Lou Rawls(1933-2006)
- Actor
- Music Department
- Producer
Rawls was born on 1st December 1933 in Chicago, Illinois. His father
abandoned his family and Lou was raised by his grandmother. His first
meeting with music was when he was seven years old, in a Baptist church
choir. He was mostly influenced by the Chicago Regal theatre where he
had the opportunity to see the best in black entertainment.
Billy Eckstine and Arthur Prysock were
only two of the best that Lou saw. He and classmate,
Sam Cooke, would harmonize in the
school lavatory. He graduated from Dunbar Tech. School and joined the
touring gospel singing group, the Pilgrim Travelers. He left the group
in 1956 and joined the US Army and became a Sergeant with the Screaming
Eagle Paratroopers. In 1958, he was involved in a serious auto accident
that killed one and Rawls was pronounced dead on on the way to the
hospital. Lou remained in a coma for over five days and suffered a
memory loss for several months.
Sam Cooke was also in the automobile
and was left uninjured. Rawls was first noticed by Capitol Records
producer Nick Benet after noticing his four octave range while
performing at a Pandora's Los Angeles coffee shop. He went on to
perform at a number of LA clubs and later made his debut at the
Hollywood Bowl in 1959 with
Dick Clark. He went solo in 1964 and
has won four Grammys. In the mid 70s, he joined the Anheuser Busch
Brewery as a corporate spokesman. Since 1980, he has presented a series
of world wide concerts for American military bases that were
co-sponsored by Anheuser Busch, the USO, and the US Dept. Of Defense.
During Christmas of 1983, he toured US bases in the Phillipines, Korea
and Japan. He has raised hundreds of millions of dollars for black
colleges and, every year, he sponsors a celebrity golf tournament in LA
to raise money for the United Negro College Fund. South Wentworth
Street in Chicago was renamed Lou Rawls Drive in his honor. The
talented Rawls is also the singing voice of the animated fickle feline
"Garfield".