Yesterday we told you about Mama Cass Elliot receiving her Star on The Hollywood Walk Of Fame ...
Mama Michelle, the last surviving member of the remarkable quartet, was on hand and remembered ...
“On our first meeting, Cass and I experienced our very first acid trip.
"It was 1965. We never came down. We bonded. She was my best
friend. She gave me courage to sing when I thought I couldn’t make a
note …
"She was born to be onstage.”
She was there with her daughter Chynna (as well as Wendy and Carnie Wilson, collectively known as Wilson Phillips, who enjoyed their own bit of pop success in the '90's) to pay tribute to their legendary "Aunt Cass." Also on hand were Michelle's daughters Bijou and (by marriage) Mackenzie and Mamas and Papas Record Producer Lou Adler, along with Micky Dolenz, John Sebastian and Stephen Stills, all part of the Laurel Canyon Crowd of the '60's.
Tributes from Paul McCartney, David Crosby, Graham Nash, Carol Burnett, Richard Carpenter and others were also read.
David Salidor, Micky's PR Guy, sent us this clipping from "The Glorious Corner" to share ...
A
star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame was unveiled Monday honoring the
late singer "Mama" Cass Elliot, fulfilling a longtime quest by the
daughter of the member of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame pop group,
The Mamas & the Papas.
Bandmate
Michelle Phillips and John Sebastian, an original member of the Rock
& Roll Hall of Fame rock band Lovin' Spoonful, were among those
speaking at the ceremony at 7065 Hollywood Blvd. between La Brea and
Sycamore avenues.
"On
our first meeting, Cass and I experienced our very first acid trip,"
Phillips joked. "It was 1965. We never came down. We bonded. She was my
best friend. She gave me courage to sing when I thought I couldn't make a
note. She'd say, `Hey, just go for it. You know I'm going to make it.'
And so I went for it.
"She
was born to be on stage. I was sick. I was terrified. But she took my
hand in hers and walked me on to face 18,000 fans — our very first Mamas
and Papas appearance at the Bowl."
Elliot's
daughter, Owen Elliot-Kugell, and the singer's sister, singer-
turned-attorney Leah Kunkel, accepted the star on behalf of the family.
The
crowd cheered loudly as Owen Elliot-Kugell walked to the microphone,
recognizing her long-fought effort to have her mother honored on the
Walk of Fame.
"What
a fantastic day," she said. "It's amazing to see all the people who
have come out to celebrate my mother and her achievements nearly five
decades after she's gone. It speaks volumes of the wonderful human being
that she was to be remembered today with such fervor and such love.
"Of
course, she's never really left us, because her voice and the music
she's a part of creating live on today across the world. And I know that
wherever it is heard, her voice makes life a little brighter for
whoever hears it, as it does for me."
The
Hollywood Walk of Fame's selection committee approved Elliot- Kugell's
application for a star for her mother in 2015. She had not been
previously nominated, according to Ana Martinez, producer of the
Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Elliot-Kugell said it was a "grassroots effort" to finally get the star installed and unveiled.
The star is the 2,735th since the completion of the Walk of Fame in 1961 with the first 1,558 stars.
Born
Ellen Naomi Cohen on Sept. 19, 1941, in Baltimore, Elliot initially
sought a career in theater, including auditioning for the role of Miss
Marmelstein in the 1962 Broadway musical, "I Can Get It For You
Wholesale," according to the biography on her website, casselliot.com.
The role went to an actress with no previous Broadway experience, Barbra
Streisand.
In
1963, Elliot, Tim Rose and John Brown formed a folk trio initially
known as the Triumvirate, later known as The Big 3, who recorded two
albums and appeared on "The Tonight Show" and the variety shows
"Hootenanny" and "The Danny Kaye Show."
The
group metamorphasized into Cass Elliot and The Big 3, which included
singer Denny Doherty, and later The Mugwumps, who released a single for
Warner Bros. Records.
In
mid-1965, Elliot joined Doherty, Phillips and her husband John, who had
been performing as the New Journeymen, to form The Mamas & the
Papas. The group's first album "If You Can Believe Your Eyes and Ears,"
released Feb. 28, 1966, was 112th on Rolling Stone's 2012 list of the
500 greatest albums of all time and part of the 2010 book, "1001 Albums
You Must Hear Before You Die."
"If You Can Believe Your Eyes and Ears" was the group's only album to reach the top of the Billboard 200 chart.
The
album included "Monday, Monday," which brought the group its only four
Grammy nominations, and a win for best contemporary rock 'n' roll group
performance, vocal or instrumental in a field that also included The
Beach Boys' "Good Vibrations" and The Monkees' "Last Train to
Clarksville."
"Monday,
Monday" was also nominated for record of the year, which was won by
Frank Sinatra's rendition of "Strangers in the Night"; best performance
by a vocal group, losing to the Anita Kerr Singers' "A Man and a Woman";
and best contemporary rock 'n' roll recording, losing to "Winchester
Cathedral" by the New Vaudeville Band.
The
group initially recorded from 1965-68, recording four albums and 16
singles. It reunited in 1971, recording the album "People Like Us" and
the single "Step Out." Its other memorable songs include "California
Dreamin"' "Dream a Little Dream of Me," "Creeque Alley" and "Dedicated
to the One I Love"
The group's first concert was at the Hollywood Bowl and it closed the famed Monterey International Pop Festival in 1967.
Elliot
recorded five solo albums with hits including "It's Getting Better,"
"Make Your Own Kind of Music" and "New World Coming."
Elliot
starred in prime-time television specials in 1969 and 1973,
guest-hosted "The Tonight Show" multiple times, co-hosted "The Mike
Douglas Show" for a week in 1974 and appeared on "The Ed Sullivan Show"
and "The Carol Burnett Show."
Elliot died of a heart attack on July 29, 1974, at age 32 following a series of sold-out performances at the London Palladium.
Cass
Elliot was always a huge favorite and Monkee Micky Dolenz, who was
invited to the presentation by Cass' daughter Owen, met up with Stephen
Stills; who avid Monkees-fans will know originally tried out for the
band, didn't get it, and then suggested roommate Peter Tork, who got the
gig.
Dolenz
sent us this AM an early-photo of them both which paradoxically
references the new photo. Dolenz said of the similarity, "The strangest and most wonderful coincidence."
Harvey Kubernik (who was there for the Cass ceremony ... and even posed with Cass' daughter Owen ... see yesterday's post) sent in this reminder that Jefferson Airplane will ALSO be so-honored later this month ...
https://jeffersonairplane.com/jefferson-airplane-earns-star-on-hollywood-walk-of-fame/
https://walkoffame.com/press_releases/jefferson-airplane-to-be-honored-with-a-star-on-the-walk-of-fame/