
Sad news. The legendary Miss Connie Francis has ascended that glittering stairway one last time and departed for Fabulon.
Specialising in teary ballads such as Who's Sorry Now? and harmless pop numbers like Lipstick On Your Collar, she was a huge star (in the Doris Day mould) in the pre-Beatles early 60s. By the end of that decade, her particular brand of middle-of-the-road ditties was so out of fashion she retired from recording altogether. While on a "comeback" tour in the 1970s Connie was tragically raped in her motel room, and latterly became an advocate for victims' rights.
It is however this number that keeps Connie Francis high in the ranks of gay icons - a song that the lady herself apparently refers to as "The Gay National Anthem"...
Where the boys are, someone waits for me
A smilin' face, a warm embrace, two arms to hold me tenderly
Where the boys are, my true love will be
He's walkin' down some street in town and I know he's lookin' there for me
In the crowd of a million people I'll find my valentine
And then I'll climb to the highest steeple and tell the world he's mine
Till he holds me I wait impatiently
Where the boys are, where the boys are
Where the boys are, someone waits for me
Till he holds me I wait impatiently
Where the boys are, where the boys are
Where the boys are, someone waits for me
Connie Francis (born Concetta Rosa Maria Franconero, 12th December 1938 - 16th July 2025)
It's funny, many I know knew the name, but didn't quite know what she was famous for. Till they heard her songs. The youngins' would get her and Doris mixed up too. And she was certainly a beauty.
ReplyDeleteYoung 'uns know nothing, dear - but they would be interested to know that Connie's 1962 track Pretty Little Baby went viral on TikTok in May this year... Jx
DeleteSuch a chaotic, difficult life the lady had. But such an icon. One of my all-time favorites. I still say she needs inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
ReplyDeleteIf such things matter, then of course she should be there - she was third-most-popular artiste after Elvis and The Beatles in her heyday! Jx
DeleteI love Who's Sorry Now? RIP, Connie.
ReplyDeleteSx
She was the pioneer of that style of power-ballad - long before the likes of Vikki Carr or Leslie Gore got in on the game... Jx
DeleteI heard her sing “Follow the Boys” when I was a kid. It’s her fault.
ReplyDeleteHa! "Blame Connie" - a t-shirt in the making, methinks. Jx
Delete+ Bellissima Concetta :)
ReplyDeleteHa inciso anche canzoni in italiano e in dialetto napolteano, oltre numerose altre lingua. Segno di una cantante dedita e genuina che riesce a raggiungere tutti, come la tua Petula Clark.
She was a truly international artiste, indeed. Jx
DeleteI have loved her voice since I was a nipper and she never fell out of fashion with me.
ReplyDeleteRIP Connie.
Me neither. She even had a camp renaissance in the Disco era! Jx
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