Lovelace Watkins
Lovelace Watkins (March 6, 1933 – June 11, 1995)[1] was an American, Las Vegas-based singer and performer (also nicknamed "The Black Sinatra"). BiographyWatkins was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey, in 1933. He was of African, Indian, and Spanish heritage.[2] His mother gave birth to him at fourteen, and he was raised by his grandmother. He studied microbiology at Rutgers University and trained as a boxer. He was invited to the Royal Command Performance for the Queen of the United Kingdom. He appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1961 while promoting his album, The Big, Big Voice of Lovelace Watkins. Lovelace also appeared on the Johnny Carson and Mike Douglas shows. He made his debut at the Wookey Hollow nightclub; he was later recalled for a second show one week later. He performed at the London Palladium on November 15, 1971, in front of Queen Elizabeth II.[3] His third Wookey Hollow cabaret appearance was recorded and televised on BBC One at 11:35 pm on May 8, 1974. Following this, Lovelace Watkins at the attendance record at the "Talk Of The Town" in London, England. Watkins appeared on the British religious variety series Stars on Sunday. In 1974, Lovelace did a ten-week long summer season at the ABC Theatre in Blackpool. The shows were sold out. AustraliaWatkins had a long association with Australia's Gold Coast. He helped raise money for the city following the floods in 1974. He was named "Ambassador at large" by Gold Coast Mayor Keith Hunt. Watkins recorded two songs; they were "We Love The Gold Coast" by Clyde Collins and "On The Gold Coast" by Tom Louch from Victoria.[4] The single was released on the Finooks Folly label.[5] South AfricaIn South Africa, he received two gold albums, and a public parade was held in his honor. In apartheid South Africa, Watkins was the guest of honor at a woman's banquet. He was pictured in The Sunday Express dancing with a white woman; the hotel almost lost its license.[6] Personal life and deathIn March 1972, he married Anna Marie Fitzsimmons of Salford, Lancashire, and their son was born in 1972; the marriage later ended. Nearing the end of his music career, Watkins started a company that prepared apartments and commercial buildings for rental companies in the Las Vegas area, and continued singing at various functions in Las Vegas. He died of leukemia in 1995.[7] releases
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