Sammy Davies Jnr Biography
Recognized throughout much of his career as "the world's greatest living entertainer,"
Sammy Davis, Jr. was a remarkably popular and versatile performer equally adept at acting, singing, dancing and impersonations
--
in short, a variety artist in the
classic tradition.
A member of the famed
Rat Pack, he was among the very first African-American talents to find favor with audiences on both sides of the color barrier,
and remains a perennial icon of cool.
Born in Harlem on December
8, 1925, Davis made his stage debut at the age of three performing with Holiday in Dixieland, a black vaudeville troupe featuring
his father and helped by his de facto uncle, Will Mastin; dubbed "Silent Sam, the Dancing Midget," he proved phenomenally
popular with audiences and the act was soon renamed Will Mastin's Gang Featuring Little Sammy.
At the age of seven Davis
made his film debut in the legendary musical short Rufus Jones for President, and later received tap-dancing lessons courtesy
of the great Bill "Bojangles" Robinson. In 1941, the Mastin Gang opened for Tommy Dorsey at Detroit's Michigan Theater; there
Davis first met Dorsey vocalist Frank Sinatra -- the beginning of a lifelong friendship.
In 1943 Davis joined the U.S. Army, where he endured a constant
battle with racism; upon his return from duty, the group was renamed the Will Mastin Trio. Three years later they opened for
Mickey Rooney, who encouraged Davis to begin including his many impersonations in the Trio's act; where previously they had
exclusively performed music, the addition of comedy brought new life to the group, and by the beginning of the next decade
they were headlining venues including New York's Capitol club and Ciro's in Hollywood.
In 1952, at the invitation of Sinatra, they also played the newly-integrated
Copacabana. In 1954 Davis signed to Decca, topping the charts with his debut LP Starring Sammy Davis Jr; that same year he
lost his left eye in a much-publicized auto accident, but upon returning to the stage in early 1955 was greeted with even
greater enthusiasm than before on the strength of a series of hit singles including "Something's Gotta Give," "Love Me or
Leave Me" and "That Old Black Magic." A year later Davis made his Broadway debut in the musical Mr. Wonderful, starring in
the show for over 400 performances and launching a hit with the song "Too Close for Comfort."
In 1958 Davis resumed his film career after a quarter-century
layoff with Anna Lucasta, followed a year later by his acclaimed turn in Porgy and Bess. Also in 1959 he became a charter
member of the Rat Pack, a loose confederation of Sinatra associates (also including Dean Martin, Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop)
which began regularly performing together at the Sands casino in Las Vegas. In 1960 they made Ocean's Eleven, the first in
a series of hip and highly self-referential Rat Pack films; although Davis' inclusion in the group was perceived in many quarters
as an egalitarian move, many black audiences felt he was simply a token -- the butt of subtly racist jokes -- and declared
him a sell-out. His earlier conversion to Judaism had been met with considerable controversy within the African-American community
as well; still, nothing compared to the public outcry over his 1960 marriage to Swedish actress May Britt, which even elicited
death threats. Still, Davis remained a major star, appearing in the 1962 Rat Pack film Sergeants 3 and scoring a major hit
with "What Kind of Fool Am I?" Two years later he returned to Broadway in the long-running Golden Boy, scoring a Tony nomination
for his performance.
In 1964, the third Rat Pack film, Robin and the Seven Hoods, was
released; two years later, in the wake of the publication of his autobiography Yes I Can, Davis was also among a number of
musical luminaries, including Sinatra and Louis Armstrong, who co-starred in the jazz drama A Man Called Adam. In 1968 he
and Lawford teamed as Salt and Pepper; the picture was a hit, and a sequel, One More Time, appeared in 1970. In between the
two Davis delivered one of his most memorable screen performances in Bob Fosse's 1969 musical Sweet Charity; he also appeared
in a number of television features, including The Pigeon, The Trackers and Poor Devil. In 1972 Davis topped the pop charts
with "The Candy Man," from the film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory; from 1975 to 1977, he hosted his own syndicated
variety show, Sammy and Company, and in 1978 starred in the film Sammy Stops the World. However, in the late 1970s and through
much of the 1980s Davis's profile diminished, and he was primarily confined to the casino circuit, with a 1988 comeback tour
he mounted with Sinatra and Martin largely unsuccessful. His appearance in the 1989 film Tap was much acclaimed, but it was
to be his last screen performance -- a lifelong smoker, Davis died of cancer on May 16, 1990.
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