Harry James(1916-1983)
- Actor
- Music Department
- Composer
Harry James was born in a rundown hotel next to the city jail in
Albany, Georgia. His mother and father were members of a circus - she
as a trapeze artist and he a band leader - with the Mighty Haag Circus.
At seven, they settled in Beaumont, Texas where Harry learned to play
drums. By twelve, he was playing trumpet in the Christy Brothers Circus
band. In 1936 James joined
Ben Pollack's band, soon leaving to
lead the brass section of
Benny Goodman's band. He even once
applied to Lawrence Welk's band but was
turned down because they said he played too loud and it was not Welk's
style. After three years with Goodman, he wanted to leave, and with
Goodman's backing, he formed the Music Makers. In 1943 he married pinup
queen Betty Grable, his second of four
wives. He had earlier married and divorced Louise Tobin, a singer.
Grable kept appearing in movies and Harry kept playing while they
raised horses. He made his debut in Philadelphia at the Ben Franklin
Hotel and soon was a nationwide favorite of dance lovers and jazz
addicts, rocking the rafters at the Hollywood Paladium, Chicago's
famous College Inn at the Hotel Sherman, Frank Dailey's Meadowbrook in
Cedar Cove, NJ, and then onto New York City. It was the Lincoln Hotel
in NYC that the Music Makers called home, but James also starred at the
Paramount Theater in the spring of 1943, with thousands of teenagers
flocking to see him. His version of You Made Me Love You was a
big hit and a favorite of many through the war years. James was a great
discoverer of talent, finding
Frank Sinatra working as a waiter in a New
Jersey restaurant and giving him a job singing in his band.
Dick Haymes,
Kitty Kallen,
Connie Haines and
Helen Forrest can all thank James
for giving them their first real break. In 1963 his band was featured
at Disneyland, still known as the Music Makers. He played his last gig
at the Century Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles on June 26, 1983, just a few
days before dying of lymphatic cancer.