."
  • "He was a silly guy. Out - do the other guy. That was his effort at all times."
  • "I think it was just an opera. Now, you go to opera, you expect to see and hear what the opera is. So, it was Catfish Row. It was singers. Marvelous voices. It didn`t make no difference what color they were."
  • "It`s very difficult to photograph an opera. And they messed up on it. It just wasn`t there. And I don`t blame the Gershwins for taking it away. Of course, if they had gotten the original company to have done it, it would have been very good."
View all Quotes: Cab Calloway

Biography

Cab Calloway
Last Updated: Wednesday, September 09, 2009

cab callowayCab Calloway was a legendary fireball of talent, whose infectious "hi-de-hi's," "ho-deho's," scattin', and jivin', in a baritone singing voice rich and vibrant, became the spirited cry of people wanting to be happy. He was born on Christmas night, December 25, 1907, in Rochester, New York. The second of six children of Cabell and Martha Calloway, he was named Cabell III, after his father and grandfather. "My family was a middle, class family. We didn't have too much money," Cab said.

When he was 6-years-old, they moved to Baltimore, Maryland, where, after school, he sold newspapers, shined shoes, was a checker, waited tables, and walked horses at the racetrack. His parents hoped young Cab would someday study law, but, by the time he graduated from high school at the age of 17, he had already made up his own mind to be an entertainer. "In high school I began to play drums and to sing with a small group and even do vaudeville with some kids from school," Cab recalled. "And best of all, I found out that I could get paid for entertaining. I could do two of the things most important to me - at the same time make people happy and make money."

cab callowayCalloway's older sister, Blanche, was a singer and his idol. She was working in Chicago, in "Plantation Days," one of the first major African-American revues. Blanche gave him advice, and, when the show needed a replacement in a vocal quartet for a singer who was ill, she helped Cab get hired. From there, he worked in some clubs, among them the Sunset Cafe, gradually building up a reputation as a good singer, and a reliable and likeable emcee. This led to an offer to front the Alabamians, an 11-piece band that had come to Chicago. The outfit played jazz and novelties acceptably; but when Calloway took the bandstand, things perked up considerably.

In later years he worked on the stage in Porgy And Bess and Hello, Dolly!, and took acting roles in films such as The Blues Brothers (1980). His other films over the years included The Big Broadcast (1932), International House (1933), The Singing Kid (1936), Manhattan Merry Go Round (1938), Sensations Of 1945 (1944), St. Louis Blues (1958), The Cincinnati Kid (1965) , and A Man Called Adam (1966). Calloway enjoyed a considerable resurgence of popularity in the 70s with a Broadway appearance in Bubbling Brown Sugar.

In the 80s he was seen and heard on stages and television screens in the USA and UK, sometimes as star, sometimes as support but always as the centre of attention. In 1993 he appeared at London's Barbican Centre, and in the same year celebrated his honorary doctorate in fine arts at the University of Rochester in New York State by leading the 9,000 graduates and guests in a singalong to "Minnie The Moocher". Calloway died the following year.

Filmography

Cab Calloway

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