Connie Francis, the pop singer who released a string of hit singles across the late Fifties and early Sixties including “Where the Boys Are” and “Who’s Sorry Now?,” died on Wednesday at the age of 87.
Francis’ death was confirmed on Thursday by Ron Roberts, her friend and president of her Concetta Records (Francis’ birth name was Concetta Franconero). “It is with a heavy heart and extreme sadness that i inform you of the passing of my dear friend Connie Francis last night,” Roberts wrote on social media in a statement that was reposted on Francis’ own frequently updated Facebook account. “I know that Connie would approve that her fans are among the first to learn of this sad news.”
While no cause of death was provided, Francis revealed earlier this month that she had been hospitalized due to “extreme pain,” which forced her to miss a Fourth of July radio broadcast with host Cousin Brucie.
Francis’ music career began in the mid-Fifties with a series of unsuccessful singles for MGM Records; however, she was enlisted to provide the singing voices for actresses Tuesday Weld and Jayne Mansfield in 1956’s Rock, Rock, Rock and 1958’s The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw, respectively.
After MGM Records dropped her, Francis was encouraged to re-record Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby’s 1920s song “Who’s Sorry Now?,” which in 1958 would become the singer’s first big hit, peaking at Number Four on the Billboard Hot 100. The single would launch both Francis’ music and movie career, as she became the best-selling female singer of the era and the first female artist to top the Billboard 200, with her 1960 Number Ones “Everybody’s Somebody’s Fool” and “My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own.”
“I am thrilled and overwhelmed at the success of ‘Pretty Little Baby,’” Francis said in a statement in May. “I recorded that song 63 years ago and to know that an entire new generation now knows who I am, and my music is thrilling to me. Thank you so much everybody, thank you TikTok.”
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From Rolling Stone US