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Eva Alice Nadauld (September 1, 1923 – November 3, 2010), known professionally as Eve Young early in her career, and later as Karen Chandler, was an American singer of popular music during the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, best known for her 1952 hit, "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me".
The original version was released by Karen Chandler in 1952, released by Coral Records. [1] It first appeared on the US Billboard charts on October 25, 1952 [2] and last appeared on April 11, 1953, [3] peaking at number five on Billboard's chart of "Most Played by Jockeys", [4] number seven on Billboard's chart of "Best Selling Singles", [5] and number nine on Billboard's chart of "Most Played ...
Karen Mayo-Chandler (18 April 1958 – 11 July 2006) was a British actress and model. She appeared in issues of Vogue and Harper's Bazaar magazines. After minor television and theatre appearances in the United Kingdom, she relocated to Los Angeles in 1982, and made her American television debut with a guest role on Bring 'Em Back Alive.
It was also recorded in 1956 by Lawrence Welk with The Lennon Sisters, and by the duo of Karen Chandler and Jimmy Wakely. Kay Starr recorded a searingly original version in the early 1950s, dispensing with the sentimentality of other recordings and transforming the song into a scorching anthem of self-destructive vengeance.
After the two Chi Omega murders, Bundy attacked sorority sisters Kathy Kleiner Rubin and Karen Chandler. Kleiner Rubin suffered a broken jaw, shattered chin, ripped cheek and nearly severed tongue.
Before fleeing the scene, he attacked two other young women, Karen Chandler and Kathy Kleiner (now Kathy Kleiner Rubin), who survived. "He was a coward," Kleiner Rubin later told Fox News Digital ...
Karen Chandler – Her Dot single brought the song to #19 on Billboard's 1968 Easy Listening chart. Larry Clinton and his orchestra (recorded January 20, 1939, released by Victor Records as catalog number 26151A, with the flip side "The Masquerade Is Over" [5]) Dorothy Carless - Mixed Emotions (1956) The Four Freshmen – Four Freshmen and Five ...
Music & Media wrote, "Caramba, coveritis has hit the Estefan estate. For every mood there's a song, but mainly for the late night wine-and-dine atmosphere. 'Don't Let The Sun Catch You Crying' feels like the kind of moonlit drama, the original singers Gerry & The Pace Makers intended it to be.