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Sammy Davis Jr. was born Samuel George Davis, Jr. on December 8, 1925 to Cuban American parents in New York City. Starting as a child vaudevillian at age three, he toured for years nationally with the Will Masten Trio, and after military service, returned to the trio. He became an overnight sensation following a nightclub performance at Ciro’s in 1951 and with a trio became a recording artist.
As his father and uncle aged, Davis broke out to achieve success on his own and he released several albums that led to being hired to sing the title track for the Universal Pictures film “Six Bridges to Cross” in 1954. He amassed a catalogue of several dozen recordings for Decca, Reprise, Verve, Motown, MGM and 20th Century, consistently kept alive the Great American Songbook from Broadway accompanied by orchestras and big bands and had two #1 hits – “I Gotta Be Me” and The Candy Man.
Sammy starred in four Broadway musicals from 1956 to 1978 in Mr. Wonderful, Golden Boy, Sammy and Stop The World I Want To Get Off. His film career spanned nearly six decades with important roles and appearances in A Man Called Adam, Porgy & Bess, Anna Lucasta, Sweet Charity, Cannonball Run, Moon Over Parador and Tap. As a charter member of the Rat Pack he did several movies with them beginning with Oceans 11.
Not to let television escape his grasp in 1966 had his own variety show, The Sammy Davis Jr. Show, would appear on Archie Bunker, I Dream of Jeannie, The Rifleman, Charlie’s Angels, One Life To Live, General Hospital and the Cosby Show to name a few.
With his career slowing in the late sixties, by 1972 he was a star in Las Vegas earning him the nickname Mister Show Business. In 1987 Sammy toured internationally with Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Liza Minelli. He was awarded NAACP’s Spingarn Medal, won a Golden Globe and an Emmy, two-time recipient of the Kennedy Center Honors, has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame and posthumously awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Awards.
Singer, tap dancer, impersonator and musician Sammy Davis Jr. passed away in Beverly Hills, California on May 16, 1990, of complications from throat cancer. On May 18, 1990, two days after Davis’ death, the neon lights of the Las Vegas Strip were darkened for ten minutes, as a tribute to him.
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