*1931
Jazz, Pop and Children's Music
Betty Clooney was born in April of 1931 in Maysville, Kentucky. She and her older sister (by three years) Rosemary Clooney, loved to sing as kids and became an important part of their grandfather's political campaigns for mayor of their hometown. Soon the Clooney family moved to Cincinnati, Ohio where the girls continued to vocalize. In their teens they went to radio station WLW for an audition and were successful where they remained on the staff of the station for two years in 1945 and 46. One day they were heard by bandleader Tony Pastor. The bandleader originally hesitated on hiring both sisters, but soon relented and so The Clooney Sisters hit the road with the Pastor band. They appeared in a movie short with the Pastor Orchestra in 1947. The Clooney Sisters recorded a number of songs for Columbia with the Tony Pastor Band. During the later nineteen fifties Betty Clooney called it quits a singing career and concentrated on raising a family and tending to her four children. There was talk of a reunion tour with The Clooney Sisters, but that was never to be as Betty Clooney passed away from a cerebral hemorrhage in July of 1976. She was only 45 years old. In her memory Rosemary and Nick Clooney established the Betty Clooney Foundation in 1983 and the Betty Clooney Center in Long Beach, California, which opened in 1988. Both are dedicated to treatment for traumatic brain injuries.
The Clooney Sisters |
Track list and 30sec audio provided by
Title | Artist | Year | Type |
---|---|---|---|
Fuzzy Wuzzy (Wuz A Bear) | Betty Clooney, Mitch Miller & His Orchestra, The Sandpipers | 1963 | Single |
Kiki | Betty Clooney | 1955 | Single |
Si, Si, Senor | Betty Clooney | 1955 | Single |
Ko Ko Mo / So All Alone | Bill Darnel And Betty Clooney | 1955 | Single |
Sisters | Rosemary Clooney & Betty Clooney With Paul Weston And His Orchestra | 1954 | Single |
In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening | Betty Clooney, Scott Fisher And His Orchestra, Johnny Bothwell And His Orchestra | 1953 | Single |
Let's Go Home for Christmas | Betty Clooney | 1953 | Album |
How Many Sweethearts Have It | Betty Clooney | 1953 | Single |
Fuzzy Wuzzy (Wuz A Bear) | Betty Clooney, Mitch Miller & His Orchestra | 1952 | Album |
Egbert The Easter Egg | Betty Clooney, The Sandpipers, Mitch Miller & His Orchestra | 1951 | Album |
Egbert, The Easter Egg / Bunny Bunny Bunny | Betty Clooney, The Sandpipers, Mitch Miller & His Orchestra | 1951 | Single |
You're All I See | Betty Clooney | 1951 | Single |
Foolish Pride | Betty Clooney | 1950 | Album |
Christmas And You | Frank Hunter And His Orchestra Vocal, Betty Clooney | Single | |
Golden Toy Parade | Betty Clooney, Anne Lloyd, The Sandpipers & Mitch Miller & His Orchestra | Single | |
Tete A Tete | Steve Lawrence, Betty Clooney | Compil. |