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Friday, August 29, 2025


Samuel Henry Kress Portrait

painted by

Leopold Seyffert

Circa 1953




S. H. Kress was the second of seven children descending from German and Irish immigrants.


The life of Samuel Henry Kress (1863-1955) falls naturally into three stages, the hard-one-struggles of his youth in rural Cherryville, Pennsylvania, the brillance of his mercantile success with the S. H. Kress & Company variety stores and with the distribution of his incomparable collection of European paintings and sculpture to scores of art museums across the land with the Kress Foundation's philanthropic programs. 

The Kress story, once familiar to most Americans, has been said to epitomize American opportunity and the virtues of stern discipline, vigorous hard work and generosity.

Samuel Kress had already passed his 65th birthday when, in 1929, he established the Foundation that bears his name.  With the same dedication that marked the creation of his commercial empire, he had recently planed the seeds of what would eventually become a major collection of Italian Renaissance art.  Between 1929 and 1961, Samuel Kress and the Kress Foundation (with the participation of his brothers, Claude and Rush) assembled and distributed across the United States the 20th century's foremost collection of Old master paintings and other European works of arts.



 S. H. Kress & Company Five-and-Ten-Cent Store 
 Memphis, Tennessee.
Circa 1896

Before the establishment of the Kress Foundation in 1929, Kress was already a recognized benefactor to as many as 200 communities in more than half the country.  On Main Streets all across the nation, the vast retail empire of S.H. Kress & Company, established in 1896, operated a chain of five-and-ten-cent stores purveying affordable, durable and cheerful domestic merchandise.  Designed to exacting company standards, the handsome Kress stores were cherished not only for their quality merchandise, but also as prominent local landmarks.  The downtown Kress stores were celebrated beacons of prosperity and progress examples of urban architectural design and sources of municipal pride. 


S. H. Kress & Company
Birmingham, Alabama 



The most distinctive and best remembered Kress stores were a group of more than fifty Art Deco buildings, dating from 1929-1944 and designed by Edward F. Sibbert*, the company's longtime chief architect.  Sibbert's buildings streamlined the Kress image by using sleek modern facades, simple yet distinctive ornament and color characteristic of the Kress brand.  Curved glass display windows led the shopper through heavy bronze doors into an interior of rich marbles, fine woods and large customized counters set crosswise down a long sales floor.  Well-positioned hanging lamps created a bright atmosphere for an endless array of inexpensive items (there were 4,275 different merchandise on sale in 1934).  Everything from the constantly restocked merchandise to the popular soda fountain in the basement which encouraged customers to linger. 

*Edward F. Sibbert was a Brooklyn born American architect.  He is best remembered for the fifty or so retail stores he designed during a 25-year career as the head architect at the S. H. Kress & Co. hain of five-and-dimes.  His tenure at Kress coinciced roughly with the company's peak years of success and many of his Art Deco-style buildings have survived beyond the chain's 1980 demise and are in use today utilizing other purposes.

In 1929, Sibbert answered an advertisement in a newspaper and was hired by the S. H. Kress Co.  Samuel H. Kress was in the process of dismissing his head architect, George Mackay and it is possible Sibbert worked with MacKay in designing the store for Pueblo, Colorado.  Sibbert continued as Kress' chief architect for 25 yeas, designing chain stores across the United States in a consistent format and style, recognizalbe by its use of ornamental terra cotta.  

Sibbert was a member of the American Institute of Architects and American Society of Civil Engineers. He retired to Pompano Beach, Florida after living for many years in New York City.  Sibbert passed in Pompano Beach May 13, 1982.




Edward F. Sibbert 

(1899-1982)


Like the great movie houses of the day, the "dime store" and the Kress store were a popular destination during hard economic times. 

Each Kress store was a gift of civic art to its community.  Grandest of all was Edward Sibbert's masterpiece, the Kress flagship store at the corner of Fifth Avenue and 39th Street in New York City which opened in 1935.



The Flagship* Store
39th and 5th Avenue
NYC

*A flagship store is a retailer's most important or prominent store, often serving as the company's first or most well-known location.  It is a place where brands showcase their identity, experiment with new concepts and offer customers a unique shopping experience. They may be the largest store in the chain, the one with the highest sales volume.

The seven-story marble structure designed for everything shopping comfort, its Art Deco elegance was graced with Mayan-style hieroglyphs of goods for sale on the exterior and airborne Mayan gods in relief on the sales floor.  Awarded a gold medal for architectural quality, the store represented the zenith of the Kress empire in luxury, modernity and retailing capacity.  In December 1938, it was also the locale of the most astonishing Christmas display in the history of Fifth Avenue with Samuel Kress' acquisition of Giorgione's Allendale Nativity, placed on view for holidays shoppers.  Like most of the Kress stores across the nation, the Fifth Avenue emporium was supremely successful and its demolition in 1980 sadly marked the end of an American era.  




Once neglected by architectural historians, the study of 20th-century commercial architecture is now receiving the attention it most certainly deserves.  The National Building Musuem in Washington, DC stewards the archives that document the building history of 221 Kress stores in 28 states.  It also has published A Guide to the Building Records of S. H. Kress & Co. 5-10-25 Cent Stores.


















Tuesday, August 19, 2025

 

Doris Duke 

(1912-1993)



Doris Duke and her Father, James Buchanan Duke.

Doris Duke was the only child of James Buchanan Duke and Nanaline Holt Duke.  Doris' life was marked by both privilege, philanthropy and intrique regarding her two marriages and a child named Arden who only lived 24 hours and whose father was never really determined.   She was known for the extensive charitable donations, particularly to Duke University, Princeton University and other institutions.  

Doris Duke did not inherit the Duke mansion in Charlotte, North Carolina.  She did inherit Duke Farms in New Jersey, Rough Point in Rhode Island and a mansion on Fifth Avenue in New York City.  Doris and her mother, Nanaline Duke eventually donated the Fifth Avenue mansion to New York University's Institute of Fine Arts in 1958.


The 5th Avenue Mansion 


While her father purchased the Duke Mansion in Charlotte (Myers Park) and expanded it, it was not part of her inheritance.  Instead, the estate was purchased by Charles Campbell Coddington (1878-1928) after J.B. Duke's passing.  

Doris Duke was an American billionaire tobacco heiress, philanthropist and socialite.  She was often called "the richest girl in the world".  Her great wealth, luxurious lifestyle and love life attracted significant press coverage, both during her life and after her passing at Falcon Lair in Los Angeles. 

Duke married twice.  The first time in 1935 to James H. R. Cromwell. They embarked on a world honeymoon spending significant time in the Middle East and in Asia  The couple had a daughter, Arden who was born prematurely in Honolulu on July 11, 1940 and only lived for 24 hours. Many who knew Doris feel the father of that child was not James Cromwell and say "anyone who knew Miss Duke knows that". 


Duke and Cromwell divorced in 1943.  After the divorce, Cromwell remarried and had two children demonstrating he had a life beyond his marriage to Doris Duke.  Doris, after the divorce, continued her philanthropic activities and built Shangri La in Honolulu, Hawaii.  


Shanghri La

4055 Papu Circle

Honolulu, Hawaii 


Shangri La was constructed from 1935-1937.  It was inspired by Doris' extensive travels throughout North Africa and Western, Central,  South and Southeast Asia and the landscapes of Hawaii'i.  Over the course of 60 years, Duke assembled and impressive collection of nearly 4,500 artworks, cultural resources and architectural designs through commissions from artisans, purchases from dealers and bazaars, or received as gifts. The collection is particularly strong in ceramics, wood, glass and textiles from 1600 to 1940. As part of her lasting desire to promote the sturdy and understanding of the art and cultures experienced during her travels, Doris Duke directed in her will that Shangri La be "available to scholars, students and others interested in the furtherance and preseration of Islamic art and make the premises open to the public."  In 2002, Shangri La opened as the only musuem dedicated exclusively to Islamic art in the United States. 


James and Doris Duke Cromwell 


On September 1, 1947, while in Paris, Duke became the third wife of Porfirio Rubirosa, a diplomat from the Dominican Republic.  Duke paid Porfirio's second wife $1 million to agree to an uncontested divorce.  Rubirosa was a known playboy having been married to Barbara Hutton, heiress to the Woolworth fortune on December 30, 1953.  The marriage lasted 1 month following a 3 month engagement.

Duke's passions varied widely.  She was a news correspondent in the 1940s.  She also played jazz piano and learned to surf, competitively.  At her father's estate in Hillsborough Township, New Jersey she created one of the largest indoor botanical displays in the United States.  She was also active in preserving more than 80 historic buildings in Newport, Rhode Island.  Duke was close friends with former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.  In 1968, Duke created the Newport Restoration Foundation with Kennedy Onassis being appointed the vice president.


In 1930, when Doris turned 18, the 6 foot tall Duke was presented to society as a debutante at a ball at Rough Point, the family residence in Newport.  She received large bequests from her father's will when she turned 21, 25 and 30.  Her mother died in 1962 leaving her jewelry, a coat and an additional $250 million.  When Duke came of age, she used her wealth to pursue a variety of interests including extensive travel and the arts.  She studied singing with the voice teacher of opera singer, Beverly Sills in New York City.  She spoke French fluently and after WWII she moved to Paris and wrote for Harper's Bazaar. 

Due to her extensive travel she purchased her own Boeing 737 and redecorated the interior of the plane to travel between homes and her trips to collect art.  



One of the famous homes Doris Duke purchased was Falcon Lair.  It was an historic 11 bedroom Mediterranean-style villa above Benedict Canyon once owned by silent film star, Rudolph Valentino.  In 1925, Rudolph Valentino purchased the 4 acre estate for $175,000 (equivalent to $3,138,000 in 2024) and named it Falcon Lair inspired by a film he planned to make with his wife, Natacha Rambova.  The estate was designed by Wallace Neff and featured a Spanish Revival style house.  After Valentino's passing, the estate was sold several times.  Eventually, Doris Duke acquired it and lived there for many years, using it as her West Coast home. Duke reportedly lived in a state of isolation at Falcon Lair.  It was even referred to as a "prison", by some.  Doris passed while in residence at Falcon Lair at age of 80. 


The historic main house was demolished in 2006.  Today, the former stable building and three-bay garage, converted into a guesthouse and pool pavilion, an elaborate gated entance, plus an open-air chapel are the only remaining structures of the original estate.  This remaining portion of the estate has been listed for sale at various times, most recently in 2019 for $4.95 million.



Falcon Lair

1436 Bella Drive

Benedict Canyon

Los Angeles, California 



The Fatal Crash That Plunged Doris Duke Into Scandal

It was about 5 p.m. on a Friday in October 1966 when the millionaire heiress Doris Duke, hounded by gossip columns for decades, drove a rental Dodge Polara station wagon into infamy.  Duke, then 53, was leaving her Newport, Rhode Island estate with her close companion of ten years, the interior set designer Eduardo Tirella, 42, according to reports at the time.  Tirella drove the two down the driveway before getting out to open the mansion's front gates, as Duke slid over to the driver's side.  "It was something we'd done a hundred times before," she reportedly told police. As Tirella opened the gates she would then usually drive the car through as he closed them.  This time, though, it all went terribly wrong.  As the New York Daily News recounted at the time, the car "struck the heavy, 15-foot high, 20-foot wide wrought iron gate with such force the gate sprang open.  Several inch-square, five-foot long sections of iron were torn out. The vehicle dragging Tirella's body, lurched across two-laned Bellevue Avenue and hit a large tree."  


The damaged infamous Rough Point Gates




 Duke was found nearby seemingly in a fog, bleeding from wounds.  She was released from the hospital after 30 stitches treating cuts to her lip and chin, but would not be interviewed by police until nearly two days after the event, as questions and a blinding media glare only grew more intense.  Her physician, Dr. Philip   McAllister told reporters Doris was in shock and officers wouldn't formally interview Duke until that Sunday afternoon. Dr. McAllister told the New York Daily News that subjecting Doris to police questions so soon after the tragedy would have been "inhumane".

The slow speed of the police investigation clearly concerned the Rhode Island Attorney General J. Joseph Nugent who soon announced he would ask police for a full report.  "This is an extraordinary case," Nugent told reporters.  "I can make a judgement independent of the police in the matter, if necessary".  The rumors grew quickly.  As the New York Times would later report, there was speculation that Duke had been drunk behind the wheel and that it wasn't an accident, after all!  When asked about such a possiblity, Duke's doctor pronounced it "unthinkable", saying the two "were devoted".  Besides, there was "no evidence of alcohol in the blood of either Miss Duke or Tirella" according to Dr. McAllister who just happened to also be the state's acting medical examiner.

The doctor didn't stop there.  "Wealth does not bring happiness. And I'm convinced that enormous wealth brings great handicaps."

Rumors notwithstanding, Police Chief Radice would rule Tirella's death "an unfortunate accident".  He added, "As far as I am concerned, the case is closed." Nugent, the attorney general, never apparently questioned the investigation and the case was closed.  All evidence at the site that there had ever been accident .. vanished.  The rented station wagon was hauled away,  the gates were repaired and the media disappeared.  One of Tirella's eight siblings, Alice Romano, filed two negligence suits of $1.25 million each, one against Duke and another against Avis Rental.  Duke was found negligent in the the civil trail and was order to pay $75,000 to the Tirella family.  Romano appealed the court's decision, alleging that the jury's award was inadequate, but it was dismissed.  

If Duke's money had been a curse to herself while she was alive, it seems to have had the same effect on her distnad relatives.  Duke was said to change her will often, replacing her nephew, Walker Patterson Inman, Jr. as executor with her butler, Bernard Lafferty. Lafferty was set to receive a $5 million fee and $500,000 a year for life (Duke's dogs were left a $100,000 trust fund), but he died in 1996.  She reportedly left Inman $7 million in a trust.

Duke might not have been surprised had she lived as she once told a journalist in 1945 over a glass of wine at the Hassler Hotel in Italy

"All that money is a problem sometimes."


A Vanity Fair article was written in July/August 2020 by Peter Lance titled Homicide at Rough Point.



A writer by the name of Alyssa Maxwell wrote a book titled Murder at Rough Point.



On October 7, 1966, the wealthy heiress Doris Duke hit and killed her friend, Eduardo Tirella while behind the wheel of a renter car.  Whether his death at age 42 was an accident or an intentional act of murder, is still up for debate nearly 60 years later!  In 2021, the investigation was reopened.


Eduardo Tirella 

On the last full day of his life, October 6, 1966 Eduardo Tirella flew into Newport, Rhode Island, the storied summer colony of the country's old money families.  He was met at the airport by Doris Duke,, the richest woman in America, and they drove to Rough Point, her 10-acre estate on Bellevue Avenue .. Newport's Millionaire's Row.  Eddie, as friends knew Tirella, had just told intimates that after a decade as the artistic curator and designer of Duke's estates in New Jersey, Bel Air, Honolulu and Newport he was planning to sever his professsional ties with Doris, for good!  Now, it was time to let his patron and constant companion know, face-to-face!

The handsome Tirella, a war hero and Renaissance man, had just finished advising on a new Tony Curtis film, Don't Make Waves, and was working on his Hollywood career.  Anxious to move to the West Coast full-time, he intended to load his effects into a rented station wagon, drop them at his family's home in New Jersey and then fly back to California.  But nobody left Doris Duke without consequences.  Tirella, who was gay, had been warned by his friends that Duke might over react to his pending departure.  

Late the next afternoon, Tirella and Duke had a heated argument, overheard by the estate's staff.  Moments later, the pair got into the two-ton station wagon with Tirella behind the wheel and headed off for an appointment.  Approaching the property's immense iron gates, Eduardo stopped the car and got out of the station wagon to unlock the gate. 

Suddenly, Doris slid into the driver's seat, released the parking brake, shifted into drive and hit the accelerator resulting in Tirella's untimely death.   

🔎 🔍 

Ninety-six hours later, with no inquest and basing the authorities account of the crash entirely on the word of Doris Duke .. Newport police chief, Joseph A. Radice declared the death of Tirella .. accidental.  Case closed.  



Sidenote:  The fact that Doris' staff heard Eduardo and Doris arguing and he was intending to sever ties with her leads me to believe she ..

.. got away with murder .. 
















Sunday, August 3, 2025

 

Heinz Hall

600 Penn Avenue

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 


Home to the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra

and

the cornerstone of the Cultural District of Pittsburgh.




The structure evolved from its origin in 1927 as the Loew's Penn Theatre to its renovation and dedication as Heinz Hall for the Performing Arts in 1971. 

Motion picture magnate, Marcus Loew hired the architectural firm of Rapp & Rapp to design the opulent movie house.  Known as Pittsburgh's "Temple of the Cinema" the building was regarded as the most magificent theatre between New York and Chicago.  Audible gasps from first-nighters would be heard as they entered the Grand Lobby on opening night.  A marble staircase led from the Grand Lobby with its 50-foot-high vaulted Venetian ceiling supported by massive ornamental columns.

Bronze and crystal chandeliers and imported silk damask draperies complimented the lobby artwork.  An organ, which would be destroyed in a 1936 flood, was touted to be "the greatest musical instrument the world has ever known".  Those in attendance were treated to a two-hour silent film and a live stage show.  

Such spectacles were not restricted to Pittsburgh.  In the early decades of the century, Americans flocked in droves to similarly designed theatres.  These flamboyant and stately palaces were built of the most costly materials, embellished with gold leaf cherubs, crystal chandeliers, Carrara marble and Persian tiles. 

With the advent of televsion, declining attendance and the rising costs of maintaining such landmarks, the Penn Theatre, in line with the nation's other great movie palaces, was forced to shut its doors in 1964.  The building then sat vacant for five years.  Destined to be demolished to make way for a parking lot, the building was nearly destroyed until the Pittsburgh Symphony intervened. 

Thank you Pittsburgh Symphony!

The Pittsburgh Symphony was searching for a new home, having outgrown Carnegie Music Hall.  The economic advantages to recycling the well-constructed theatre were clearly apparent.  To explore the feasibility of using the building, Henry J. Heinz II and Charles Denby, president of the Pittburgh Symphony Society, toured the old movie palace. Together, they had the vision to look past the rundown interior and see that with proper restoration the hall could be a brillant cultural center. Along with Adolph W. Schmidt, president of the A.W. Mellon Educational and Charitable Trust and Theodore Hazlett, Jr., representing the Allegheny Conference and the Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh, these men worked with the architectural firm of Stotz, Hess, MacLachlan & Fosner to begin the construction.

The $10 million recontruction took place over a three-year period, with much of the work completed by local craftsmen and artisans. Much of the basic architecture of the building remained unchanged from the original French Court style. The entrance to the theatre was moved into the area that had once been a coffee shop.  The 40-foot Alcoa window replaced the original entrance and rises above the Grand Lobby.

Breche opal and Lavanto marble, plush red velvet and shimmering crystal are the main elements in the decoration of the interior of the Hall. The gold detailing throughout is 24-karat gold leaf, which was applied by two local craftsmen of the A.J. Vater Company,  who worked on its application for 18 months.  The two spectacular 15-foot chandeliers in the Grand Lobby, weighing more than one ton each and which were part of the original theatre, were dismantled, redesigned and recrystalled. The crystals on these and all of the chandeliers were imported from J & L. Lobyer of Vienna. The acoustical consultant was Dr. Heinrich Keilholz of Salzburg, Austria.  An adjustable orchestra pit, to accommodate 85 musicians and powered by a hydraulic lift, was added for opera and stage performances.

As part of the renovation, a new five-story wing was added to the rear of the building which added 28 feet to the stage, plus dressing rooms, a music library and rehearsal room facilities. The main rehearsal room was designed to the exact dimensions of the stage area. All of the rooms are soundproofed and equipped with acoustical panels. 

September 10, 1971 was the Grand Opening of Heinz Hall for the Performing Arts.  It was a celebration of ceremony and pageantry with flowers, dinners, champagne and music.  Many of Pittsburgh's most prominent citizens were in attendance for the festivities with a Pittsburgh Symphony concert under the baton of William Steinberg.  

The guest list included such dignitaries as Marian Anderson, Charlton Heston, James Earl Jones, Gregory Peck and Nancy Hanks, then chair of the National Council on the Arts. 



In keeping with its grand tradition, Heinz Hall maintains its position as a world-class, acoustically stunning concert hall to be enjoyed for generations to come.


Thank goodness it was saved and not turned into a parking lot.





Friday, August 1, 2025

 

The McGuire Sisters

Christine, Phyllis and Dorothy 


Ruby Christine McGuire

(July 30, 1926-December 8, 2018)


Dorothy "Dottie" McGuire

(February 13, 1928-September 7, 2012)


Phyllis Jean McGuire

February 14, 1931-December 29, 2020)



The singing sisters known for their sweet harmonies and identical outfits, recorded the No. 1 hits "Sincerely" and "Sugartime" in the 1950s. The sisters knowsn for their sweet synchronized body movements and gestures.  Other songs were "Goodnite, Sweetheart, Goodnite" (1954) and "Something's Gotta Give" (1955).  The trio was dressed and coiffed identically performing synchronized body movements and hand gestures with military precision. Their recordings of "Sincerely", "Picnic" and "Sugartime" sold more than one million copies. 



Christine, Phyllis and Dorothy were born in Middletown, Ohio though grew up in Miamisburg, Ohio and began performing in 1935 when Phyllis, the youngest, was 4.  They got their big break on Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts in 1952.  They made numerous appearances on TV variety shows hosted by Milton Berle, Andy Williams, Perry Como, Dean Martin, Danny Kaye, Red Skelton and others while touring into the late 1960s, making a last stop on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1968.  The sisters got back together in 1986 to tour nightclubs and in 2004 they performed in the PBS special Magic Moments:  Best of 50's Pop.

The McGuire Sisters performed for five U.S. Presidents and Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain.  The five Presidents were Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush.

They were inducted into the National Broadcasting Hall of Fame in 1994 and the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2001.  In 2009, the sisters were inducted into the Hit Parade Hall of Fame.  

The McQuire Sisters and the Andrew Sisters met several times during their careers.


The McGuire Sisters were inducted into the Coca-Cola Hall of Fame. 

Christine, Phyllis and Dorothy at the opening of the World of Coca-Cola in Las Vegas, Nevada

July 7, 1997

The Coca-Cola company signed them to a contract with the highest fee in advertising history at that time.  

In 1968, they retired from  public performance.  Phyllis went to a solo act while Dorothy and Christine became totally devoted to their families.  Seventeen years later, however, they joined as an act again in response to their fans.  The sisters reunited in 1986, performing at Toronto's Royal York Hotel for the first time since their retirement.  Numerous nightclub engagements followed in Las Vegas, Atlantic City and New York City's Rainbows & Stars showcasing the group and Phyllis' impersonations of Peggy Lee, Judy Garland, Pearl Bailty, Ethel Merman and even Louis Armstrong. After their singing careers, they opened a restaurant in Bradenton, Florida calling it McGuire's Pub. 



The Talented and Beloved McGuire Sisters

Circa 1959









Saturday, July 19, 2025


 

Miss Connie Francis

(1937-2025)

Miss Connie Francis was born Concetta Rosa Maria Franconero in Newark, New Jersey on December 12, 1937. Francis attended Newark Arts High School in 1951 and 1952 before she and her family moved to Belleville, New Jersey.  Francis graduated as salutatorian of her class from Belleville High School in 1955.   She became an American pop singer, actress and one of the top-charting female vocalists of her time.  She was estimated to have sold more than 100 million records, worldwide. 


 She regularly performed at talent contests and pageants in the neighborhood and was eventually advised at the age of 14 before an appearance on the variety show, Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts to change her last name to Francis for easier pronunication. Godfrey having trouble pronouncing her last name, suggested she change it. Godfrey also advised her to drop the accordion which was advise she gladly followed as she had begun to dislike the large and heavy instrument. 

She had a rocky start in the music industry with her first eight singles failing commercially after she signed with MGM Records in 1955.  Though she had her first taste of success in 1957, her recording contract with MGM came to an end.  

Francis considered pursuing a career in medicine and was accepted into New York University, but at what was meant to be her final session, she recorded a cover of the 1923 song Who's Sorry Now.  Though the song had a slow start, Dick Clark played it on his "American Bandstand" in January 1958 and invited her to perform it on "The Saturday Night Beechnut Show" (which would later become "The Dick Clark Show").  The performance launched her career and the song reached No. 1 on the U.K. Singles Chart and No. 4 in the United States resulting in MGM Records renewing her contract.  



Frankie Avalon, Connie Francis, Dick Clark and Fabian
Circa 1960s


After teaming up with the songwriting duo Neil Sedaka and Howard Greenfield, Francis had a slew of charting hits comprising both original and cover songs like Stupid Cupid, My Happiness, Among My Souvenirs and Lipstick on Your Collar though the recording she is most remembered for was Where the Boys Are

In 1984, she wrote her memoir titled Who's Sorry Now? which became a bestseller. She officially retired in 2018.  Francis was married four times and was also in a relationship with singer, Bobby Darin who was the love of her life though her father thwarted any chance of a lasting relationship with Darin.  Darin went on to marry Sandra Dee.


Bobby Darin performing with Connie Francis on The Ed Sullivan Show.

January 3, 1960


The tragedies that befell Francis would challenge the most resilient of souls.  Nevertheless, she navigated each dark, engulfing personal tunnel with unwavering tenacity, always eventually emerging aided by her sense of humor.  From the age of 10,  she worked on television with many comedians like Don Rickles and developed that sense of humor which sustained her throughout her life.

Francis wrote another autobiography titled Among My Souvenirs: The Real Story.




Writing Among My Souvenirs in 2017 was an enormous amount of work .. "A real roller-coaster ride".  After making a series of unsuccessful singles in the 1950s, Francis recorded Who's Sorry Now? which was a song her father had nagged her to record. Connie as a music student of her father, George at Art High School. They had a close, but complex relationship. In 1984, she told People magazine she allowed her father to exert "too much influence" over her life. George Franconero was her manager for 30 years directing her singing dates and accordion lessons from a young age. He was her first music teacher.


George Franconero, Sr., Ida Franconero

George Franconero, Jr. and Connie Francis


Among My Souvenirs rocketed up the charts and by the end of 1958, Billboard named Connie Francis the No.1 female vocalist in the country.  A string of hits followed in the early 1960s including Everybody's Somebody's Fool and Heartaches by the Number. 

A pop sensation, Hollywood soon came calling to cash in on her fame.  MGM placed her in the 1960s film, Where the Boys Are though Francis never caught the acting bug. She is quoted as saying "I just didn't feel comfortable, as though I didn't belong there."

Since a 1967 trip to Vietnam when she entertained the troops, Francis has remained especially close to the military veterans she calls "the real heroes"



Her voice became a defining sound of the 1950s and 1960s.


.. Francis in her own words .. 

"Not so much for the heights I have reached, but for the depths fromwhich I have come".


Connie is now at peace.  We remember her for the joy she gave us in her voice.

Rest in Peace, Miss Connie Francis


Sidenote: The first time Francis saw Elvis, in person, was shortly after his mother had died.  He was in the audience, front row center, at the Sahara in Las Vegas.  Knowing that, Francis was anxious to meet him after the show. She sang "Mama".  Elvis started to cry and left the showroom.












Friday, July 18, 2025


Hialeah Park

Hialeah, Florida

 🐎 

Hialeah, most likely referring to the city in Florida, translates to "pretty prairie" or "beautiful meadow" in English.  This is based on its Seminole-Creek origin combining "haiyakpo" (prairie) and "hili" (pretty).  

🐎 

Hialeah Park .. known for their pink flamingos ..


The Hialeah Park Race Track is an historic rack track.  Its site covers 40 square blocks and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on March 2, 1979.  On January 12, 1988 the property was determined eligible for designation as a National Historic Landmark by the Secretary of the Interior, Donald P. Hodel. 

Among the races the track has hosted was the appropriately named Flamingo Stakes, an important stepping stone to the Kentucky Derby for 3-year-old horses.

🐎 


Hialeah Park

Circa 1930

🐎 

The Hialeah Park Race Track is one of the oldest existing recreational facilities in South Florida.  Originally opened in 1922 by aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss and his partner, Missouri cattleman James H. Bright as part of their development of the town of Hialeah.  Hialeah Park opened as a greyhound racing track operated by the Miami Kennel Club.  The Miami Jockey Club launched Hialeah's Thoroughbred horse racing track on January 25, 1925.  The facility was severely damaged by a 1926 (category 4) hurricane and in 1930 was sold to Philadelphia horseman, Joseph E. Widener. 

Hailed as one of the most beautiful race tracks in the world, Hialeah Park officially opened, again, January 14, 1932.  It was became the place for the rich and famous to winter.  Not only did the greatest horses come to Hialeah, but such personalities such a Truman, Churchill, Kennedy and Nixon wheeled through the turnstiles and remarked on Hialeah's incredible beauty. 





🐎 

With Kentucky horseman, Colonel Edward R. Bradley as an investor, Widener hired architect Lester W. Geisler to design a complete new grandstand and Renaissance Revival clubhouse facilities along with landscaped gardens of native flowers and a lake in the infield that Widener stocked with the famous pink flamingos.  The park became so famous for its flamingo flocks it has been officially designated a sanctuary for the American flamingo by the Audubon Society.  

On January 16, 1936 Hialeah Park became the first thoroughbred horse racing venue to install a photo-finish camera, revolutionizing the accuracy of race results in the sport.

🐎 

Winston Churchill at Hialeah Park 

Circa 1946

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Other celebrities through the years were Jacqueline Kennedy, Joseph and Rose Kennedy and Elizabeth Taylor.  The famous aviator, Amelia Earhart said her final good-byes to the continental United States from Hialeah as she left on her ill-fated flight around the world in 1937.



Jacqueline Kennedy




Kennedy Outing at Hialeah
Janet Auchincloss, Jacqueline Kennedy and Josephine Kennedy. 

Circa January 17, 1955





Joseph and Rose Kennedy



Rose Kennedy



Elizabeth Taylor




"If they build it, they will come."




Aerial Image
Circa 1940



Grandstand Entrance
Hialeah Park 
Miami, Florida 

View of the Bouganvillea covered grandstand entrance taken from the 
paddock of the Hialeah Race Track