The Best-Known Unknown in Show Business: Thelma Carpenter
Series: Afterglow: Jazz and American Popular Song
From: WFIU
Length: 00:59:00
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Singer and actress Thelma Carpenter had a long and successful career in the entertainment field, but she never really gained wider fame, leading her to joke in later years that she was "the best-known unknown in show business." Influenced by vocalists such as Ethel Waters and Mabel Mercer, Carpenter had a style that critics have described as both "rhythmic and lusty" and "trans-racial," and shaped with a classic 1940s sound that uses just a little vibrato. A veteran of the swing era, in later years she performed on Broadway and also appeared in the 1979 movie version of The Wiz as "Miss One."
This program features Carpenter's earliest recordings with Teddy Wilson and Coleman Hawkins, several of her little-heard sides with Count Basie's orchestras, a number of her post-World War II solo records (including a collaboration with an early version of the Ames Brothers), and music from a 1970s NPR popular-song series with popular-song maven Alec Wilder, as well as two tracks from a lost album of duets with pianist Ellis Larkins.
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Piece Description
Singer and actress Thelma Carpenter had a long and successful career in the entertainment field, but she never really gained wider fame, leading her to joke in later years that she was "the best-known unknown in show business." Influenced by vocalists such as Ethel Waters and Mabel Mercer, Carpenter had a style that critics have described as both "rhythmic and lusty" and "trans-racial," and shaped with a classic 1940s sound that uses just a little vibrato. A veteran of the swing era, in later years she performed on Broadway and also appeared in the 1979 movie version of The Wiz as "Miss One."
This program features Carpenter's earliest recordings with Teddy Wilson and Coleman Hawkins, several of her little-heard sides with Count Basie's orchestras, a number of her post-World War II solo records (including a collaboration with an early version of the Ames Brothers), and music from a 1970s NPR popular-song series with popular-song maven Alec Wilder, as well as two tracks from a lost album of duets with pianist Ellis Larkins.




