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She is a harpist, pianist, flautist and theatre
producer born Merrilyn Hecht in Freeport, Illinois, to a family who owned
Hecht’s clothing store. Her
nickname of Corky came about when she attended summer camp as a child.
She began playing the piano when she was three years
old and was noticed when she was just seven and playing around on the piano
while on holiday in Florida. This
led to her attending the Chicago Conservatory from the time she was seven. While at the Conservatory the harp
caught her attention but not just sticking to classical music, she diverted
some of her attention to jazz and music from shows.
She was enrolled in Stephens College when she was
sixteen and was unbelievably failed in harp, possibly because her teacher
wasn’t enamoured with her playing jazz with boys from the nearby
university. Her father then
signed her up at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, which was against her
wishes as she had set her heart on becoming a musician in Hollywood.
She made it to Hollywood though after having lasted at
the university a year and meeting her dad halfway and agreeing to be
enrolled in UCLA. Of course
this didn’t last and within a short while she was a harpist on the Freddie
Martin Show.
Before long she got noticed and was signed up to
appear on the new show Liberace. This working association carried on
for the next three years when she toured with Liberace and appeared in his
movie Sincerely Yours. During all these years since moving to California her
parents still thought she was still attending UCLA until the night they saw
her performing on TV. They
found out when her mother flew to Los Angeles that she had actually put
herself together a nice wee career.
Staying within television she became a performer on The
Red Skelton Show among many others and then was asked to play on the
movie soundtrack of The Ten Commandments by Cecil B. DeMille. She then worked at the Coconut
Grove club as a pianist and singer, and starting to use Corky Hale as her
stage name. She worked with
countless artists there, which later resulted in her being dated by Frank
Sinatra.
She went to Las Vegas to perform for Jerry Grey, which
resulted in her accompanying Billie Holiday, but she turned down a chance
to perform in the Philippines with her. Around the same time her parents opened up the clothing
store called Corky Hale for her and moved down to Los Angeles to keep an
eye on her. She stopped
working as a musician to work in the store and then got married to a man
she had met in the clothing industry.
She wasn’t settled though and the marriage lasted just four years
with much of her time spent living in Italy, which was one of the good side
of things for her. She
remained in Rome for a few years after getting divorced and appeared in a
few movies and on the TV show Tempo de Jazz.
Returning to the States in 1966 she moved around a bit
until settling in New York where she played for Tony Martin and Tony
Bennett. Towards the end of
the 1960s she met her husband Mike Stoller, of Leiber & Stoller songwriting
fame, while recording some demos for him. They have been married since 1970 and often split their
time between New York and Los Angeles during the earlier years. Unbelievably she somehow even found
time to open the New York restaurant Corky’s.
She has worked with literally a who’s-who of artists over
the years either on television, in the recording studio or on stage and
just a few of these not mentioned above have included Elkie Brooks, James
Brown, Nat “King” Cole, Judy Collins, Roberta Flack, Dean Friedman, Boy
George, Harry James, Elton John, Yusef Lateef, Peggy Lee, Melissa
Manchester, Herbie Mann, the New York Pops Orchestra, Anita O’Day, Stealers
Wheel, Barbra Streisand, Mel Torme and too many more to mention.
As you can imagine, her album output is extensive and
includes her own Corky, Harp Beat, Have Yourself a Jazzy
Little Christmas, I’m Glad There Is You and Plays George
Gershwin & Vernon Duke and also Debut by Bjork, Boy Meets
Girl by Sammy Davis Jr. & Carmen McRae, Sings the Cole Porter
Songbook by Ella Fitzgerald, Chapter Two by Roberta Flack, Ultimate
Collection by Billy Holiday, Songs of the Century by George
Michael, Against the Grain by Phoebe Snow and the soundtracks of Godspell,
Kissing Jessica Stein and SpongeBob Square Pants.
She now owns the Hollywood jazz club Corky’s in Los
Angeles and outside of her musical career she is also an American Film
Institute associate and a theatre producer who has worked on Lullaby of
Broadway and Give ‘Em Hell Harry among others. She has also founded the charitable
Angel Harvest, which aids people going hungry in the Los Angeles vicinity,
and has been a birth control teacher in New York’s Planned Parenthood
organisation.
Sources:
- http://corkyhale.com/biography.php
- http://www.citycabaret.com/corkyhale/corkystory.html
- http://www.citycabaret.com/corkyhale/corkycareer.html
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corky_Hale
- http://www.answers.com/topic/corky-hale
- http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:w9ftxqq5ld6e~T1
- http://www.corkyhale.com/albums.php
- http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:w9ftxqq5ld6e~T4
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