The Macomb Daily

Bobby Rydell, teen idol who starred in ‘Bye Bye Birdie,’ dies at 79

- By Harrison Smith

Bobby Rydell, a pompadoure­d, velvet-voiced teen idol of rock-and-roll’s early years who recorded more than two dozen hit singles, was featured in the 1963 movie musical “Bye Bye Birdie” and maintained a decades-long career as a crooner on the nightclub circuit, died April 5 at a hospital in Abington, Pa. He was 79.

The cause was complicati­ons from pneumonia, according to a statement shared by his spokeswoma­n Maria Novey.

For a few years in the late 1950s and early 60s, when Elvis Presley was in the Army and Beatlemani­a had not yet begun, Rydell was one of the biggest young pop stars in America, a slender, boyishly handsome singer and drummer who caused teeny-boppers to swoon and played Ann-Margret’s sweetheart in “Bye Bye Birdie.”

He came to symbolize an era of teen sock hops and towering hairdos, inspiring the name of Rydell High School, the setting for the 1970s musical “Grease.”

By most accounts, he released 34 Top 100 hits - from “Kissin’ Time” in 1959, when he was just 17, to a waltzing version of Paul Anka’s “Diana” in 1965 - and sold more than 25 million records, performing on television shows including “American Bandstand” and receiving an average of 5,000 fan letters a week.

Virtually all of them, he said, were from young women proposing marriage.

“I never thought of myself as a celebrity,” Rydell once told the Philadelph­ia Daily News. “I was just a guy who went out there and worked.”

Raised in South Philadelph­ia, he grew up within a few blocks of three other teen idols, all from Italian American families: Frankie Avalon, James Darren and Fabian, who were then known by the names Avallone, Ercolani and Forte.

Long after he started touring, he was still called Bobby Ridarelli by friends and neighbors, and explained that he changed his name because it was too hard for Paul Whiteman, the host of a Philadelph­ia-based show called “TV Teen Club,” to pronounce on-air.

Rydell cultivated a boynext-door image, recording songs such as “Wildwood Days,” a celebratio­n of Jersey Shore summers, and performed at major venues such as New York’s Copacabana nightclub, where he debuted when he was 19.

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