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Shirley Bonne (born Shirley Mae Tanner, May 22, 1934) [2] is an American former film and television actress. [3] [4] [5] She is known for playing the title role in the American sitcom television series My Sister Eileen. [6] Bonne was born in Los Angeles, California, the daughter of Theodore Tanner. [1]
Shirley Boone was a lesser-known recording artist and television personality than her husband. She also founded a hunger-relief Christian ministry that evolved into Mercy Corps . [ 40 ] She died at age 84 in 2019, at the couple's Beverly Hills home, of complications from vasculitis , which she had contracted less than a year earlier.
Debby Boone was born in Hackensack, New Jersey, the third of four daughters born to singer-actor Pat Boone and Shirley Foley Boone, daughter of country music star Red Foley. When Boone was 14 years old, she began touring with her parents and three sisters: Cherry, Lindy, and Laury. The sisters first recorded with their parents as The Pat Boone ...
Cheryl Lynn Boone (born July 7, 1954), also known as Cherry Boone O'Neill, is an American writer, author, and singer. She and her three sisters formed the 1970s pop singing group, The Boones . Boone has spoken publicly about her experiences and recovery from anorexia nervosa .
Pat Boone and Shirley Boone – included in the album Side by Side (1959). [8] Patti Page – for her album I've Heard That Song Before (1958). [9] Timi Yuro - The title track from the "Let Me Call You Sweetheart" (Liberty Records 7234, 1962) - This recording went to #66 on the US Hot 100, [10] and #15 on the Easy Listening chart. [11]
During his career as a singer and composer, Pat Boone released 63 singles in the United States, [better source needed] mostly during the 1950s and early 1960s when Boone was a successful pop singer and, for a time, the second-biggest charting artist behind Elvis Presley according to Billboard. [1]
Pat Boone recorded a version of "Tumbling Tumbleweeds" with his wife Shirley Boone on their 1959 album "Side by Side". Johnnie Ray recorded his version for the 1959 album On the Trail. [17] Jazz guitarist Grant Green recorded a version in 1962, which was released on the 1969 album Goin' West, and features Herbie Hancock on piano.
The song was a hit record for Elsie Baker in 1912 (Victor B-12069). [9]It has since been recorded by numerous artists, including Sophie Braslau (1916), Dusolina Giannini (1926), Al Bowlly (1934), Bing Crosby (1934 and 1945), Erskine Hawkins (1942), Helen Traubel (1946), Jeanette MacDonald (1947), and as duets by Jo Stafford and Nelson Eddy (1951), and Pat and Shirley Boone (1962).