Connie Francis, Whose Ballads Dominated '60s Pop Music, Dies at 87 [View all]
Last edited Thu Jul 17, 2025, 09:44 AM - Edit history (1)
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/17/arts/music/connie-francis-dead.html
https://archive.ph/938mt
Connie Francis, Whose Ballads Dominated 60s Pop Music, Dies at 87
Ms. Francis, who had a natural way with a wide variety of material, ruled the charts with songs like Whos Sorry Now and Dont Break the Heart That Loves You.
By William Grimes
July 17, 2025 Updated 8:16 a.m. ET
Connie Francis, who dominated the pop charts in the late 1950s and early 60s with sobbing ballads like Whos Sorry Now? and Dont Break the Heart That Loves You, as well as up-tempo soft-rock tunes like Stupid Cupid, Lipstick on Your Collar and Vacation, died on Wednesday. She was 87.
Her publicist, Ron Roberts, announced her death in a post on Facebook. He did not say where she died or cite a cause.
Petite and pretty, Ms. Francis had an easy, fluid vocal style, a powerful set of lungs and a natural way with a wide variety of material: old standards, rock n roll, country and western, and popular songs in Italian, Yiddish, Swedish and a dozen other languages.
Between 1958 and 1964, when her brand of pop music began to fall out of favor, Ms. Francis was the most popular female singer in the United States, selling 40 million records. Her 35 Top-40 hits during that period included 16 songs in the top 10, and three No. 1 hits: Everybodys Somebodys Fool, My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own and Dont Break the Heart That Loves You.
She was best known for the pulsing, emotional delivery that coaxed every last teardrop from slow ballads like Whos Sorry Now?, and made Where the Boys Are a potent anthem of teenage longing. Sighing youngsters thrilled to every throb in My Happiness and Among My Souvenirs.
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