Ronnie Carroll | |
---|---|
![]() Ronnie Carroll at theEurovision Song Contest 1962 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Ronald Cleghorn |
Born | (1934-08-18)18 August 1934 Belfast, Northern Ireland |
Died | 13 April 2015(2015-04-13) (aged 80) Hampstead,London, England |
Occupation | Singer |
Instrument | Vocals |
Ronnie Carroll (bornRonald Cleghorn; 18 August 1934 – 13 April 2015) was a Northern Irish singer, entertainer and political candidate.
Carroll was born Ronald Cleghorn in 116 Roslyn Street,Belfast,Northern Ireland, in 1934, the son of a plumber.[1]
In January 1954, 19-year-old Ronnie Cleghorn was appearing in a variety show at the Town Hall,Portadown billed as Belfast'sNat King Cole[2] and the show went on to play at several locations in Northern Ireland. Coming across to England, Cleghorn joined a show called "Hollywood Stars" at the Queen's in Blackpool in March 1954[3] in which the cast gave impressions of trans-Atlantic screen personalities. He sang in the style of Nat King Cole in blackface.[4] Cleghorn adopted the stage name of "Carroll" in May 1954 and the show toured the UK for the next eighteen months. He made his first television appearance on BBC's "Camera One" on 10 January 1956 singing “Love Is a Many Splendored Thing”.[5] He was given a recording contract byPhilips and his first record "Last Love" was released on 1 February 1956.[6] Carroll joined a touring show "New Faces of 1956" which began in Nottingham on 27 February 1956[7] and then he went into a radio show "Calling All Stars".[8] Later that year, he was topping the bill on variety stages[9] and his record “Walk Hand in Hand” was in the charts.[10]
He is the only singer to have represented the UK in theEurovision Song Contest two years in succession.[11] Having taken part in the 1960 UK Eurovision selection contest with the song "Girl with a Curl", he returned to win the selection and beBritain's entry in the1962 contest, and with thesong "Ring-a-Ding Girl" shared fourth place, the same placinghe reached in 1963 with "Say Wonderful Things". This success was followed by twoTop 10 hits during 1962 and 1963, but a lack of good material meant that he could not sustain achart presence. In 1962 he appeared on the bill of "TheWinifred Atwell Show". From Monday 17 September 1962, for one week only, he gave twice-nightly performances at theBrighton Hippodrome.
Carroll subsequently worked oncruise ships, including theQE2, withJohn Marcangelo who was thedrummer with the Ronnie Carroll Orchestra. He played a pop musician named 'Ronnie' in the 1963 filmBlind Corner. He had many guest appearances on hit TV shows in the 1960s and early 1970s, includingThe Morecambe & Wise Show andSez Les.[12]
In 2005, he released a comebackalbum,Back on Song.[1]
Carroll contested his homeHampstead and Highgate constituency seat in the 1997 UKGeneral Election, and theUxbridge by-election in July that year with theRainbow Alliance.[13][14] He stood in the2008 Haltemprice and Howden by-election as a candidate forMake Politicians History and received 29 votes, despite announcing that he was trying to enter the record books by receiving no votes.[15][16]
He stood as a candidate (under the name 'The Eurovisionary Carroll') for the2015 general election, in theHampstead and Kilburn constituency. Nominations had closed on 9 April 2015, just four days before his death, but polling day was not until 7 May. He was standing as an independent so the poll continued; if he had won the election, the ballot would have been re-run at a later date. In the event he polled 113 votes to finish sixth out of seven candidates.[17]
Through work invarietytheatre he met his first wife,Millicent Martin, they married in Barbados in 1958, remaining married until 1969.[18] His company Ronnie Carroll Productions Ltd went into liquidation in 1969 following a petition from the Inland Revenue.[19] He had suffered gambling losses of £170,000 in recent years.[20]
His second wife was the Olympic runnerJune Paul and they married on 21 September 1970.[21] They ran a successful nightclub inGrenada, which failed when there was a revolution and the airport runways were dug up, ending tourism for a time.[22][23] He was first declared bankrupt in 1974 when his second marriage to June Paul ended, Paul went on to own the "Everyman Cinema" in Hampstead.[23] Carroll went on to marry and divorce his third and last wife, South African-born Glenda Kentridge.[22] In 1989 Carroll was declared bankrupt for a second time, at one point, running a food stall in Camden Market.[23]
He lived his last years inHampstead, north London, and was a regular caller to radio phone-in shows onBBC London 94.9. He died in London on 13 April 2015, at age 80.[24][23] He was survived by two sons with June and a daughter and son, his children with Glenda.[22]
Media related toRonnie Carroll at Wikimedia Commons
Awards and achievements | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest 1962,1963 | Succeeded by |