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Kvitka Cisyk

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(Redirected fromKacey Cisyk)
American opera singer (1953–1998)

Kvitka Cisyk
Квітка Цісик
Cisyk in 1989
Born
Kvitoslava-Orysia Cisyk

(1953-04-04)April 4, 1953
DiedMarch 29, 1998(1998-03-29) (aged 44)
Manhattan, New York, U.S.
Occupation(s)Singer, actress
Years active1971–1998
Spouses
  • Jack Cortner
Edward J. Rakowicz
(m. 1983)
Children1
Musical career
Genres
InstrumentVocals
Labels
Musical artist
Websitekvitkacisyk.com

Kvitka Cisyk[a] (April 4, 1953[1] – March 29, 1998, bornKvitoslava-Orysia Cisyk[b]; also known asKacey Cisyk) was an Americancoloratura soprano ofUkrainian ethnicity. Cisyk, a classically trainedopera singer, achieved success in four musical genres: popular music, classical opera, Ukrainian folk music and commercial jingles for radio and TV advertisements.

Cisyk recorded"You Light Up My Life" for thefilm of the same title (Oscar and Golden Globe Awards win in 1978), sang the "Have you driven a Ford lately?" and "You deserve a break today!" jingles, and released two critically acclaimed albums of Ukrainian songs.

Early life

[edit]

Cisyk was the daughter of two Ukrainian immigrants fromEastern Galicia; her given name, Kvitka, is Ukrainian for "flower".[1] Her father,Wolodymyr Cisyk [uk], a well known Ukrainian concert violinist and teacher,[1] taught his daughter the violin when she was five years old, grooming her for a career as a classical musician.

Education

[edit]

Cisyk attended theHigh School of Music & Art in New York City and graduated in 1970. She attended Harpur College, also known as SUNY Binghamton, for one year directly after high school. Her sister taught piano there. In the summer of 1971, she attended a SUNY-sponsored opera program in Ghent, Belgium.[2] She received a violin scholarship to theMannes College of Music, but had switched to classical voice training by the time of her graduation.[3]

In January 1971, the initiative committee (chaired by Lubomyr Zobniv),[4] which consisted mainly of Harpur College students, created a television program called "Thoughts of Ukraine" to mark the Day of Unity of Ukraine.[5] The script was prepared by Maria Cisyk (music teacher) and Maria ("Mima") Koropiy (graduate student in French; host of a Ukrainian radio program).[6][7] The program featured Ukrainian folk dances, poems by Taras Shevchenko, songs performed by Kvitka Cisyk with guitar accompaniment by Bohdan Sokhan (a student from New York) and Yuriy Turchyn (a student at Rutgers University), and songs accompanied by Maria Tsysyk's piano. The individual performances were harmoniously combined with photographic material from Ukraine and background music selected and played for the program by Maria Cisyk. On the evening of January 22, the program "Thoughts on Ukraine" was broadcast on WINR-TV.

Music career

[edit]

Cisyk's original goal was a career as an opera singer, but her father's death left the family without a source of income. Needing to earn money immediately, Cisyk pursued a career as a session singer in popular music. She drew her professional name (Kacey) from her first and last initials.

Cisyk began singing in clubs, while submitting audition tapes to producers and advertising agencies. She had a successful career as a background singer in popular music, working as a backup singer forCarly Simon andMichael Franks and for artists produced byQuincy Jones.

Soundtrack and commercial jingle success

[edit]
Cisyk performing in 1989

Cisyk's work in commercials brought her to the attention ofJoe Brooks, who worked as a composer and arranger of jingles.[8] Brooks, who wrote, directed and composed the score for the movieYou Light Up My Life chose Cisyk to dub the singing voice of actressDidi Conn.

Cisyk's performance of the song appears on the original soundtrack album, and was released as a single, although she was not listed as the performing artist in the final credits of the film (for which she successfully sued the producers). Her single release of the song reached No. 80 on theBillboard Hot 100 charts.[citation needed]

The song was also recorded by singerDebby Boone, with Brooks producing and arranging. This recording of"You Light Up My Life", became a No. 1 single on theBillboard chart for ten consecutive weeks. People magazine ran a substantial article about "The real voice behind 'You Light Up My Life" inasmuch the similarity between her and Debby Boone's voice led many to assume the latter had sung the songs in the movie. In a 2013 biographical essay about Cisyk, her second husband,Ed Rakowicz wrote that Brooks "withheld payment" and "tried to evade payment by false promises and by asking her to be an incidental actor in his film, implying huge rewards yet to come."[9] Later, (according to Rakowicz's biographical essay[9]), Brooks made improper advances toward Cisyk, and after being rebuffed, didn't speak directly to her again, and continued to evade payments to her. Rakowicz writes,[9] "[Kacey] retained a lawyer and sued Brooks for the fees she earned for her work on the record and the film but accepted an award of a small sum just to relieve herself of the torment of a prolonged legal battle with Brooks." Brooks then had Cisyk's singing credit removed from the endcredits of the film.

Later in 2009,Joseph Brooks became the subject of an investigation after being accused of a series of casting-couch rapes.[10][11] He was indicted in May 2009 by the state Supreme Court forManhattan (a trial-level court) on 91 counts of rape, sexual abuse, criminal sexual act, assault, and other charges.[12] While awaiting trial, Brooks killed himself in May, 2011.[13]

Cisyk also recorded lead vocals for the soundtracks of the moviesThe One and Only andCircle of Two. She also contributed backing vocals to the Carly Simon songs used on the soundtrack for the movieWorking Girl.

Cisyk achieved her widest success as a singer of the musicaljingles used in TV and radio commercials.[1] Cisyk's recording of the slogan "Have you driven a Ford lately?" was used inFord commercials from 1981 to 1998; in 1989, Ford executives estimated that Cisyk's recording of that phrase had been heard 20 billion times.[1][14]

In addition to Ford, Cisyk sang for automakersGeneral Motors andToyota. She recorded spots for the three national television networks in the 1980s (ABC,NBC andCBS), four major airlines (American,Delta,Eastern andTWA), two national retailers (Sears andJCPenney), and the two most popular soft drinks:Coca-Cola andPepsi.

According to herNew York Times obituary, "a typical day, she later recalled, would begin with a 9 am session for Trans World Airlines, followed by Coca-Cola at eleven, Hartz Mountain at 1 pm, Eastern Airlines at two, Datsun at three, L'Eggs at five, McDonald's at six, and, after all that, a recording session from 8:30 pm to 3 am".

Ukrainian music

[edit]

As the daughter of Ukrainian immigrants, Cisyk was raised with Ukrainian music, and she is well known in the Ukrainian-speaking world for her two albums of Ukrainian songs.[1] According to Cisyk she recorded these albums because her colleagues often asked her to "show them something Ukrainian, but there were no records worthy of being shown".[1]

In 1980 she recorded her first album,Kvitka, Songs of Ukraine which won top honors in the 1988 Ukrainian Music Awards.

Her second album,Kvitka, Two Colors, released in 1989, was dedicated to "the spirit of the Ukrainian soul, whose wings can never be broken." Today, songs from both albums continue to be heard on radio in Ukraine.

Both albums were nominated for aGrammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album.[1]

BothSongs of Ukraine andTwo Colors were family projects. Cisyk's second husband,Ed Rakowicz, a recording engineer, produced Kvitka Two Colors; her first husband, Jack Cortner[15] arranged and conducted them both. Her sister,Maria Cisyk, a concert pianist and teacher, performed the solo piano selections on the record, and her mother, Iwanna, made sure her Ukrainian pronunciation was perfect.

Death and legacy

[edit]

Kvitka Cisyk Rakowicz died ofbreast cancer on March 29, 1998, at the age of 44.

For what would have been her 60th birthday, UkrainianInter TV channel broadcast a documentary filmKvitka. Single copy voice. The film examined the phenomenon of her life and career, and interviewed her relatives and close friends: husband Ed Rakowicz, son Eddie, family fromLviv and the United States, as well as peers and fans. On April 4, 2013 premieres of the film took place inKyiv,Lviv,Ternopil,Ivano-Frankivsk,Odesa,Luhansk andChernivtsi. The film debuted onInter TV channel on April 5, 2013.

Her contribution to Ukrainian music is recognized with a yearly music festival. Parks and streets were also named for her inKyiv,Vinnytsia Oblast andLviv,Ukraine.[16] In September 2022 a street that was named afterSoviet child actressGulya Korolyova inDnipro was renamed to honor Cisyk.[17] On 20 May 2024 thePoltava city council renamed a street in its city in honour of her.[18]

Recordings

[edit]

Solo albums

[edit]

Credits/participations

[edit]
ArtistSong/Album/Film TitleYearCredit/Participation
Michel CamiloForbidden Fuit1994Vocals (Background)
Flying Monkey OrchestraBack in the Pool1993Vocals, Choir, Chorus
Sadao WatanabeEarth Step1994Vocals (Background)
Sesame StreetSesame Road1993Vocals, Voices
BonkersBonkers Theme, Let's Go Bonkers1993Vocals, (Background)
Darkwing DuckDarkwing Duck Theme,1991Vocals, (Background)
Carole KingCity Streets1989Vocals (Background)
Various ArtistsWorking Girl1988Vocals (Background)
Michael FranksThe Camera Never Lies1987Vocals (Background)
Neal FoxA Painting1977Vocals (Background)
Michael FranksSkin Dive1985Vocals (Background)
Michael FranksPassionfruit1983Vocals (Background)
Marvin StammStammpede1983Vocals
Roberta FlackI'm the One1982Vocals, Vocals (Background)
Michael FranksObjects of Desire1982Vocals (Background)
David SanbornVoyeur1982Vocals, Vocals (Background)
Joseph BrooksYou Light Up My Life1977Vocals, Vocals (Background)
Alan and Marilyn BergmanThe One and Only1978Vocals
Michael FranksIndispensable1988
Michael JohnsonLifetime Guarantee1984Solo, Background vocals
Spyro GyraFreetime1981Backing vocals
Small Voices CallingSounds of a Better World2000Vocals

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Ukrainian:Квітка Цісик,romanizedKvitka Tsisyk
  2. ^Ukrainian:Квітослава-Орися Цісик,romanizedKvitoslava-Orysia Tsisyk

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghThe Myth of Kvitka,The Ukrainian Week (11 April 2013)
  2. ^«Eight Ukrainian students are awarded UNA scholarships for 1971» // «The Ukrainian Weekly», № 115, 19 June 1971, p. 1Archived 2013-12-20 at theWayback Machine
  3. ^«Eight Ukrainian students are awarded UNA scholarships for 1971» // «The Ukrainian Weekly», № 115, 19 June 1971, p. 1Archived 2013-12-20 at theWayback Machine
  4. ^Lubomyr Zobniw on SalesSpiderArchived 2013-12-02 at theWayback Machine
  5. ^«Binghamton TV program devoted to Independence Day» // «The Ukrainian Weekly», № 25, 6 February 1971, p. 1Archived 2013-12-02 at theWayback Machine
  6. ^«Obituary: Maria „Mima“ Koropey Zobniw» // Binghamton Press & Sun-Bulletin, 6-8 April 2009Archived 2013-12-02 at theWayback MachineBillmyer S. «Binghamton shooting victim went to work on day off just to help» // syracuse.com, 7 April 2009Archived 2013-12-03 at theWayback Machine
  7. ^«Community in Binghamton Marks Ukrainian Day» // «The Ukrainian Weekly», № 30, 13 February 1971, p. 2Archived 2013-12-03 at theWayback Machine
  8. ^Brown, Scott (February 21, 2003)."The 'Light' Stuff".EW.com.Archived from the original on June 5, 2013. RetrievedApril 22, 2013.
  9. ^abcKvitka’s Biography by Ed Rakowicz, 2013 Accessed Jan 14, 2014.
  10. ^Blumenthal, Ralph (June 23, 2009)."Director Joseph Brooks Accused of Raping Actresses".The New York Times.
  11. ^"NY Director Accused of Attacking Wannabe Actresses".Huffington Post.Associated Press. May 25, 2011. Archived fromthe original on April 2, 2015. RetrievedMay 1, 2016.
  12. ^"Prosecutors Want to Add Charges Against Composer".6abc.com.Philadelphia, Pennsylvania:WPVI-TV.Associated Press. December 2, 2009. RetrievedNovember 28, 2015.
  13. ^Goldstein, Joseph (May 23, 2011)."Songwriter, an Oscar Winner, is Found Dead".The New York Times.
  14. ^ROBERT McG. THOMAS JrPublished: April 13, 1998 (April 13, 1998)."Kasey Cisyk, Singer, Dies at 44; Made Mark in Commercials - New York Times".The New York Times. RetrievedApril 22, 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  15. ^[1]Archived October 17, 2009, at theWayback Machine
  16. ^"Україна Молода :.: Видання | НЬЮЗ–РУМ".Umoloda.kyiv.ua. July 26, 1997. RetrievedApril 22, 2013.
  17. ^"In the center of Dnipro, the street of Stepan Bandera appeared - the mayor".Ukrayinska Pravda (in Ukrainian). September 21, 2022. RetrievedOctober 18, 2022.
  18. ^"In Zaporizhzhia, a street was renamed in honor of teenage partisans who were killed by the occupiers in Berdyansk".Istorychna Pravda (in Ukrainian). May 21, 2024. RetrievedMay 22, 2024.

External links

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