Eve Boswell
Eve Boswell | |
|---|---|
Eve Boswell (1964) | |
| Background information | |
| Born | Éva Keleti 11 May 1922 |
| Died | 14 August 1998 (aged 76) |
| Genres | Traditional pop |
| Years active | 1950s |
Eve Boswell (born Éva Keleti; 11 May 1922 – 14 August 1998), was a Hungarian-born South African pop singer.[1] With the outbreak of the Second World War, Boswell's family moved to South Africa, where they worked with the Boswell Circus. After a few years in South Africa, during which she got married, Boswell was offered a temporary contract to work with a band in the United Kingdom. Boswell's success with that contract eventually led to her becoming a popular solo singer in Britain in the 1950s.
Career
[edit]Éva Keleti was born in Hungary to professional musician parents who toured worldwide.[1] Educated in Switzerland, she studied piano before joining her parents on tour as the juggling act, Three Hugos.[1] When the Second World War was declared, the family left Britain with the Boswell Circus. She married, and as Eve Boswell became a popular singing star in South Africa.[1]
In 1949, she was heard by bandleader Geraldo (Gerald Bright), who persuaded her to return to Britain as a singer in his band, which was widely heard on BBC Radio.[1] Boswell was the singing voice of Vera-Ellen in the 1951 British film Happy Go Lovely. She parted with Geraldo in 1951, and launched a solo career.[1] Her first hit record came the following year with "Sugar Bush", partly sung in Afrikaans.[1] Starting in March 1952, she toured for several months with comedian Derek Roy in a musical revue, Happy-Go-Lucky, before flying to Korea to entertain the armed forces.[2] In 1953, she was with Harry Secombe in Show of Shows at Blackpool Opera House.[3] She was given her own radio show on the BBC's Light Programme called Time to Dream in October 1953,[4] and she appeared in the 1953 Royal Variety Performance at the London Coliseum.[1] Boswell played alongside Tommy Cooper in Happy and Glorious and later with him in pantomime in 1954 in Humpty Dumpty at the Dudley Hippodrome.[5]
Her major chart hit came with "Pickin' a Chicken", a South African tune with new words,[1] which rose to No. 9 on the UK Singles Chart[6] at the start of 1956. Her first LP, Sugar and Spice, on which she sang 10 songs in nine different languages, followed later in the year.[1] A continuous programme of radio and TV work[7] and tours followed, leading to more than one mental breakdown.
She faded from public view as public tastes for pop music changed through the late 1950s and 1960s.[1] Her husband died in 1970, and she opened her own singing studio in London, Studio 9, in 1974.[8] She later returned to South Africa, where she married the radio producer Henry Holloway, who produced her last LP, It's a Breeze, recorded in 1979.[9]
Discography
[edit]Albums
[edit]- Sugar and Spice (Parlophone, 1956)
- Sentimental Eve (Parlophone, 1957; with the Reg Owen Orchestra, issued in America in 1958 as The War Years on Capitol Records)
- Following the Sun Around (Parlophone, 1959)
- At the Mediterranean (South Africa) (Continental Records, 1961)
- Goeie Nuus! Good News (South Africa) (Brigadiers, 1962)
- Sugar Bush '76 (EMI Records, 1976)
- It's a Breeze (Sugarbush Records, 1979)
Singles
[edit]As vocalist with Geraldo
[edit]Parlophone releases, with Eve Boswell's vocals on one side only:
- "Again" (1949)
- "My Golden Baby" (1949)
- "Confidentially" (1949)
- "Best of All" (1950)
- "Dear Hearts and Gentle People" (1950)
- "You're Only Dreaming" (1950)
- "All My Love" (1951)
- "If" (1951)
- "Mariandl-andl-andl" (with Derrick Francis, 1951)
Solo releases
[edit]All below released on Parlophone, unless stated otherwise.
- "I Can Dream, Can't I?" / "Mamma Knows Best" (1950)
- "Bewitched" / "If I Loved You" (1950)
- "Your Heart and My Heart" / "I Remember the Cornfields" (1950)
- "Beloved, Be Faithful" / "Yes! I'll Be There" (1950)
- "My Heart Cries for You" / "All My Life" (1951)
- "Transatlantic Lullaby" / "Broken Heart" (1951)
- "Would You" / "I'm in Love Again" (1951)
- "I'll Be Around" / "The Way That the Wind Blows" (1951)
- "I Never Was Loved By Anyone Else" / "While We're Young" (1952)
- "We Won't Live in a Castle" / "Paradise" (1952)
- "Please, Mr. Sun" / "Love's Last Word Is Spoken" (1952)
- "Dance Me Loose" (with Derek Roy) / "Just For Old Times"
- "Sugar Bush" / "I'm Yours" (1952)
- "Here in My Heart" / "I Ain't Gonna Marry" (1952)
- "Moon Above Malaya" / "Oh My Love, Oh My Heart" (1952)
- "Hi-Lili, Hi-Lo" / "Everything I Have Is Yours" (1953)
- "Old Johnnie Goggabee" / "Your Mother and Mine" (1953)
- "I Believe" / "Tell Me You’re Mine" (1953)
- "The Bridge of Sighs" / "Time to Dream" (1953)
- "Tell Me Who's Your Sweetheart" (with The Song Pedlars) / "Dare I" (1953)
- "If You Love Me (I Won't Care)" / "Why?" (1953)
- "A Million Stars" / "Don't Ever Leave Me" (1953)
- "Crystal Ball" / "Romany Violin" (1954)
- "Bewitched" / "Playing with Fire" (1954)
- "Du Bist Mein Liebchen" / "The Little Shoemaker" (1954)
- "Not I" / "More Than Ever" (with The Kentones) (1954)
- "Skokiaan" / "On the Waterfront" (1954)
- "These Are the Things We'll Share" / "Open Your Heart" (1955)
- "Ready, Willing, and Able" / "Pam-Poo-Dey" (1955)
- "The Heart You Break" / "Tika Tika Tok" (1955)
- "That's All I Need" / "No Such Luck" (1955)
- "Pickin' A-Chicken" / "Blue Star (The "Medic" Theme)" (1955)
- "Young and Foolish" / "Where You Are" (1956)
- "It's Almost Tomorrow" / "Cookie" (1956)
- "Keeping Cool with Lemonade" / "Down By the Sugar Cane" (1956)
- "Sarie Marais" / "Come Back My Love" (1956)
- "True Love" (Solo piano, Eve Boswell) / "Where in the World is Billy?" (1956)
- "Rock Bobbin' Boats" / "Tra La La" (1957)
- "Chantez, Chantez" / "She Said" (1957)
- "With All My Heart" / "Sugar Candy" (1957)
- "Stop Whistlin' Wolf" / "The Gypsy in My Soul" (1957)
- "Swedish Polka" / "Tell My Love" (1957)
- "Bobby" / "(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons" (1958)
- "I Do" / "Love Me Again" (1958)
- "Voom - Ba - Voom" / "Left Right Out of My Heart" (1958)
- "More Than Ever" / "I Know Why" (1958)
- "The Christmas Tree" / "Christmas Lullaby" (1958)
- "Piccaninny" / "If I Had a Talking Picture of You" (1959)
- "Wimoweh Cha Cha" / "Boegoeberg Se Dam" (1959)
- "Once Again" / "You Are Never Far Away from Me" (1959)
- "Turnabout Heart" / "Misty" (1959)
- "Love Me" / "You're My Thrill" (Decca, 1962)
- "Never Too Late" / "Let's Get Away" (1963)
- "This Is My Love" / "Lonely in a Crowd" (Morgan, 1969)
- "One God" / "Love Song" (Phoenix, 1974)
- "Sugar Bush '76" / "This Time" (EMI, 1976)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Colin Larkin, ed. (2002). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Fifties Music (Third ed.). Virgin Books. p. 46. ISBN 1-85227-937-0.
- ^ "Daily Herald". Daily Herald: 7. 25 November 1952.
- ^ "The Stage". The Stage: 35. 20 August 1998.
- ^ "Daily Herald". Daily Herald: 6. 2 October 1953.
- ^ "Birmingham Daily Post". Birmingham Daily Post: 10. 24 December 1954.
- ^ "EVE BOSWELL | Official Charts Company". Officialcharts.com. Retrieved 21 October 2019.
- ^ "Internet Movie Database". imdb.com. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
- ^ "The Stage". The Stage: 17. 22 August 1974.
- ^ "Discogs.com". Discogs.com. Retrieved 5 March 2022.