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Singer Perry Como Dies

Perry Como, the crooning baritone barber famous for his relaxed vocals, cardigan sweaters and television Christmas specials, died Saturday after a lengthy illness.

Como died in his sleep at his home of natural causes, said Officer Phil Hardin of the Jupiter Inlet Colony Police Department. Some sources listed Como's age as 88; others said he was 87.

"We spent two beautiful hours (Friday) with dad, me and my grandson, Holden," Como's daughter, Terry Thibadeau, told The Palm Beach Post. "We shared ice cream. It was a wonderful moment for us."

The charming Italian-American whose name became synonymous with mellow performed through seven decades, starting in the 1930s. His idol, the late singer Bing Crosby, once called Como "the man who invented casual."

Como left his job as a Pennsylvania steel town barber to sing with big bands in the 1930s, and his songs were a mainstay of radio and jukeboxes in the late 1940s. He helped pioneer variety shows in the 1950s and performed on television specials over the last four decades.

In 1945, Como had his first million-selling hit, "Till the End of Time." It was among many songs including "Prisoner of Love" that topped the charts. He competed with Frank Sinatra and Crosby to be the era's top crooner.

While Como emulated Crosby in his early years, some of his best-known numbers were light novelty songs like "Hot Diggity" and "Papa Loves Mambo." He made a brief foray into wartime movie musicals in Hollywood, but decided to pursue a career in radio.

Como often said he far preferred singing romantic ballads to some of the lightweight numbers, but the novelty songs were a frequent audience request.

"They get tired of hearing `Melancholy Baby' and those mushy things," Como said in a 1994 interview. "But those are the songs that, as a singer, you love to sing."

Some music experts say Como, with his naturally melodic baritone voice, might have carved a deeper niche if he had taken firmer control of his material.

Will Friedwald, author of "Jazz Singing" and an expert of music from Como's era, once called Como "a marvelous singer" who "seemed to do everything they put in front of him."

Como made his television debut in 1948 on NBC's "The Chesterfield Supper Club" and in 1950 he switched to CBS for "The Perry Como Show," which ran for five years. Como then returned to NBC for a variety show that ran for eight years, first on Saturday nights opposite Jackie Gleason, then on Tuesday night.

In 1963, he gave up the regular television show and began doing occasional specials. Rock 'n' roll had crowded out the crooners who once charmed hordes of screaming bobby-soxers.

His career saw a resurgence in the 1970s with songs like "It's Impossible," "And I Love You So" and several best-selling Christmas albums. In 1987, President Reagan presented Como with a Kennedy Center award for outstanding achievement in the performing arts.

In 1994, Como put out a three-CD boxed set including his most poular songs since he started recording in 1943. And his former hit, "Catch a Falling Star" - for which Como won a Grammy in 1958 - became familiar to a new generation of fans when it became part of the Clint Eastwood-Kevin Costner movie "A Perfect World."

Como said he occasionally tired of the jokes about his somnambulant style, although he found a skit on the SCTV comedy show particularly amusing. The spot showed a Como impersonator lying on the floor nearly comatose with a microphone in front of his barely moving lips as dancers leaped about him.

His casual legend grew from his first pressure-packed appearances on the pioneering medium of live television - with its crashing scenery, misplaced cue cards and camera confusion.

"I decided the only thing to do was take it as it came," he recalled in a 1985 interview. "People wrote in asking how I could be so casual. It all started to grow."

Pierino Roland Como was born May 18, in 1912 or 1913, in Canonsburg, Pa., the middle offspring of 13 children of Italian immigrants.

At age 11, he went to work sweeping floors after school at a barbershop in the town just south of Pittsburgh. He got lessons on how to cut the hair of coal miners and other workers, and by the age of 14 he had his own barber business earning $150 a week. His pay dropped off during the Depression when he went to work for another barber.

But he got an offer to sing with Freddie Carlone's band in Cleveland in the early 1930s. He began his rise in show business when he was signed to sing with Ted Weems big band in 1936, a relationship that continued for six years.

In 1943, he began what turned into a 50-year contract with RCA-Victor Records with the recording of the song "Goodbye Sue."

In his later years, Como lived in a private semi-retirement with his wife Roselle, whom he met at a picnic when he was 16 and married in 1933. They divided their time between the North Carolina mountains and the Palm Beach County town of Jupiter where he played golf, took long, brisk walks and entertained his grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Mrs. Como died in August 1998, less than two weeks after she and Como celebrated their 65th wedding anniversary.

He reappeared on television periodically for Christmas television specials from exotic, international locales. Even as he grew older, the graying Como retained a tanned, fit appearance and youthful charm.

By Amanda Riddle
©MMI The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed

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