Albuquerque Journal

Tommy DeVito of The Four Seasons dies at 92

Baritone singer also played lead guitar in doo wop quartet

- BY TIM BALK

Tommy DeVito, a son of New Jersey who became a founding member and lead guitarist for Frankie Valli’s beloved doo wop quartet, The Four Seasons, has died. He was 92.

DeVito died Monday night in Nevada, and a funeral service for the baritone singer will be planned in New Jersey, Alfredo Nittoli, a friend, wrote on Facebook.

Earlier this month, DeVito was hospitaliz­ed after contractin­g coronaviru­s.

In a statement, Valli and Bob Gaudio, another member of The Four Seasons, expressed “great sadness” over the death of their bandmate.

“We send our love to his family during this most difficult time,” Valli and Gaudio said in the joint statement. “He will be missed by all who loved him.”

Valli, Gaudio and DeVito were collective­ly inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1990, along with Nick Massi, the band’s bass guitarist who died of cancer in 2000.

The Hall of Fame lauded The Four Seasons’ inventive style and string of rollicking hits, which included “Sherry,”

“Working My Way Back to You” and the sultry 1967 smash “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You.”

The group’s rise from humble origins in the Garden State and following period of radio dominance were immortaliz­ed years later in the Broadway hit “Jersey Boys.”

In the musical, the character based on DeVito explained: “If you’re from my neighborho­od, you got three ways out: You could join the army. You could get mobbed up. Or — you could become a star.”

DeVito’s character causes trouble at times for the band in “Jersey Boys,” piling up gambling debts. The reallife DeVito said the narrative was about 75% true, and he told NJ Advance Media in 2005, “It’s a good story. Who am I to spoil it?” (But he disputed a pair of specific aspects of the musical: that he was a slob, and that the mob ran him out of town.)

DeVito was born Gaetano DeVito in Belleville, N.J., in 1928, the son of Italian immigrants and the youngest of nine children. He grew up poor and often got into trouble.

“When I was a kid, I was locked up. I was in six or seven jails. I went to prison one time. But my teenage years were a son of a b — _ . I was a hell raiser,” DeVito once told the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

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