Kitty Kallen (Katie Kallen)

Kitty Kallen

Kitty Kallen (May 25, 1921 – January 7, 2016) was an American popular singer whose career spanned from the 1930s to the 1960s,to include the Swing era of the Big Band years, the post-WWII pop scene and the early years of rock ‘n roll. She performed with some of the most popular big bands of the 1940s, including those of Jimmy Dorsey and Harry James, before striking out on a solo career. She is widely known for her 1954 solo recording ‘”Little Things Mean a Lot”, a song that stayed at the U.S. number one spot for nine consecutive weeks, charted in the U.S. for almost seven months, hit #1 on the UK singles chart, and sold more than two million copies. AllMusic called the recording a “monster hit”, and music historian Jonny Whiteside said the song “ably characterizes Kallen’s impressive, and graceful, transition from classic big band swing to modern post-war pop.” Voted “most popular female singer” in 1954 in both Billboard and Variety polls, Kitty Kallen lost her voice at the Palladium in 1955 at the top of her career and left singing for four years, suffering paralyzed vocal cords. After testing her voice under a pseudonym in small town venues, she ultimately returned and went on to achieve 13 top-ten career hits.

Kitty Kallen performed at numerous prominent live venues including Manhattan’s Copacabana, Morris Levy’s Versailles, the Capitol Theater, the Maisonette Room at the St. Regis, the Cafe Rouge at the Hotel Pennsylvania and the Plaza Hotel’s Persian Room. As well, she starred on Broadway in Finian’s Rainbow; in the 1955 film The Second Greatest Sex and on numerous television shows including The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, The Big Beat with singer-host Richard Hayes, American Bandstand, and Fred Allen’s Judge for Yourself. In 1951, Kallen appeared with Buster Crabbe as the Queen and King of Winter at the Lake Placid resort. During the height of her popularity, three imposters billed themselves as Kitty Kallen. When one of them, Genevieve Agostinello, died in 1978, it was incorrectly reported that Kallen herself had died. On February 8, 1960, Kallen received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (located on the north side of Hollywood Boulevard at #7021).

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Born

  • May, 25, 1921
  • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Died

  • January, 07, 2016
  • Cuernavaca, Mexico

Cause of Death

  • subsequently suffered blood clots in her lungs

Cemetery

  • Beth-El Cemetery
  • Paramus, New Jersey

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