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Paul Williams

 
Artist: Paul Williams
  • Born: September 19, 1940, Omaha, NE
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Classics," "Just an Old Fashioned Love Song," "Songs for the Family of Man: A Collection 1969-1979"
  • Representative Songs: "We've Only Just Begun," "An Old Fashioned Love Song," "Someday Man"

Biography

Pop songwriter, singer and actor Paul Williams was born September 19, 1940, in Omaha, NE; following his father's 1953 death, he was sent to live with relatives in Long Beach, CA, there fostering his growing interests in music and drama by appearing in a series of high-school plays and talent shows. After graduation, the famously diminutive Williams briefly worked as an apprentice jockey before pursuing acting professionally, relocating to Albuquerque, NM to appear in community theatre productions of A Thousand Clowns and A Midsummer Night's Dream; he returned to Long Beach in 1960 to join the repertory company Studio 58, earning sufficiently strong critical notice to go to Hollywood. Despite landing a major role in the 1965 satire The Loved One, Williams' early movie career was largely frustrating, and after several years of bit parts he accepted an offer from stand-up Mort Sahl to write comedy sketch material for local television.

Through Sahl, Williams was introduced to composer Biff Rose, with whom he collaborated on the song "Fill Your Heart," recorded by Tiny Tim as the B-side to his novelty smash "Tiptoe Through the Tulips"; the single's success helped land Williams his own deal with Warner Bros., and he quickly formed the band Holy Mackerel, which issued a self-titled LP in 1968. The record went nowhere, and in 1970 Williams resurfaced as a solo artist with the album Someday Man. It too fared poorly, and he next landed as a staff songwriter at A&M; paired with composer Roger Nichols, he quickly co-authored the hit "Out in the Country" for Three Dog Night. Williams and Nichols were next hired to write theme music for a local bank commercial advertising services for newlyweds; the resulting "We've Only Just Begun" became a blockbuster hit when later covered by the Carpenters as well as a staple of wedding parties for decades to come.

Williams returned to recording with the 1971 A&M effort Just an Old Fashioned Love Song, the title track becoming a smash for Three Dog Night; in between 1972's Life Goes On and 1974's Here Comes Inspiration, he also earned his first Academy Award nomination, teaming with composer John Williams on "Nice to Be Around" from the film Cinderella Liberty. In 1974, Williams also scored and starred in Brian DePalma's rock musical Phantom of the Paradise, earning a second Academy Award bid for his soundtrack; he finally won the Oscar -- as well as a Grammy and a Golden Globe -- for "Evergreen," the love theme to the 1976 Barbra Streisand film A Star Is Born. By the late '70s, Williams was a true celebrity, known not only for his music but also for regular guest appearances on television programs like The Tonight Show, The Love Boat and Fantasy Island and occasional film work (including the Smokey and the Bandit series); in 1979, he also appeared in The Muppet Movie, scoring the picture as well and earning Oscar and Grammy nominations in the process.

Williams' profile declined sharply in the decade to follow, however, and as the hits dried up he concentrated less on music than acting; he also battled longstanding problems with drugs and alcohol, finally defeating his addictions in 1989 (the same year he starred on Broadway in the one-man show Tru as author Truman Capote). Becoming a licensed drug rehabilitation counselor, Williams also began an active involvement with the Musician's Assistance Programme, a non-profit organization founded to aid music-industry professionals recover from substance abuse problems. He returned to music in 1992 with the Grammy-nominated soundtrack to The Muppet Christmas Carol, and in 1997 issued Back to Love Again, his first new studio LP since 1979's A Little on the Windy Side. The following year, Williams also began a recurring role on the CBS daytime drama The Bold and the Beautiful; concurrently, he penned a pair of Nashville hits in Diamond Rio's "You're Gone" and Neil McCoy's "Party On." In 1999 Williams provided music and lyrics for Garry Marshall's musical adaptation of Happy Days, the show ran in England and Australia and is slated to open in Los Angeles in the early part of 2006. Leading up to that date were a steady stream of Williams releases including a 2003 live album called Love Wants to Dance, a greatest hits collection on Hip-O Select, Evergreens: The Best of the A&M Years, a reissue of the Holy Mackerel record and in late 2005, I'm Going Back There Someday, a deluxe CD/DVD package of new live and studio recordings of classic Paul Williams tunes. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Paul Williams (politician)
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Paul Glyn Williams (14 November 192210 September 2008) was a British Conservative Party politician who served as Member of Parliament for Sunderland South from 1953 to 1964. He was also a prominent businessman. He was one of 8 Conservative "Suez rebels" who resigned the Conservative Party whip to protest against the government's decision to withdraw from Suez.

Contents

Personal life

Williams was the son of businessman Samuel O. Williams and his wife Esmée (née Cail). He was educated at Marlborough College and Trinity Hall, Cambridge University (MA 1942), where he won a half blue in athletics and was secretary of the Cambridge University Conservative Association. After graduating in 1942, he served as a flight lieutenant in the RAF during the Second World War, flying transport aircraft.

His first marriage, in 1947, was to former model, Barbara Joan Hardy. They had two daughters, but were divorced in 1964. He later married Gillian Foote, and they had one daughter. He lived near Devizes in Wiltshire. He was survived by his second wife, and his three daughters.

Business activities

Williams became a businessman after his war service. He was a director of: First South African Cordage, 1947-1954; Transair, 1953-1962; Hodgkinson Partners Ltd., PR consultants, 1956-1964; Minster Executive, 1977-1983; and Chairman of the Backer Electric Company Limited, 1978-1987, and of Henry Sykes, 1980-1983. He was a consultant to P-E International plc, 1983-1991, and to Hogg Robinson Career Services, 1991-1995.

He was chairman and managing director of Mount Charlotte Investments from 1966 to 1977, a hotel company that later merged with Thistle Hotels.

Politics

Williams also became politically active as a Conservative after the war. He contested Arthur Blenkinsop's safe Labour seats of Newcastle upon Tyne East in February 1950, and then the marginal constituency of Sunderland South in October 1951, losing narrowly to Labour candidate Richard Ewart by 306 votes. After Ewart's early death, Williams won the seat by 1,175 votes at a by-election in 1953, the first time that the government party had won an opposition seat in a by-election since 1924.

He became a "Suez rebel" in December 1953, urging the government to suspend negotiations with Egypt to evacuate the canal zone, and voted against the Conservative government's Suez policy in July 1954. He increased his majority in the May 1955 general election, but, after further disagreement with government policy to withdraw from Suez, he and seven other backbench Conservative MPs resigned their party's whip in May 1957. He sat as an Independent Conservatives until he and four other rebels were persuaded to resume the whip in July 1958. He was re-elected with a reduced majority in 1959. He lost his seat in the October 1964 general election, with Labour candidate Gordon Bagier winning by 1,566 votes.

He held right-wing views, being pro-British Empire, anti-Europe and anti-American, and supported white governments in Africa. He supported white rule in Southern Rhodesia and South Africa. His views were almost polar opposites of those held by the new Conservative leader in 1964, Edward Heath, who remarked of Williams in 1966: "I thoroughly disagree with his views. I always have and I suspect I always will. They are not the view of the modern Tory party, nor the views of the great majority of people in this country." After that rebuke, there was little chance that Williams's parliamentary career would revive.

An early member (1962) of the Conservative Monday Club, Williams was National Club Chairman from 1964 to 1969, standing down in the latter year because of business pressures. In November 1965, Peterborough in the Daily Telegraph stated that "the Club owed a good deal of its standing to its Chairman, Paul Williams", and commended his "political acumen". In 1966 he issued a press statement on behalf of the Club criticising the Conservative Opposition: "Mr Angus Maude is right in saying that 'to the electorate at large the opposition has become a meaningless irrelevance.' To some of us outside Parliament it appears to be neither Conservative nor an opposition ... we must oppose socialism, not condone it." In his outgoing Chairman's address at the Club's AGM in April 1969 Williams called for a more aggressive opposition, appealing for "patriotism and moral rejuvenation, and a return for self-respect in the individual and the nation". (Copping, (ii) pp. 13, 16). He remained on the Club's Executive Council until 1973 and was still listed as a Vice-President in 1991.

References

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Richard Ewart
Member of Parliament for Sunderland South
1953–1964
Succeeded by
Gordon Bagier
Political offices
Preceded by
Paul Bristol
Chairman of the Monday Club
May 1964 - April 1969
Succeeded by
George Pole

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