Joan Regan

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Joan Regan
Born(1928-01-19)19 January 1928
Romford, Essex, England
Died12 September 2013(2013-09-12) (aged 85)
London, England
GenresTraditional pop
Occupation(s)Singer, actress
Instrument(s)Vocals
Years active1953–2013
LabelsDecca, emi Pye, Nectar

Joan Regan (born Joan Bethel or Siobhan Bethel; 19 January 1928 – 12 September 2013)[1] was an English traditional pop singer, popular during the 1950s and early 1960s.[2]

Biography[edit]

Regan was born in either Romford, Essex, or West Ham, London, (sources disagree) the youngest of six children to Irish parents. She had rheumatic fever as a child which left her with a damaged mitral valve, although this did not cause problems until she was in her seventies.[3][4]

Regan married an American serviceman, Dick Howell, a friend of her brothers who met in the Navy. She and Howell married on her 18th birthday in 1946. For a time they lived in Burbank, California. They had three children, one of whom died at an early age. The marriage eventually broke down. Regan, a Catholic, was able to obtain a legal dissolution, rather than a divorce.[5] Before becoming a singer, Regan worked at a number of jobs, including re-touching photographs.[3] Her successful singing career began in 1953, when she made a demo record of "Too Young" and "I'll Walk Alone". The demo came to the attention of Bernard Delfont, and that helped her sign a recording contract with Decca Records.[3]

She had a number of Top 40 hits for the label, many of them were cover versions of American hits. Among them were Teresa Brewer's "Ricochet", "Till I Waltz Again with You", and "Jilted", Doris Day's "If I Give My Heart to You" and Jill Corey's "Cleo and Me-O" and "Love Me to Pieces".[6]

Beginning on November 18, 1953,[7] she became the resident singer on BBC producer Richard Afton's television series Quite Contrary.[2] Afton later replaced Regan with Ruby Murray as resident vocalist beginning with the show on June 23, 1954.[8][9] She appeared on the Six-Five Special, and was given her own BBC television series, Be My Guest, which ran for four series starting in 1959.[2][3]

After being knocked out by a descending safety curtain during her first appearance in variety,[6] she developed her act to include impressions of Judy Garland, Dame Gracie Fields and Dame Anna Neagle, to the last of whom she bore a facial resemblance.[2]

In the late 1950s, she appeared several times at the London Palladium, including the Royal Command Performance in 1955 and also in the show Stars in Your Eyes[3] with Cliff Richard, Russ Conway and Edmund Hockridge which ran for a 6-month season at the Palladium in 1960.[10] In 1958, she appeared as herself in the film Hello London.[11]

On leaving Decca in 1958, she signed with EMI's HMV label, where she had a Top 10 hit with a cover version of the McGuire Sisters' "May You Always".[6] Two years later, she left EMI for Pye Records, and had two minor record successes, ("Happy Anniversary" and "Papa Loves Mama").[3]

In July 1957, she married her second husband, Harry Claff, who was the joint general manager and box office manager at the Palladium.[6] In November that year, the Daily Herald reported Regan was to have a baby in February 1958, seven months after the wedding.[6] After receiving "abusive and wounding letters from people who were personally unknown to her", Regan successfully sued the newspaper for libel;[6] her daughter, Donna, was actually born in April 1958.[2] Claff and Regan divorced in 1963 after Claff was sentenced to prison for embezzlement of £62,000.[6] He served five years in prison.[6] His defence was that he had only "borrowed" some money from the London Palladium, where he was box-office manager, and would have paid it back. By this time, the hits had dried up and she suffered a nervous breakdown.[6] Regan married her third and last husband, Dr. Martin Cowan, a medical doctor, at Caxton Hall, London on September 12, 1966.[12][2][3] After Dr. Cowan's retirement, they moved to Florida in 1982.[13]

In the United States, Regan recorded two singles for Columbia (one of which, "Don't Talk To Me About Love", went on to become a Northern soul classic). In 1984 she slipped in the shower, hit her head on the tiles and suffered a brain haemorrhage.[6] After an emergency operation she was left paralysed and speechless.[2] Her recovery, which entailed much physical and speech therapy, was aided by her miming to her old records.[6] It took many months of treatment before she regained the ability to sing.[6] In 1987, some of those old tracks, together with others by Dickie Valentine, Lita Roza and Jimmy Young, were issued on the double album, Unchained Melodies.[2]

In 1988, she returned to the UK where, with the help and encouragement of Russ Conway, who had been her rehearsal pianist in the early 1950s, she returned to the stage.[6] She recorded for Nectar Records from 1989 to 1996, for whom she recorded a single "You Needed Me" and two albums, The Joan Regan Collection and Remember I Love You.[3]

Later years and death[edit]

Regan continued singing, entertaining and supporting her charities (including the Not Forgotten Association) to the age of 82. She died on 12 September 2013, aged 85.[1] She was survived by her three children.[5]

Discography[edit]

Albums[edit]

  • The Girl Next Door (Decca, 1954)
  • Just Joan (Decca, 1956)
  • Joan and Ted (with Edmund Hockridge) (Pye-Nixa, 1961)
  • The World of Joan Regan (Decca, 1976)
  • Remember I Love You (Nectar Music, 1996)[2]
  • The Best of Joan Regan (Pulse, 1999)
  • The Best of Joan Regan (Spectrum Music, 2001)
  • Soft Sands – Decca Singles (Vocalion, 2004)

Singles[edit]

Year Single Peak chart positions
AUS UK[14] US[15][16]
1953 "Till They've All Gone Home"

b/w "I'll Always Be Thinking of You"

23
"The Long Way"

b/w "Rag-a-Bone Man"

"Ricochet" (with the Squadronaires)

b/w "Merry-Go-Rounds and Swings"

8
1954 "Red, Red, Red"

b/w "Tani"

Someone Else's Roses"

b/w "The Love I Have for You"

5
"Cleo and Me-o" (with Dickie Valentine)

b/w "Pine Tree, Pine Over Me"

"I'll Travel with You"

b/w "Jil Ted"

"If I Give My Heart to You"

b/w "Faded Flowers"

3
"Wait for Me, Darling" (with the Johnston Brothers)

b/w "Two Kinds of Tears"

18
"This Ole House" (with the Keynotes)

b/w "Can This Be Love?"

1955 "Prize of Gold"

b/w "When You're in Love"

21 6
"Open Up Your Heart and Let the Sunshine In" (with Rusty Regan)

b/w "If You Learn to Love Each Other"

19
"Don't Be Afraid of Love"

b/w "Danger! Heartbreak Ahead"

"Just Say You Love Her"

b/w "Nobody Danced with Me"

"The Shepherd Boy"

b/w "The Rose and the Flame"

"Croce di Oro"

b/w "Evermore" (US); "Love and Marriage" (UK)

55
1956 "Don't Take Me for Granted"

b/w "The Boy with the Magic Guitar"

"Honestly"

b/w "I'd Never Leave You Baby" (with the Johnston Brothers)

"Sweet Heartaches"

b/w "Second Fiddle"

"Gone"

b/w "Make Me a Child Again"

1957 "Nearer to Me"

b/w "Cross My Ever-Loving Heart"

"Wonderful! Wonderful!"

b/w "Speak for Yourself John"

"Good Evening Friends" (with Max Bygraves)

b/w "7½ Cents"

"Love Me to Pieces"

b/w "Soft Sands"

1958 "I May Never Pass This Way Again"

b/w "Breezin' Along with the Breeze"

"Love Like Ours"

b/w "Take Me in Your Arms"

1959 "May You Always"

b/w "Have You Ever Been Lonely?"

"May You Always"

b/w "Who's Afraid (Not I, Not I, Not I)"

9
"Happy Anniversary"

b/w "So Close to My Heart"

29
1960 "If Only You'd Be Mine"

b/w "O Dio Mio"

"Papa Loves Mama"

b/w "When You Know Someone Loves You"

29
"One of the Lucky Ones"

b/w "My Thanks to You"

47
"Must Be Santa"

b/w "Will Santa Come to Shanty Town"

42
1961 "How Wonderful to Know"

b/w "(Ting-a-Ling) It Must Be Spring"

"We Who Are in Love (Nous les Amoureux)"

b/w "My Foolish Heart"

"Surprisin'"

b/w "In the Arms of My Love"

1962 "Most People Get Married"

b/w "Don't Let Me Stand in Your Way"

1963 "Wand'ring Boy"

b/w "Golden Dreams'"

1966 "Don't Talk to Me About Love"

b/w "I'm No Toy"

1967 "No One Beside Me"

b/w "A Love So Fine"

1989 "You Needed Me"

b/w "Together Again"

"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released.

Songs[edit]

Regan recorded a number of other songs, including "It's a Big, Wide, Wonderful World" and "That Old Feeling".

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Leigh, Spencer (17 September 2013). "Joan Regan: Singer who had hits in the 1950s and became the toast of the London Palladium". The Independent. Archived from the original on 9 June 2022. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Joan Regan". Nme.com. Retrieved 1 April 2009.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Sharon Mawer. "Joan Regan biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 6 April 2009.
  4. ^ "Joan Regan obituary". Guardian.com. 15 September 2013. Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  5. ^ a b "Obituary". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Colin Larkin, ed. (1992). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music (First ed.). Guinness Publishing. pp. 2066/7. ISBN 0-85112-939-0.
  7. ^ "Daily News (London)". Daily News (London): 6. 6 November 1953.
  8. ^ "Belfast News-Letter". Belfast News-Letter: 4. 1 June 1954.
  9. ^ "Singers Of The Fabulous Fifties". CommuniGate. UK: This Is Sussex. Archived from the original on 13 September 2008. Retrieved 24 September 2008.
  10. ^ "The Stage". The Stage: 3. 28 April 1960.
  11. ^ Hello London, IMDb.com; accessed 3 September 2017.
  12. ^ "Daily Mirror". Daily Mirror: 4. 13 September 1966.
  13. ^ "The Stage". The Stage: 82. 18 August 1988.
  14. ^ "JOAN REGAN | full Official Chart History | Official Charts Company". www.officialcharts.com. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  15. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1986). Joel Whitburn's Pop Memories 1890-1954: The History of American Popular Music. Record Research. p. 363. ISBN 9780898200836.
  16. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1994). Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles 1955–1993. Record Research. p. 493. ISBN 9780898201048.

External links[edit]