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Bobby Short

 
Black Biography: Bobby Short

singer

Personal Information

Born Robert Waltrip Short on September 15, 1924 in Danville, IL; died on March 21, 2005 in New York; ninth of ten children; children: one adopted son.

Career

Capitol Lounge, Chicago, singing debut, 1942; toured United States, 1940s; Cafe Gala, Los Angeles, singer, 1948-51; England and France, toured, early 1950s; Atlantic label, recording artist, 1955-90(?); Hotel Carlyle, New York, singer, 1968; Telarc label, recording artist, 1993-(?); nine-piece band, co-founder, 1997.

Life's Work

After he took up residence in the lounge of New York's elegant Hotel Carlyle in the late 1960s, vocalist and pianist Bobby Short became an icon of New York and American cultural life. Short called himself a saloon singer, but actually he roosted at the top of the hierarchy of entertainers who perform in cocktail lounges, and indeed he did much to define the modern categories of lounge singer and cabaret singer. New York visitors stopped in at the Café Carlyle for decades to hear Bobby Short, to glimpse the lifestyles of the city's well-heeled residents, and to take a tour through the classics of American popular song with one of its most knowledgeable curators for a guide.

Robert Waltrip Short, the ninth of ten children, was born in the small town Danville, Illinois, on September 15, 1924. His father was a coal miner from Kentucky who sometimes landed higher-paying jobs, and the family had a piano and a radio tuned to jazz. At age four, Short taught himself to play the piano. The resourcefulness that put Short on the road to performing in posh nightclubs was inherited in part from his mother. She "taught survival. I think she had a framework of cast iron," Short told CNN. The young musician had a childhood remarkably free of racial discrimination. "There was a total absence of any kind of overt racial prejudice in those years, and it was kept that way by our teachers--which I was not aware of then," he wrote in his autobiography, Black and White Baby.

Began Performing at Age Nine

But survival instincts were necessary after the Great Depression of the 1930s hit the Short family hard. When he was nine, Short began to supplement the household's income by playing and singing in taverns. His skills developed quickly, and he turned into something of a teenage sensation. Agents who heard of his talent booked him into clubs and hotels in Chicago and New York. Short developed a taste for fine clothes, and later in life he would frequently appear on lists of best-dressed men. But his father's death in 1936 interrupted his high-flying career; he went back to Illinois to be with his family.

Short launched his adult career in 1942, performing at Chicago's Capitol Lounge. His reputation spread, and he landed nightclub slots in other large cities. Sometimes he shared a bill with singer Nat "King" Cole, a friend who influenced his expressive vocal style. By 1948, Short was a regular at the Cafe Gala in Los Angeles, staying there for three years and leaving only when he felt that he had become stuck in a "velvet-lined rut," as he was quoted as saying in the Times of England.

Indeed, Short constantly tried to expand his musical horizons. In the early 1950s he traveled to Paris, finding club jobs there and adding a layer of sophistication to his stage personality. Short also spent time in England, and his speaking voice took on a British accent. His clear diction became one of his trademarks; gradually, he gained the ability to lead listeners through the complicated lyrics of classic Broadway songs by Cole Porter and other composers.

Landed Carlyle Engagement

Short returned to the United States in the mid-1950s and recorded about a dozen albums for the Atlantic label, owned by jazz- and blues-loving Turkish-American brothers Ahmet and Nesuhi Ertegun. Working at the height of the rock and roll era, Short was never a chart-topping artist on the order of Atlantic labelmate Ray Charles. But other musicians admired them; trumpeter Miles Davis named Short as an influence on his own "cool jazz" style. Today, Bobby Short's Atlantic albums are valuable collector's items.

The second flowering of rock music in the 1960s also slowed Short's career. Rather than bemoaning his bad fortune, however, Short spent hours honing his craft, following the inspiration of classical musicians like African-American opera singer Shirley Verrett, a good friend. In 1968 the Ertegun brothers recommended Short for a fill-in slot at the Cafe Carlyle, located in a durably elegant Central Park-area hotel. Short won the approval of both the hotel's old-money patrons and the tourists who came to the Carlyle to rub elbows with them. In the late 1960s he cemented his reputation by giving two well-received concerts with nightclub vocalist Mabel Mercer at New York's Town Hall.

Short fulfilled the two key requirements of high-end cabaret singing: he brought the established classics of popular song alive, yet his own style was distinctive and personal. Short knew thousands of songs, and Broadway connoisseurs could count on hearing an unknown gem by Cole Porter or George and Ira Gershwin over the course of an evening at the Carlyle. Even though he performed twice a night, five nights a week, for six months a year, Short rarely repeated himself.

As a vocal stylist, Short was quite unusual. New Yorker jazz writer Whitney Balliett wrote that Short had "a searching down sound": a versatile baritone that could unexpectedly drop into a gruff tone or emphasize psychologically significant points in a song's lyrics. Short could bring out the sexy qualities that lay behind the conventional rhymes of Broadway pop, and he could find an elegant quality in more raucous old jazz and blues songs. He often performed blues diva Bessie Smith's "Gimme a Pigfoot (And a Bottle of Beer)." Short tried to uncover African-American roots of the classic Broadway sound, and he often revived little-known pieces by the likes of Thomas "Fats" Waller and his Madagascarian-American lyricist, Andy Razaf.

Friendship with Gloria Vanderbilt Caused Controversy

Although Short had no taste for controversy, he did become involved in one well-publicized dispute with racial overtones. The situation arose as a result of Short's long friendship with heiress Gloria Vanderbilt, who was turned down by the board of the posh River House condominiums when she tried to buy a unit there--because, she alleged in a lawsuit, the board feared that she and Short would marry. The dispute eventually simmered down, and Short became one of the few African Americans included on New York's Social Register of prominent citizens. He never married, but he adopted a son, Ronald Bell.

Short made nationally prominent film and television appearances, and his face became well known after it appeared on the billboards of the Gap clothing-store chain. He won two Grammy awards, one for a recording of romantic songs and the other for a Cole Porter disc. Both appeared on the Telarc label. Short appeared as himself in Woody Allen's film "Hannah and Her Sisters," and in 1994 he garnered an honor of a different kind: was named a living landmark by the New York Landmarks Conservancy. Short spent vacation time at a villa in the south of France.

In 1997, well over 70 years old, Short rethought his backing band at the Carlyle, expanding it from a trio to a nine-piece band. He tried to retire in 2004, but popular demand induced him to sign a contract to appear for another year. He continued to work even after receiving a leukemia diagnosis, and he worked on a new CD of Fred Astaire songs until just before his death. He never finished it, but he left a sturdy legacy nonetheless: the younger cabaret performers that revived the art in the 1990s and 2000s all looked to Bobby Short as an inspiration. "Bobby Short," singer and pianist Michael Feinstein told the Chicago Tribune, "was the inventor of what all of us do."

Awards

Selected: Two Grammy awards; New York Landmarks Conservancy, Living Landmark honor, 1994.

Works

Selected discography

    Albums
    • Songs by Bobby Short, Atlantic, 1955.
    • Bobby Short, Atlantic, 1956.
    • Speaking of Love, Atlantic, 1957.
    • Sing Me a Swing Song, Atlantic, 1957.
    • Nobody Else But Me, Atlantic, 1958.
    • The Mad Twenties, Atlantic, 1959.
    • Bobby Short on the East Side, Atlantic, 1963.
    • My Personal Property, Atlantic, 1971.
    • Bobby Short Loves Cole Porter, Atlantic, 1973.
    • Bobby Short Live at the Cafe Carlyle, Mobile Fidelity, 1975.
    • Bobby Short Celebrates Rodgers & Hart, Atlantic, 1982.
    • Moments Like This, Atlantic, 1986.
    • Guess Who's in Town: Bobby Short Performs the Songs of Andy Razaf, Atlantic, 1991.
    • Late Night at the Cafe Carlyle, Telarc, 1993.
    • Swing That Music, Telarc. 1995.
    • Songs of New York, Telarc , 1999.
    • How's Your Romance, Telarc, 1999.
    • You're the Top: The Love Songs of Cole Porter, Telarc, 2001.

    Further Reading

    Books

    • Short, Bobby, Black and White Baby, Dodd, Mead, 1971.
    • Short, Bobby (with Robert Mackintosh), Bobby Short: The Life and Times of a Saloon Singer, C. Potter, 1995.
    Periodicals
    • Back Stage, March 24, 2005, p. 6.
    • Chicago Tribune, March 22, 2005.
    • New Yorker, December 26, 1970, reprinted March 22, 2005.
    • New York Observer, March 28, 2005, p. 20.
    • New York Times, March 21, 2005.
    • Times (London, England), March 23, 2005.
    • Washington Times, March 25, 2005, p. A19.
    On-line
    • "Bobby Short," All Music Guide, www.allmusic.com (April 1, 2005).
    • "Impeccable Singer Bobby Short Dead," CNN.com, www.cnn.com/2005/SHOWBIZ/Muisc/03/21/obit.short.ap (April 1, 2005).

    — James M. Manheim

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    Artist: Bobby Short
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    See Bobby Short Lyrics
    • Born: September 15, 1924, Danville, IL
    • Died: March 21, 2005, New York, NY
    • Active: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
    • Genres: Vocal Music
    • Instrument: Vocals, Piano
    • Representative Albums: "50 by Bobby Short," "Bobby Short Is K-RA-ZY for Gershwin," "Bobby Short Celebrates Rodgers & Hart"
    • Representative Songs: "I Like the Likes of You," "So Near and Yet So Far," "At Long Last Love"

    Biography

    Nightclub entertainer Bobby Short performed from the 1930s to the 2000s, primarily singing the songs of the masters of pre-rock popular song, especially Cole Porter, George Gershwin, Noël Coward, and Rodgers & Hart, while accompanying himself on piano. The quintessential cabaret artist, the dapper Short, who often made best-dressed lists, perfectly articulated the lyrics in a husky baritone, delighting his well-heeled customers, particularly at the ritzy Cafe Carlyle of the Carlyle Hotel on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, where he was in residence from 1968 to 2004. Live performance was his métier, but he also made a series of recordings for Atlantic Records, Telarc, and other labels, along with occasional forays into film and television acting as well as the musical theater.

    The ninth of ten children born to Rodman Jacob Short, a coal miner, and Myrtle (Render) Short, a domestic, in Danville, IL, Robert Waltrip Short, nicknamed Bobby, took an early interest in the family piano and, despite a few lessons, was essentially self-taught. He began playing professionally in local roadhouses at the age of eight or nine. Soon, he was performing at society parties in a white tuxedo. In July 1936, when he was 11, he attracted the attention of booking agents who, with his mother's permission, took him to Chicago to perform in vaudeville and on radio. In June 1937, after finishing grade school, he traveled to dates in Cleveland and Toledo, then moved to New York City, where he appeared at the Frolics Cafe in October and at La Grande Pomme, as well as at other clubs and theaters around the country. He returned to Danville in the summer of 1938 to attend to high school and performed only in local venues over the next several years. But after graduating in 1942 he went back to show business permanently, opening at the Capitol Lounge in Chicago that July, followed by engagements in Cleveland, Omaha, and Los Angeles, where he settled in 1943. By the following year, however, he was working in Milwaukee and St. Louis, and in the spring of 1945 he was an opening act at the Blue Angel in New York City for four weeks. He then returned to California, by way of an appearance in Phoenix, where he performed at the Haig and the Café Gala over the next few years. While he was at the Haig, in the late '40s or early '50s, he made a record that was sold at the club. He also appeared without credit in the film musical Call Me Mister, released in January 1951, singing "Going Home Train."

    In 1952, Short moved to Paris, where he appeared at the Mars Club and Spivy's, also playing at the Embassy Club in London over the course of the year. He returned to the U.S. for an engagement at the Black Orchid in Chicago, then went back to Los Angeles and the Café Gala, and made a 10" album, Bobby Short Loves Cole Porter, released by Atlantic Records. His first full-length LP, Songs by Bobby Short, recorded in March 1955, featured seven songs (out of 13) composed by Vernon Duke, who wrote its liner notes when it was released by Atlantic later that year. In February 1956, he began an 18-week engagement at the Beverly Club in New York City, which became his home. From May 9 to May 27, 1956, he made his Broadway debut in the City Center's limited-run revival of the Cole Porter musical Kiss Me, Kate, performing "Too Darn Hot" at the start of the second act. His second 12" LP for Atlantic, Bobby Short, was released in 1957, and at the same sessions in the late summer and fall of 1956, he recorded material for his third album, Speaking of Love, released in 1958. In the winter of 1956-1957, he appeared at the Red Carpet in New York, followed by an engagement at Le Cupidon. During the summer of 1957, Atlantic hired a horn section for what was intended to be a two-LP set, but only one disc, Sing Me a Swing Song, appeared as his fourth album in 1958. (The rest of the material was issued in 1971 as the LP Nobody Else But Me.)

    Short returned to the Blue Angel with top billing and a salary of 1,000 dollars a week on November 14, 1957, continuing to appear at the club off and on until 1963. In late 1958 and early 1959, he recorded his fifth full-length Atlantic LP, The Mad Twenties, an album of songs from the 1920s. Meanwhile, he appeared at the Living Room, then at the Weylin Hotel, where, in March 1959, he recorded the live album Bobby Short on the East Side before moving on to the Arpeggio. He also worked in California, Florida, and Chicago during the summer in the early '60s. In March 1962, along with LaVern Baker and Chris Connor, he recorded an album of the score of Richard Rodgers' Broadway musical No Strings, billed as "An After Theatre Version." In June 1963, he recorded My Personal Property, an album of songs composed by pop and Broadway songwriter Cy Coleman. He gave his final performance at the Blue Angel on July 10, 1963, then moved to the Café Ambassador of the Sheraton East Hotel. In early 1964, he invested in a French restaurant, the Caprice, with Blue Angel co-owner Herbert Jacoby and began appearing there. It lasted only 15 months, and in 1965, having lost his savings in the venture, Short faced a career crisis brought on by the rise of television and rock & roll, trends that led to a decline in the nightclub business. He played where he could around the country, including stints in Provincetown, MA, and Chicago, and in the winter of 1965-1966 appeared in the second edition of Ben Bagley's off-Broadway revue, The Decline and Fall of the Entire World as Seen Through the Eyes of Cole Porter, at Square East in Greenwich Village. (The show was recorded live by Painted Smiles Records, and Short, temporarily free of his Atlantic Records contract, also made recordings for Bagley's series of various-artists composer collections, including Cole Porter Revisited, George Gershwin Revisited, Irving Berlin Revisited, Jerome Kern Revisited, and Rodgers and Hart Revisited, Vol. 2.) He then went into L'Intrigue, a club on West 56th Street, later returning to the Living Room. He appeared at Paul's Mall in Boston and spent ten weeks during the summer of 1966 at the Playboy Club in London. Also in 1966, he appeared in a television production of the musical revue Pins and Needles.

    Short's luck finally turned in the spring of 1968. The Carlyle Hotel, looking for a substitute for pianist George Feyer, who had long reigned at its 120-seat Cafe Carlyle and was going on vacation, took the advice of Atlantic president Ahmet Ertegun and hired Short in the interim. He proved so popular that, when Feyer's contract expired, the Carlyle hired him as a permanent replacement, performing three shows a night eight months a year. (Later, it became two shows a night and two three-month stints in the fall and spring.) Meanwhile, he was second-billed to Mabel Mercer in concerts held at Town Hall in New York in May 1968 and recorded for a double LP by Atlantic, Mabel Mercer and Bobby Short at Town Hall. The shows were so successful that they were repeated the following year, resulting in a another two-LP set, Second Town Hall Concert. Atlantic renewed its association with Short and commissioned a new solo studio album, Jump for Joy, released in 1969. The 13-year-old Nobody Else But Me followed, and in 1972 Short took another crack at Cole Porter, this time recording a double LP that repeated the title of his two-decades-old 10" record, Bobby Short Loves Cole Porter. Amazingly, the album, supported by a concert appearance at New York's Avery Fisher Hall, reached the Billboard pop chart, and Atlantic followed with a series of two-disc collections: Bobby Short Is Mad About Noël Coward (1972); Bobby Short Is K-RA-ZY About Gershwin (1973); Live at the Cafe Carlyle (1974); and Bobby Short Celebrates Rodgers & Hart (1975). Meanwhile, he published a memoir of his youth, Black and White Baby (1971).

    Over the years, Short came to represent the elegance and sophistication of New York with his tuxedoed appearance and repertoire of standards. As a result, he became attractive to advertisers, who frequently featured him in television commercials and print ads for such products as perfume and designer jeans. He also got other opportunities to perform. In February 1979, he acted in the ABC television mini-series Roots: The Next Generations, and in May 1980 he was a producer and participant in the Broadway revue Black Broadway, which had a brief run at Town Hall. His other TV guest appearances included the series The Love Boat, Tattingers, In the Heat of the Night, Central Park West, Frasier, and 7th Heaven. There were also films. He was seen and heard as himself, performing Cole Porter's "I'm in Love Again" at the Cafe Carlyle in Woody Allen's Hannah and Her Sisters in 1989, and his recording of Porter's "I Happen to Like New York" was heard over the titles of Allen's Manhattan Murder Mystery in 1993. (Other soundtrack-only appearances included Savages [1972] and Love Affair [1994].) He also appeared in the films For Love or Money (1993) and Man of the Century (1999), and in the TV movies Hardhat and Legs (1980), A Night on the Town (1983), and Blue Ice (1992). He published a second memoir, Bobby Short: The Life and Times of a Saloon Singer, written with Robert Mackintosh, in 1995.

    On records, Short moved to Elektra/Asylum for 1982's Moments Like This (which reached the jazz charts), but returned to Atlantic for Guess Who's in Town: Bobby Short Performs the Songs of Andy Razaf (1987), a tribute to the little-known wordsmith who worked with Fats Waller and Eubie Blake. He didn't cut any new records for several years, but in the early '90s he signed with Telarc for a series of CDs starting with the live album Late Night at the Cafe Carlyle (March 1992), which reached the jazz charts and was nominated for the 1992 Grammy Award for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance, and including Swing That Music (August 1993), recorded with the Howard Alden-Dan Barrett Quartet; the live Songs of New York (1995); another jazz-chart entry, Celebrating 30 Years at the Cafe Carlyle (January 1998); How's Your Romance (January 1999); and You're the Top: The Love Songs of Cole Porter (June 1999). He switched to the audiophile Surrounded by Entertainment label for 2001's Piano, an album on which he performed mostly piano instrumentals. He sang the title song on clarinetist Ken Peplowski's 2004 album Easy to Remember.

    Short announced his retirement from the Cafe Carlyle with his final appearance on New Year's Eve 2004, but later agreed to return in May 2005 to mark the club's 50th anniversary. Instead, he died of leukemia at the age of 80 on March 21, 2005. In a profile in The New Yorker magazine in December 1970, Whitney Balliett had described Short as "one of the last example (and indubitably the best) of the cafe singer or the supper-club singer or 'troubadour.'" Thirty-five years later, other examples had emerged, notably Michael Feinstein, Harry Connick, Jr., and Peter Cincotti. But Balliett's assessment that Short was the best of his time remained inarguable. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
    Discography: Bobby Short
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    Actor: Bobby Short
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    • Born: Sep 15, 1924 in Danville, Illinois
    • Died: Mar 21, 2005 in New York, New York
    • Occupation: Actor
    • Active: '70s-'90s
    • Major Genres: Comedy, Music

    Biography

    A black cabaret artist, singer, and pianist, he appeared onscreen in Call Me Mister (1951). ~ All Movie Guide
    Wikipedia: Bobby Short
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    Bobby Short

    Dina Merrill, Bobby Short & Dick Sheridan in NYC 1970
    Background information
    Birth name Robert Waltrip Short
    Born September 15, 1924(1924-09-15)
    Danville, Illinois, U.S.
    Died March 21, 2005 (aged 80)
    New York City, New York, U.S.
    Genres Swing, traditional pop, vocal jazz
    Occupations Vocalist,Pianist
    Labels Atlantic Records

    Robert Waltrip "Bobby" Short (September 15, 1924March 21, 2005) was an American cabaret singer and pianist, best known for his interpretations of songs by popular composers of the first half of the 20th century such as Rodgers and Hart, Cole Porter, Jerome Kern, Harold Arlen, Vernon Duke, Noel Coward and George and Ira Gershwin.

    He also championed African-American composers of the same period such as Eubie Blake, James P. Johnson, Andy Razaf, Fats Waller, Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn, presenting their work not in a polemical way, but as simply the obvious equal of that of their white contemporaries.

    His dedication to his great love – what he called the "Great American Song" – left him equally adept at performing the witty lyrics of Bessie Smith's "Gimme a Pigfoot" or Gershwin and Duke's "I Can't Get Started with You."

    Short always said his favorite songwriters were Ellington, Arlen and Kern, and he was instrumental in spearheading the construction of the Ellington Memorial in his beloved New York City.

    He was born in Danville, Illinois, where one of his school classmates was Dick Van Dyke. He began performing as a busker after leaving home at the age of eleven for Chicago, with his mother's permission.

    He started working in clubs in the 1940s. In 1968 he was offered a two-week stint at the Café Carlyle in New York City, to fill in for George Feyer. Short ( accompanied by Beverly Peer on bass and Dick Sheridan on drums ) became an institution at the Carlyle, as Feyer had been before him, and remained there as a featured performer for over 35 years. There, a combination of traits – his seemingly-effortless elegance; his vocal phrasing (perfected, as was that of Frank Sinatra's, at the feet of Miss Mabel Mercer, with perhaps also some help from Ethel Waters); his talent for presenting unknown songs worth knowing while keeping well-known songs fresh; his infectious good cheer; and his resolute, self-disciplined professionalism – earned him great respect and made him tremendously popular. Bobby Short was generous with his impromptu all-night performances at his various favorite cafes and restaurants. He was a regular patron at Ted Hook's Backstage, located at Eight Avenue and Forty-Fifth Street.

    Contents

    Discography

    As A Leader

    • 1955 Songs by Bobby Short (Atlantic)[1]
    • 1957 Bobby Short (Atlantic)[2]
    • 1958 Sing Me A Swing Song (Atlantic)[3]
    • 1958 Speaking of Love (Atlantic)[4]
    • 1959 Bobby Short on the East Side (Atlantic)[5]
    • 1959 The Mad Twenties (Atlantic)[6]
    • 1963 My Personal Property (Atlantic)[7]
    • 1969 Jump for Joy (Atlantic)[8]
    • 1972 Bobby Short is Mad About Noel Coward (Atlantic)[9]
    • 1972 Bobby Short is Mad About Cole Porter (Atlantic)[10]
    • 1973 Bobby Short is K-RA-ZY for Gershwin (Atlantic)[11]
    • 1974 Live at the Cafe Carlyle (Atlantic)[12]
    • 1975 Bobby Short Celebrates Rodgers & Hart (Atlantic)[13]
    • 1977 Personal (Atlantic)[14]
    • 1982 Moments Like This (Elektra/Asylum)[15]
    • 1987 Guess Who's in Town: Bobby Short Performs the Songs of Andy Razaf (Atlantic)[16]
    • 1992 Late Night at the Cafe Carlyle (Telarc)[17]
    • 1993 Swing That Music (Telarc)[18]
    • 1995 Songs of New York (Live) (Telarc)[19]
    • 1998 Celebrating 30 Years of the Cafe Carlyle (Telarc)[20]
    • 1999 You're the Top: The Love Songs of Cole Porter (Telarc)[21]
    • 2001 Piano (Surrounded By)[22]

    Filmography

    • 2004 Bobby Short at the Cafe Carlyle

    References

    1. ^ AMG Listings
    2. ^ AMG Listings
    3. ^ AMG Listings
    4. ^ AMG Listings
    5. ^ AMG Listings
    6. ^ AMG Listings
    7. ^ AMG Listings
    8. ^ AMG Listings
    9. ^ AMG Listings
    10. ^ AMG Listings
    11. ^ AMG Listings
    12. ^ AMG Listings
    13. ^ AMG Listings
    14. ^ AMG Listings
    15. ^ AMG Listings
    16. ^ AMG Listings
    17. ^ AMG Listings
    18. ^ AMG Listings
    19. ^ AMG Listings
    20. ^ AMG Listings
    21. ^ AMG Listings
    22. ^ AMG Listings

    External links


     
     

     

    Copyrights:

    Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bobby Short" Read more

     

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