Sarah Vaughan
She began studying music when she was seven, taking eight years of piano lessons and two years of organ. As a child she sang in the choir at the Mt. Zion Baptist Church in Newark and played piano and organ in high school productions at Arts High School. She entered an amateur contest at the Apollo Theater in New York's Harlem area, singing "Body and Soul", and won the $10 prize and a week's engagement at the Apollo. From 1944 to 1945, she sang with Billy Eckstine and in 1947 she married her manager, trumpeter George Treadwell. Her later husbands included pro football player Clyde Atkins and trumpeter Waymon Reed. She received many awards, including an Emmy in 1981 for a tribute to George Gershwin and a Grammy in 1983.
Known For
Credits
- 2018 · Michel Legrand, sans demi-mesure as Self (archive footage)
- 2014 · Duke Ellington & Sarah Vaughan Live At The Berlin Philharmonic Hall 1989 as Self
- 2013 · Queens of Jazz: The Joy and Pain of the Jazz Divas as Self (archive footage)
- 2012 · Music According to Tom Jobim as Self (archive footage)
- 2012 · …Sings Musicals as Self (archive footage)
- 2009 · Simonal: No One Knows How Tough It Was as Self (archive footage)
- 2007 · Jazz Icons: Sarah Vaughan: Live in '58 & '64 as Self
- 2006 · Jazz Voice - The Ladies sing Jazz Vol.2 as Self (archive footage)
- 2005 · Sarah Vaughan & Other Jazz Divas as
- 1991 · Sarah Vaughan: The Divine One as
- 1987 · Jake and the Fatman as
- 1981 · Count Basie At Carnegie Hall as Self
- 1974 · Sarah Vaughan and her Trio play Jazz from Newport (part II) as
- 1972 · Le Grand Échiquier as Self
- 1971 · The Pearl Bailey Show as Self
- 1969 · The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour as Self
- 1968 · The Dick Cavett Show as Self - Guest
- 1962 · The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson as Self
- 1961 · The Mike Douglas Show as Self
- 1960 · Murder, Inc. as Singer
- 1957 · American Bandstand as Self
- 1956 · The Steve Allen Show as Self - Singer
- 1956 · Basin Street Revue as
- 1955 · Rhythm and Blues Revue as Self
- 1953 · The Oscars as Self
- 1951 · Disc Jockey as Herself
- 1950 · The Colgate Comedy Hour as Self
- 1948 · The Ed Sullivan Show as Self