Eydie Gorme, popular singer who worked solo and with husband
Steve Lawrence, has died after a brief illness. She was 84.
Best remembered, perhaps, for her 1963 hit "Blame It On The Bossa
Nova," Eydie was already a successful band singer and nightclub entertainer
when Steve Allen hired her for the "Tonight Show" (then a local New York
program) in 1953; Lawrence had joined the show a year earlier. She sang solos
and did duets and skits with Lawrence, and they stayed with Allen when the show went
national in 1954. Although not regulars on Allen's Sunday-night show, they were
Allen's summer replacement in 1958. They married in Las Vegas in 1957 and performed
there often. Strangely enough, she was not a regular on the short-lived "Steve Lawrence
Show" on CBS in 1965.
In the first "Back To The Future," when Marty McFly first enters the downtown of
Hill Valley in 1955, the cover of one of Eydie's albums is one of several in the window
of the record store.
Steve Lawrence, has died after a brief illness. She was 84.
Best remembered, perhaps, for her 1963 hit "Blame It On The Bossa
Nova," Eydie was already a successful band singer and nightclub entertainer
when Steve Allen hired her for the "Tonight Show" (then a local New York
program) in 1953; Lawrence had joined the show a year earlier. She sang solos
and did duets and skits with Lawrence, and they stayed with Allen when the show went
national in 1954. Although not regulars on Allen's Sunday-night show, they were
Allen's summer replacement in 1958. They married in Las Vegas in 1957 and performed
there often. Strangely enough, she was not a regular on the short-lived "Steve Lawrence
Show" on CBS in 1965.
In the first "Back To The Future," when Marty McFly first enters the downtown of
Hill Valley in 1955, the cover of one of Eydie's albums is one of several in the window
of the record store.