Tommy Sands (American singer)

Singer

Birthday August 27, 1937

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Chicago, Illinois, U.S.

Age 86 years old

Nationality United States

#40745 Most Popular

1937

Thomas Adrian Sands (born August 27, 1937) is an American pop music singer and actor.

1957

Working in show business as a child, Sands became an overnight sensation and instant teen idol when he appeared on Kraft Television Theater in January 1957 as "The Singin' Idol".

The song from the show, "Teen-Age Crush", reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 1 on Cashbox.

Sands was born into a musical family in Chicago, Illinois; his father, Ben born in Russia was Jewish and was a pianist, and his mother, Grace Dickson, a big-band singer.

He moved with the family to Shreveport, Louisiana.

He began playing the guitar at eight and within a year had a job performing twice weekly on a local radio station.

At the beginning of his teen years, he moved to Houston, Texas, where he attended Lamar High School and joined a band with "Jimmie Lee Durden and the Junior Cowboys", consisting of Sands, Durden, and Billy Reno.

They performed on radio, at county fairs, and did personal appearances.

He was only 15 when Colonel Tom Parker heard about him and signed him to RCA Records.

In 1957 Sands was featured on Hometown Jubilee on KTLA television in Los Angeles.

Sands's initial recordings achieved little in the way of sales but in early 1957 he was given the opportunity to star in an episode of Kraft Television Theatre called "The Singing Idol".

He played the part of a singer who was very similar to Elvis Presley, with guitar, pompadour hair, and excitable teenage fans.

On the show, his song presentation of a Joe Allison composition called "Teen-Age Crush" went over big with the young audience and, released as a single by Capitol Records, it went to No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 record chart and No. 1 on the Cashbox chart.

It became a gold record.

He released his debut album Steady Date with Tommy Sands (1957).

Sands' sudden fame brought an offer to sing at the Academy Awards show.

He did another episode of Kraft Television Theatre, "Flesh and Blood" (1957), playing the son of a gangster.

He also made "The Promise" for Zane Grey Theatre (1957), playing the son of a character played by Gary Merrill.

1958

Sands' teen idol looks landed him a motion-picture contract with 20th Century Fox to star in a 1958 musical drama called Sing, Boy, Sing, the feature film version of "The Singin' Idol".

Fox had enjoyed success with films starring other teen idols such as Elvis Presley and Pat Boone but Sing, Boy, Sing was a financial failure.

Sands appeared on CBS Television on January 9, 1958, in an episode of Shower of Stars, and played another singing star in "The Left-handed Welcome" for Studio One in Hollywood (1958).

Sands supported Pat Boone in a musical for Fox, Mardi Gras (1958), which was a moderate hit.

He also released the albums Sands Storm (1958), This Thing Called Love (1959), and When I'm Thinking of You (1959).

1960

His track, "The Old Oaken Bucket", peaked at No. 25 on the UK Singles Chart in 1960.

Sands appeared in the 1960 episode of Wagon Train titled "The Larry Hanify Story", as well as Wagon Train' episodes in 1963, "The Gus Morgan Story", and in 1963 "The Davey Baxter Story" ans in 1964 "The Bob Stuart Story".

His later albums included Sands at the Sands (1960) and Dream with Me (1960).

From May to November 1960, he served in the United States Air Force Reserves.

1961

Sands' second lead role in a feature was in the teen comedy Love in a Goldfish Bowl (1961) with Fabian Forte, which was not a success.

More popular was a fantasy musical he made at Disney, Babes in Toyland (1961), co-starring Annette Funicello.

That year he and Funicello sang the Sherman Brothers' title song from the Walt Disney release of The Parent Trap.

1962

Sands guested starred on "The Inner Panic" for The United States Steel Hour and was one of several pop stars who played US Rangers in Fox's The Longest Day (1962).

Sands had married Nancy Sinatra whose father Frank offered Sands a role in Come Blow Your Horn but he turned it down.

Sands studied acting in New York.

1963

Sands appeared alongside Fred Astaire in "Blow High, Blow Clear" for Alcoa Theatre (1963).

On May 14, 1963, Sands appeared, along with Claude Akins and Jim Davis, in "Trapped", one of the last episodes of NBC's Laramie western series.

In the story line, series character Slim Sherman (John Smith) finds an injured kidnap victim in the woods, portrayed by Joan Freeman.

Dennis Holmes, as series regular Mike Williams, rides away to seek help, but the kidnappers reclaim the hostage.

Slim pursues the kidnappers but is mistaken as a third kidnapper by the girl's father, played by Barton MacLane.

Sands played the girl's boyfriend, who had been ordered by her father to stop seeing her.

Sands made several appearances on Wagon Train including "The Davey Baxter Story", "The Larry Hanify Story," "The Gus Morgan Story" (with Peter Falk), and "The Bob Stuart Story".