Los Angeles Times

Enduring crooner was admired by Sinatra

- news.obits@latimes.com

Vic Damone, the enduring postwar lounge singer with a mellow baritone, who once earned praise from Frank Sinatra as having “the best pipes in the business,” has died in Florida. He was 89.

Damone died Sunday at a Miami Beach hospital of complicati­ons from a respirator­y illness, his daughter Victoria Damone said.

His easy-listening romantic ballads brought him million-selling records and sustained a half-century career in recordings, movies, and nightclub, concert and television appearance­s.

After Damone won a tie on the radio show “Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Hunt,” his career began climbing. His hit singles included “Again,” “You’re Breaking My Heart,” “My Heart Cries for You,” “On the Street Where You Live” and, in 1957, the title song of the Cary Grant film “An Affair to Remember.”

Damone’s style as a lounge singer remained constant through the years: straightfo­rward, concentrat­ed on melody and lyrics without vocal gimmicks. Like many young singers of his era, his idol was Sinatra.

“I tried to mimic him,” Damone said in a 1992 interview with Newsday. “I decided that if I could sound like Frank, maybe I did have a chance. I was singing his words, breathing his breaths, [doing] his interpreta­tion, with the high notes, the synergy.”

Sinatra and Damone — along with Tony Bennett, Perry Como, Dean Martin and others — made up a group of Italian Americans who dominated postwar pop music.

Far from resenting the mimicry, Sinatra praised Damone’s singing ability.

Born Vito Farinola in Brooklyn, N.Y., on June 12, 1928, to immigrants from Bari, Italy, Damone dropped out of high school after his father, an electricia­n, was injured on the job.

Damone adopted his mother’s maiden name when he began his career, after catching an early break while working as an usher at the Paramount Theatre in New York City, according to a family statement.

The 14-year-old bumped into Perry Como in an elevator at the theater, stopped it between floors and started singing.

Then he asked Como whether he should continue voice lessons, and Como said simply, “Keep singing!” and referred him to a local bandleader.

Damone drew crowds into his 70s, before illness prompted his retirement to Palm Beach, Fla., with his fifth wife, fashion designer Rena Rowan.

Damone appeared in several MGM musicals and was originally cast in “The Godfather,” but the role of a budding singer seeking Mob help in a Hollywood career eventually went to Al Martino.

He wrote in his memoir, “Singing Was the Easy Part,” that he never considered himself a showman like Milton Berle or Sammy Davis Jr.

“That wasn’t my particular gift,” he wrote. “My gift was singing.”

In 1954, Damone married the Italian actress Pier Angeli, after her mother refused to allow her to marry James Dean. The couple had a son, Perry, before divorcing in 1959.

Marriages to actress Judy Rawlins, with whom he had three daughters, and Houston socialite Becky Ann Jones also ended in divorce.

In 1987, Damone and actress-singer Diahann Carroll married after a long romance, and they paired for nightclub and concert tours. They divorced in 1996.

Rowan died in November 2016.

Damone is survived by two sisters, three daughters and six grandchild­ren. His son died in 2014 while battling lymphoma.

 ?? Gary Friedman Los Angeles Times ?? A MELLOW BARITONE Vic Damone, shown in Las Vegas in 1998, had “the best pipes in the business,” Frank Sinatra said.
Gary Friedman Los Angeles Times A MELLOW BARITONE Vic Damone, shown in Las Vegas in 1998, had “the best pipes in the business,” Frank Sinatra said.

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