Saturday, April 30, 2022

RIP Judy Henske

 

Judy Henske, Folk Singer Known for ‘High Flying Bird,’ Dies at 85

Best Classic Bands

By Barry Alfonso

 4/29/2022

 

Judy Henske, a groundbreaking singer during the 1960s folk revival who released a series of cult-classic albums and achieved international success as a songwriter, has died. She was 85.

Henske died April 27, 2022, in hospice care at a Los Angeles area facility after a long illness, said her husband, Craig Doerge.

Known for her fervent, dramatic vocal style and commanding stage presence, Henske stood out from her folk music peers. Her ability to temper her rousing renditions of traditional material like “Wade in the Water” and “Love, Henry” with ribald on-stage humor set her apart from typical coffeehouse performers. Henske’s 1964 single “High Flying Bird” anticipated the folk-rock revolution of the following years, opening doors for the psychedelic likes of Janis Joplin and Grace Slick. The song, written by Billy Edd Wheeler, was later covered by Richie Havens, Jefferson Airplane and many others.

Dubbed “The Queen of the Beatniks” by producer Jack Nitzsche, Henske’s vivid personality and razor-sharp wit made her a legendary figure beyond the recording industry. Woody Allen drew upon her personal style and small-town background for the title character of his film Annie Hall. Crime fiction author Andrew Vachss included her as a musical leitmotif in a series of novels. Her friendship circle was wide and fiercely loyal, including such diverse notables as Phil Ochs, Jackson Browne, Pauline Kael, Eve Babitz and Shel Silverstein.

Judith Anne Henske was born December 20, 1936, in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin. Her father was a doctor, her mother a homemaker. She showed talent as a singer as a teenager and began to pursue to music more seriously as a student at Rosary College in River Forest, Illinois, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. By 1959, she had relocated to San Diego, where she performed at local coffee houses before moving on to venues in Los Angeles. At the Unicorn, she opened for Lenny Bruce (among others) and gained notoriety for her foot-stomping, hard-belting delivery of folk ballads.

While performing in Oklahoma City in 1962, Henske was recruited by ex-Kingston Trio member Dave Guard to join the Whisky Hill Singers, with whom she recorded an album. From there, she was signed as a solo artist to Elektra Records and released a pair of albums that combined folk, blues, jazz and standup comedy. Now living in New York, she became a mainstay of the Greenwich Village folk scene and appeared at such popular clubs as the Village Gate and the Bitter End.

Henske’s notable television appearances during this time included a featured spot on The Judy Garland Show. She appeared alongside Johnny Cash in the 1963 folk exploitation film, Hootenanny Hoot. The following year, she played the lead in Gogo Loves You, an Off-Broadway musical written by Gentlemen Prefer Blondes author Anita Loos.

After releasing albums on Mercury and Reprise, Henske began to concentrate on her songwriting. Her highly literate touch as a lyricist found expression on Farewell Aldebaran, released on Frank Zappa’s Straight label in 1969. Henske’s tender-to-ferocious vocals, enhanced by the swirling psych-baroque production of her first husband, composer Jerry Yester (who had replaced Zal Yanovsky in the Lovin’ Spoonful), helped to make the album an enduring cult favorite. In 1971, she co-founded and recorded with Rosebud, a folk-rock quintet that released an eponymous album on Straight Records.

Following Rosebud, Henske turned away from recording and performing in favor of raising her daughter, Kate. She shifted her focus to lyric-writing, collaborating on songs with keyboardist and composer, Craig Doerge (whom she married in 1973). “Yellow Beach Umbrella” (covered by Three Dog Night and Bette Midler), “Might as Well Have a Good Time” (recorded by Crosby, Stills and Nash) and “Sauvez-Moi” (a #1 single in France for Johnny Hallyday) were among the pair’s most successful efforts.

The 1990s found Henske performing small club dates around Los Angeles. As a journalist, she wrote feature articles for the San Diego Reader and other publications.

In 1999, Henske returned to recording with Loose in the World, followed by She Sang California in 2004. In 2007, Rhino Records released Big Judy: How Far This Music Goes, 1962-2004, a two-CD career retrospective. By the following decade, a new generation was beginning to discover her work. In 2013, cabaret artist Meredith Di Menna brought her show Queen of the Beatniks: The Songs of Judy Henske to nightclub stages in New York. The Los Angeles dance company BodyTraffic premiered Death Defying Dances, a choreographed production inspired by Henske’s early recordings, in 2016.

In her last years, Henske worked on a memoir of her life and experiences. She continued to write songs as well.

Henske is survived by her husband Craig Doerge, her daughter Kate DeLaPointe and granddaughter Claire DeLaPointe. Plans for a memorial are pending.

 

HENSKE, Judy (Judith Anne Henske)

Born: 12/20/1936, Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, U.S.A.

Died: 4/27/2022, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

Judy Henske’s western – singer:

How the West Was Won – 1962 [sings: “(Fifteen Miles On) the Erie Canal”, “Careless Love”, “A Railroader’s Bride I’ll Be”]

RIP Naomi Judd

 

Naomi Judd, Grammy-winning matriarch of country music's The Judds, dead at 76

Judds' daughters Wynonna and Ashley announced her death on Saturday in a statement provided to The Associated Press.

The Tennesseean

By Marcus K. Dowling

April 30, 2022

 

Grammy-winning country vocalist Naomi Judd -- one half-of mother-daughter duo The Judds, died Saturday. She was 76. 

Judds' daughters Wynonna and Ashley announced her death on Saturday.

"Today we sisters experienced a tragedy. We lost our beautiful mother to the disease of mental illness," they said in a statement shared by the duo's publicist. "We are shattered. We are navigating profound grief and know that as we loved her, she was loved by her public. We are in unknown territory."

The Judds are to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame on Sunday.

The duo achieved 14 No. 1 hits over three decades, splitting as a performing act in 1991 after doctors diagnosed Naomi Judd with hepatitis. Between 1984 and 1991 alone, the Judds had 20 Top Ten hits, and tallied five Grammys, nine CMA Awards, and seven ACM Awards.

Since arriving in Music City in 1979, Naomi Judd -- and her family -- were foundational staples of country music's continued pop evolution through the 1980s and beyond.

In a 2019 Tennessean interview honoring an exhibition in the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Wynonna noted in regards to her and her mother's careers, "She was 36 and I was 18. To go from the outhouse to the White House, to know that we went from welfare to millionaire, and we’re the American dream. People are going to see this and see themselves in us. It’s important to remember we are a mother and daughter who came out of nothing and made it … and if we can do it, you can, too.”

Naomi Judd was born Diana Ellen Judd on Jan. 11, 1946, in Ashland, Kentucky. A musically gifted honor roll student, she became pregnant but married Michael Ciminella -- instead of the child's biological father. She missed her high school graduation to give birth to that child, Christina (Wynonna), in 1964. 

Mother Naomi's musical desires persisted as she raised Wynonna amid significant turmoil.

By 1972, Judd and her husband had moved to Los Angeles, where she also gave birth to Wynonna's sister Ashley. However, in that same period, she and Ciminella also divorced. Judd attempted to piecemeal together a life for her family while in Los Angeles as a welfare recipient also working secretarial, waitressing and modeling jobs, but eventually moved back to Kentucky.

"We were (living) on a mountaintop in Kentucky. We didn't have a telephone or a TV," she told the Tennessean in a 2021 interview. “We were so broke, and wearing flea market dresses. We'd have these fantasies, and we were really goofy. We had such a sense of humor. And (we were) so eager to try new stuff and make fun of ourselves.”

After a brief stint back in Los Angeles, Naomi moved the family to Nashville in 1979 and took a job working as a nurse at a hospital in Franklin, Tennessee. She also formed a duo with her then 19-year-old daughter: The Judds. By 1983, she'd met producer Brent Maher, and the duo was signed to RCA Records. A year later, their second-ever mainstream single, “Mama, He’s Crazy" was on top of Billboard's country charts.

After that hit, The Judds enjoyed a near-consecutive run of 14 No. 1 hits, including “Why Not Me,” “Love Is Alive” and “Grandpa (Tell Me ‘Bout the Good Old Days).”

Then RCA Records executive Joe Galante recalled to The Tennessean that, upon hearing The Judds, Conway Twitty told him, "Son, I want to tell you. I heard the Judds. You did a great thing for country music. Then he hung up."

Naomi and Wynonna parted ways as a recording tandem in 1991 after Naomi was diagnosed with life-threatening hepatitis C. They reunited for an extensive farewell tour in 2010-11 and performed together in 2017 at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena, as part of an all-star tribute to Kenny Rogers.

Last year saw a resurgence of popularity in The Judds, as they were named as 2022 inductees into the Country Music Hall of Fame, alongside Ray Charles, Eddie Bayers and Pete Drake. 

Upon The Judds being named Hall of Fame inductees, Naomi Judd told The Tennessean, "So much of my life, I felt anonymous. I felt neglected…So to all of a sudden have somebody saying, 'Hey, wait a minute. You did something right. You actually pulled it off, and somebody else is validating you.' That means that it must be real."

The Judds also performed at the 2022 CMT Music Awards, which was coupled with the announcement of an 11-date nationwide tour. The CMT Music Awards performance of their 1990 No. 1 single “Love Can Build A Bridge" included an introduction by Kacey Musgraves before singing in front of the Country Music Hall of Fame.

"A mother and daughter whose unique sound, prolific songwriting and non-stop perseverance made them one of the most successful duo in country history," Musgraves said.


JUDD, Naomi (Diana Ellen Judd)

Born: 1/11/1946, Ashland, Kentucky, U.S.A.

Died: 4/30/2022, Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.A.

 

Naomi Judd’s western – actress:

Rio Diablo (TV) – 1993 (Flora Mae Pepper)

RIP Joanna Barnes

 


Joanna Barnes, Actress in ‘The Parent Trap’ and ‘Auntie Mame,’ Dies at 87

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

April 30, 2022

 

She also wrote several novels, including the Hollywood-set 'The Deceivers' and the sprawling Gold Rush epic 'Pastora.'

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

April 30, 2022

 

Joanna Barnes, the actress, author and newspaper columnist who portrayed less than likable young ladies in The Parent Trap and Auntie Mame, has died. She was 87.

Barnes died Friday at her home at The Sea Ranch, California, after dealing with “multiple health problems,” her friend Sally Jackson told The Hollywood Reporter. 

Barnes also starred as Jane opposite Denny Miller in Tarzan, the Ape Man (1959), then appeared with Kirk Douglas in Spartacus (1960) and The War Wagon (1967) and with Tony Curtis in Goodbye Charlie (1964) and Don’t Make Waves (1967).

The Boston native played the ex-wife of Peter Falk’s Shakespeare-quoting lawyer on the 1965-66 CBS series The Trials of O’Brien and was a welcome guest star on dozens of other shows, from Maverick, 77 Sunset Strip, Mannix and The Beverly Hillbillies to Barney Miller, Fantasy Island, Hart to Hart and Benson.

A Phi Beta Kappa from Smith College, Barnes interviewed stars and took viewers on tours of showbiz hotspots as host of the 1967 ABC weekday show Dateline: Hollywood — Rona Barrett dished out the gossip on the program — and served as a regular panelist on the CBS game show What’s My Line?

A New York Times book reviewer described Barnes as “Jacqueline Susann with a brain” after her first novel, The Deceivers, about a young actress growing up alienated in Hollywood, was first published in 1970.

Her third novel, 1980’s Pastora, is a 750-page historical epic that, Kevin Mims wrote, “can be fairly described as California’s Gone With the Wind. It does for California’s most famous historical epoch (the Gold Rush) what Margaret Mitchell’s novel did for the American South’s most famous historical epoch (the Civil War).”

Barnes also was a regular book reviewer for the Los Angeles Times and the writer behind “Touching Home,” a syndicated column about interior design.

Barnes received a Golden Globe nomination for most promising female newcomer for her performance as Gloria Upson, the haughty debutante engaged to Roger Smith‘s Patrick Dennis, in Auntie Mame (1958), starring Rosalind Russell.

In The Parent Trap (1961), starring Hayley Mills, she played the wicked gold digger Vicki Robinson out to sink her claws into the twins’ dad (Brian Keith), then returned for the 1998 Lindsay Lohan remake as the mother of that child-hating woman.

Born in Boston on Nov. 15, 1934, Barnes attended Milton Academy and then majored in English at Smith, graduating in 1956 with an offer to join the Time-Life publishing company. She tested for an acting role opposite Louis Jourdan on ABC’s Ford Television Theatre to write about the experience and got the part in 1957.

Barnes followed with appearances on Warner Bros. TV shows, including Colt .45, Cheyenne and Hawaiian Eye, then played Dennis Morgan’s assistant on a 1959 summer detective series called 21 Beacon Street at NBC. She also worked with Smith in the film No Time to Be Young that year.

She also showed up on the big screen in Violent Road (1958), Onionhead (1958), The Purple Hills (1961), Too Many Thieves (1966), and I Wonder Who’s Killing Her Now? (1975).

Barnes was married three times: to Richard Herndon; to actor, director and Naked City narrator Lawrence Dobkin; and, from 1980 until his death in 2012, architect Jack Lionel Warner, whose firm did work for the Bel-Air Country Club and Los Angeles Country Club. She moved with Warner from Montecito to The Sea Ranch in 2005.

Survivors include her sisters, Lally and Judith, and her stepchildren, John, Laura and Louise

 

BARNES, Joanna

Born: 11/15/1934, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.

Died: 4/30/2022, The Sea Ranch, California, U.S.A.

 

Joanna Barnes’ westerns – actress:

Cheyenne (TV) – 1957, 1958 (Alice Claney, Adelaide Marshall)

Maverick (TV) – 1957, 1958, 1960 (Mary Shane, Mrs. Baxter, Abby Taylor, Felice de Signac, Daphne Tolliver

Colt .45 (TV) – 1958 (Kate Henniger)

The Man from Blackhawk (TV) – 1960 (Colette)

The Purple Hills – 1961 (Amy Carter)

Stagecoach West (TV) – 1961 (Ruby Sanders)

Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) – 1962 (Penelope Lacey)

Laramie (TV) – 1962 (Ruth Craik, Lucy Barton)

Empire (TV) – 1963 (Neva Bradford)

The War Wagon – 1967 (Lola)

Alias Smith and Jones (TV) – 1971 (Janet Jordan)