Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Longtime musician William “Autie” Goodman leaves a long legacy.

- By Briana Erickson

Wherever William Austin “Autie” Goodman went in life, from the ranch to the battlefiel­d to the Strip, music followed.

As a young teen, when he wasn’t working on a cattle ranch in Burns, Oregon, he was honing his skills on the clarinet.

When he joined the Army in 1943, his superiors quickly noted that his musical talents overshadow­ed his skills as a clerk and dispatched him to entertain officers on base in Saipan.

After moving to Las Vegas in 1956, he quickly made a name for himself performing at the Strip’s casinos, playing with a group called the Modernaire­s before joining the long-running touring group the Four Freshmen in 1977.

Goodman, who retired to Pahrump, died in his sleep on Dec. 20. He was 93.

‘The only thing I’ve ever done’

Goodman was 12 when he heard world-renowned clarinetis­t Artie Shaw play.

He turned to his father and said that’s what he aspired to do. He got his first clarinet in the mail and took some lessons, and his interest in music skyrockete­d from there.

In his teens, he began playing a tenor sax so he could join an upand-coming group in Burns. He idolized the likes of Nat King Cole and Buddy DeFranco.

“Music’s the only thing I’ve ever done,” Goodman told the Pahrump Valley Times in a 2015 interview.

In 1943, he enlisted in the Army and was stationed in Saipan during World War II.

His son, Kris, remembers his father’s story of watching the Enola Gay return after dropping the atomic bomb on Japan.

While in the military, Goodman met and performed in a trio with Bobby Troup, an actor, jazz pianist, singer and songwriter best-known for writing the song “(Get Your Kicks On) Route 66.”

The two were lifelong friends and were later reunited during Goodman’s time in the Four Freshmen.

After being honorably discharged in March 1946, Goodman moved to Portland, Oregon, where he met his

wife of 67 years, Mildred.

His 93-year-old widow remembers meeting her husband-to-be for the first time in a Portland club, saying she noticed the baby-blue-eyed, brown-haired, 5-foot-9-inch musician immediatel­y.

“Here was this cute, adorable man singing, playing the saxophone,” she said, calling him “the greatest lovesong singer.”

“He was a perfect gentleman, and I fell in love with him,” she said.

The two married on Nov. 11, 1951. They moved to Phoenix and then to Las Vegas.

15 years with group

In the 1960s, Goodman played with the Modernaire­s and worked in the house band at the former Hacienda Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. In 1977, he was invited by Bob Flanigan, the last original member of the Four Freshmen, to join the group. He stayed for 15 years.

His career with the Four Freshmen, a band dating back to 1948 and known for performing jazz and classic pop in the style of a barbershop quartet, took him all around the world, including stops in about 20 different countries and every state in the union.

Goodman sang solos and played the drums and the saxophone.

The other group members also sang and played instrument­s such as keyboard, trombone, bass and guitar.

While in the band, he worked with the likes of Sammy Davis Jr., and the group was nominated for two Grammy Awards.

He also produced a solo album, “We Thought about You,” and was inducted into a local musicians hall of fame, Kris Goodman said, adding that “he was like a Las Vegas icon, a jewel that he didn’t even know.”

When he finally retired in his 70s, he and Mildred started camping and traveling more in Nevada, fishing and exploring the wonders of the West.

“There were so many beautiful sights to see, especially when you had a dear, kind husband like mine,” Mildred said through tears.

Autie and Mildred Goodman raised four children: Kris, Terry, Jill and their late son Ted.

‘The workingman’s musician’

Kris and Terry Goodman remember there always being harmony at home, whether it was Nat King Cole on the record player or their father practicing saxophone or piano.

“He was the workingman’s musician,” Kris Goodman, 57, said. “He was able to take his talent and parlay that into the career and become a person of note in the industry, but not so much a household name.”

After moving to Pahrump, Goodman entertaine­d for about three years at the nowclosed Tommasino’s restaurant with owner/musician Tom Saitta and well-known Vegas pianist Tommy Deering.

Goodman wasn’t the only artistical­ly inclined member of his family. He inspired all three of his sons to follow in his footsteps. His wife was a sketch artist and painter who worked in several local art galleries in Las Vegas.

His daughter, Jill, went to art school in Portland and is a graphic artist.

His son Terry Goodman, 66, known in the music industry as Terry Nails, was a bass player with Ozzy Osbourne and recorded the hit 1981 song “867-5309/Jenny” as a member of Tommy Tutone.

Kris Goodman played in a performing arts group at Bonanza High School that was hired to play gigs in Disneyland, and Ted Goodman played in local bands Vegas Wash and the Generics.

Along with their four children, Autie and Mildred Goodman had five grandchild­ren and four great grandchild­ren, Kris Goodman said.

The Goodmans are planning a private memorial service but believe the family patriarch deserves broader recognitio­n.

“There are a lot of talented people in this industry, and people should know their names,” Kris Goodman said. “People should know my dad’s name.”

 ?? Kris Goodman ?? William Austin “Autie” Goodman, bottom center, and fellow members of the Four Freshmen.
Kris Goodman William Austin “Autie” Goodman, bottom center, and fellow members of the Four Freshmen.
 ?? Kris Goodman ?? William Austin “Autie” Goodman, far right, with the Modernaire­s.William Austin “Autie” Goodman, second from right, plays the saxophone and drums live with the Four Freshmen.
Kris Goodman William Austin “Autie” Goodman, far right, with the Modernaire­s.William Austin “Autie” Goodman, second from right, plays the saxophone and drums live with the Four Freshmen.
 ?? Terry Goodman ??
Terry Goodman

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States