Cab Calloway
Cab Calloway
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Cabell Calloway III was an American jazz singer and bandleader. He was associated with the Cotton Club in Harlem, where he was a regular performer and became a popular vocalist of the swing era. His niche of mixing jazz and vaudeville won him acclaim during a career that spanned over 65 years.

Although he describes himself as a loner in his autobiography, Of Minnie the Moocher Me, bandleader/singer Cab Calloway was an exuberant entertainer who loved making audiences happy and enjoyed life. Born Cabell Calloway III on Christmas day in 1907, he spent his early childhood in RochesteR&But grew up in Baltimore where his mother was a schoolteacher and his father, a lawyer.

To his parent's dismay he hustled on the streets and spent more time at the racetrack than in school. He took voice lessons at 14, learned to play the drums, and joined Johnny Jones and His Arabian Tent Orchestra at the age of 17. His older sisteR&Blanche was in show business, and Cab joined her in the touring cast of the black revue Plantation Days when he was 20. When the show closed he entered Crane College where he played basketball. But he continued singing, landing the cee's job at the Sunset Cafe, a prominent Chicago nightclub, and leading the band, the Alabamians.

While popular in the Midwest, the Alabamians were old-fashioned when they opened and closed on the same night in 1929 at New York City's Savoy Ballroom. Calloway moved on, replacing the juvenile lead in the hit show Hot Chocolates and then returned to New York to lead a band called the Missourians. TheiR&Big break came when they were asked to fill in for Duke Ellington at New York's world-famous Cotton Club. The band was a smash hit, and Calloway cut quite a figure on stage in his white tux, singing and dancing around with his hair flying.

The group became Cab Calloway's Cotton Club Orchestra, and, in 1931 with Irving Mills, Calloway wrote a new theme song for th, "Minnie the Moocher." "We created her as a rough, tough character, but with a heart as big as a whale," says Calloway. Not long after introducing the song, Calloway forgot the lyrics during a radio show. "...In the middle of a verse,...the damned lyrics went right out of my head.... I had to fill the space, so I just started to scat-sing the first thing that came into my mind...Hi-de-hi-de-hi-de-ho.'"

The crowd went wild as the band responded in kind, and fan mail poured in. "From that night on," says Calloway, "Minnie the Moocher' and hi-de-ho' have been one and the same as far as most people are concerned. And Minnie, hi-de-ho, and Cab Calloway, too." The band toured relentlessly, and Calloway was one of the first bandleaders to have both baseball and basketball teams that played s i-pros in the towns where they performed. The band members at various times included Chu Berry, Milt Hinton, Benny Payne, and Dizzy Gillespie.

They toured the U.S, Europe, South America, and the Caribbean and appeared in films. Calloway himself had a leading role in 1943's Stormy Weather and featured roles in later films and shorts. Rough times hit the big band business in 1947, and Calloway reduced the band to a combo. He played Sportin' Life in the 1950 Broadway revival of Porgy and Bess and continued performing into his 80s, playing Horace Vandergelder in Hello Dolly! providing half-time entertainment for the Harl Globetrotters, playing the Catskill Mountain resorts, and performing with his daughter Lael. He was active until his death at 86 from a stroke.

 This is his last interview (February 23, 1993)

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