TONY MARTIN
Releases
- Dinah Shore, Dinah Shore
- Thanks, Ann Miller
- Hit The Deck (O.S.T - 1953)
- Till the Clouds Roll By (O.S.T - 1946)
- Night and Day, Tony Martin
- Dancing Latin Vintage, Chuy Reyes
- Dinah Shore & Tony Martin
- Rumba De Cuba, Chuy Reyes
- GiGi, Tony Martin
- 100 Vintage Love Songs
- 100 Jazz Grand Reserve
- Ziegfeld Girls (O.S.T - 1941), Varios Artistas
- 100 Songs for Romantic Dinner
- Ballroom, Mambo, Bailes de Salón
- Songs For Vintage Lovers
- 100 Original Soundtracks, Hollywood Vol. 1
- 100 Original Soundtracks, Hollywood Vol. 2
- 50 Soundtracks Movies of 50'
Videos
Biography
Tony Martin was born as Alvin Morris in San Francisco, California, the son of Hattie (née Smith) and Edward Clarence Morris. His family was Jewish, and all of his grandparents had emigrated from Eastern Europe. He received a saxophone as a gift from his grandmother at the age of ten.
In his grammar school glee club, he became an instrumentalist and singer. He formed his first band, named “The Red Peppers”, when he was at Oakland Technical High School, eventually joining the band of a local orchestra leader, Tom Gerun, as a reed instrument specialist, sitting alongside the future bandleader Woody Herman. He attended Saint Mary’s College of California during the mid-1930s. After college, he left Gerun’s band to go to Hollywood to try his luck in films. It was at that time that he adopted the stage name of Tony Martin. His The Tony Martin Show, a 15-minute variety program, aired on NBC from 1954 to 1956 prior to the evening newscast. One of his guests was Dinah Shore, soon cast in her own hour-long NBC variety program.
He was a featured vocalist on the George Burns and Gracie Allen radio program. On the show Allen playfully flirted with Tony, often threatening to fire him. She’d say things like, “Oh, Tony, you look so tired, why don’t you rest your lips on mine?”
In World War II, he first joined the United States Navy, but as a result of rumors that he had gotten an officer’s commission through bribery he left the navy and joined the United States Army Air Forces. As a corporal he was assigned to Capt. Glenn Miller’s band, then was promoted to technical sergeant in the Air Transport Command and stationed in India, where Brig. Gen. William H. Tunner, commanding the Hump Airlift, put him to work as an entertainer, forming a troupe of amateur talent from the command and taking it around the various bases to perform. He eventually signed with Mercury Records, then a small independent run out of Chicago, Illinois.
He appeared in film musicals in the 1940s and 1950s. His rendition of “Lover Come Back To Me” with Joan Weldon in Deep in My Heart – based on the music of Sigmund Romberg and starring José Ferrer – was one of the highlights of that film. He also starred as Gaylord Ravenal in the Show Boat segment from the 1946 film Till the Clouds Roll By.
Tony Martin died on the evening of July 27, 2012, of natural causes. He was 98.