Ted Fio Rito

Theodore Salvatore Fiorito (December 20, 1900 July 22, 1971),[1] known professionally as Ted Fio Rito, was an American composer, orchestra leader, and keyboardist, on both the piano and the Hammond organ, who was popular on national radio broadcasts in the 1920s and 1930s. His name is sometimes given as Ted Fiorito or Ted FioRito.

Ted Fio Rito
Background information
Birth nameTheodore Salvatore Fiorito
Born(1900-12-20)December 20, 1900
Newark, New Jersey, U.S.
DiedJuly 22, 1971(1971-07-22) (aged 70)
Scottsdale, Arizona, U.S.
Occupation(s)Bandleader, composer, musician
Instrument(s)Piano, organ
Years active1919-1971

Biography

Fio Rito on the air with Clara, Lu, and Em, 1936. He led his band while playing the piano.

He was born Teodorico Salvatore Fiorito in Newark, New Jersey to an Italian immigrant couple, tailor Louis (Luigi) Fiorito and Eugenia Cantalupo Fiorito, when they were both 21 years old; and he was delivered by a midwife at their 293 15th Avenue residence. Ted Fiorito attended Barringer High School in Newark.[2] In Italy, his mother had sung light opera.[3]

He was still in his teens when he landed a job in 1919 as a pianist at Columbia's New York City recording studio, working with the Harry Yerkes bands—the Yerkes Novelty Five, Yerkes' Jazarimba Orchestra and The Happy Six. His earliest compositions were recorded by the Yerkes groups and Art Highman's band. Fio Rito had numerous hit recordings, notably his two number one hits, "My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua, Hawaii" (1934) and "I'll String Along with You" (1934).

He also demonstrated piano music for Al Piantadosi.[4]

He composed more than 100 songs, collaborating with such lyricists as Ernie Erdman, Gus Kahn, Sam Lewis, Cecil Mack, Albert Von Tilzer, and Joe Young.[5]

He moved to Chicago, Illinois, in 1921 to join Dan Russo's band, and the following year he was the co-leader of Russo and Fio Rito's Oriole Orchestra.[4] When Russo and Fio Rito opened at Detroit, Michigan's Oriole Terrace, their band was renamed the Oriole Terrace Orchestra. Their first recordings (May 1922) included Fio Rito's "Soothing." He did "Sleep" and other tunes for the AMPICO Reproducing Piano.

Radio remotes

The band returned to Chicago for a booking at the Edgewater Beach Hotel, where they did their first radio remote broadcast on March 29, 1924. The band had a four-year engagement at the hotel.[4] Contralto Harriet Lee frequently sang off-stage with some of the band's numbers, unseen by the audience.[6]

In August 1925, the Russo-Fio Rito orchestra opened Chicago's new Uptown Theatre. They opened the famous Aragon Ballroom in July 1926, doing radio remotes nationally from both the Aragon and the Trianon Ballrooms. In 1927, he had a radio program on KTHS in Hot Springs, Arkansas.[7] Dan Russo left the band in 1928, and Fio Rito took over as leader, touring the midwest with engagements in St. Louis, Kansas City and Cincinnati.

In August 1929, the band's first recording without Russo featured Ted Lewis on clarinet and vocal. Billed as Ted Fio Rito and His Edgewater Beach Hotel Orchestra, they headed for San Francisco to fill in for the Anson Weeks orchestra at the Mark Hopkins Hotel.

Radio in the 1930s

Fio Rito reached a national audience through syndicated and network radio programs. In Chicago, the band was heard on the Brunswick Brevities program, and they were the featured orchestra on NBC's Skelly Gasoline Show in New York. They broadcast on many 1930s radio programs, including The Old Gold Hour, Hollywood Hotel, The Al Jolson Show, Frigidaire Frolics and Clara, Lu, and Em.

The Fio Rito Orchestra's vocalists included Jimmy Baxter, Candy Candido, the Debutantes, Betty Grable, June Haver, the Mahoney Sisters, Muzzy Marcellino, Joy Lane (1947–1951), Billy Murray ("the Denver Nightingale"), Maureen O’Connor, Patti Palmer (born Esther Calonico), Kay and Ward Swingle.

During the 1940s, the band's popularity diminished, but Fio Rito continued to perform in Chicago and Arizona. He played in Las Vegas during the 1960s. In his last years, he led a small combo at venues throughout California and Nevada until his death in Scottsdale, Arizona, from a heart attack. He is buried in the San Fernando Mission Cemetery in the Mission Hills community of northern Los Angeles.

Details of his chart successes are given below.[8]

Recordings

The Fiorito Band recorded prolifically starting in 1929 for Columbia. He signed with Victor from 1929 to 1930. After a single session in 1930 for Hit Of The Week, he signed with Brunswick in 1932 and recorded scores of records through 1935, when he signed with Decca from 1936 to 1942. He did a single session for Victor's Bluebird label in 1940. From 1932 through the 1942 recording ban, he primarily recorded in San Francisco and Los Angeles (most of his pre-1932 were recorded in Chicago).

Motion picture career

Fio Rito is mentioned in The Honeymooners episode, "Young at Heart", that aired February 11, 1956. Reminiscing about bands from their youth, Ralph Kramden (Jackie Gleason) and Ed Norton (Art Carney) recall, in addition to Fio Rito, Isham Jones, Basil Fomeen, Jack Little, and "Johnny Messner and his toy piano".

His Cocoanut Grove Ambassadors radio broadcast rendition of "This Is Romance" is sampled throughout the Post-Awareness stages of Everywhere At The End Of Time, most prominently in the track "Q1 - Long decline is over", with various sections from the second half of the song being used throughout the album.

Chart successes

Year Song Peak
chart
position
1932 Willow Weep for Me
17
1933 (When It's) Darkness on the Delta
12
I'll Take an Option on You
7
I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You
12
Hold Me
12
1934 My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua, Hawaii
1
Temptation
15
I'll String Along with You
1
Soft Green Seas
12
King Kamahamena (Conqueror of the Islands)
10
June in January
10
1935 On the Good Ship Lollipop
16
1936 Let's Face the Music and Dance
9
All My Life
15
1937 Tomorrow Is Another Day
10
Vieni, Vieni
17
1939 How Strange
16

Other songs and recordings

  • "Maybe"
  • "Sunshine of Mine"
  • "There's Yes, Yes in Your Eyes"
  • "That Lullaby Strain"
  • "Toot, Toot, Tootsie (Goo'bye)"
  • "Charley, My Boy"
  • "Alone at Last"
  • "No, No Nora"
  • "When Lights Are Low"
  • "Sometime"
  • "I Never Knew (That Roses Grew)"
  • "Drifting Apart"
  • "Laugh, Clown, Laugh"
  • "King for a Day"
  • "Then You've Never Been Blue"
  • "Now That You're Gone"
  • "Three on a Match"
  • "Kalua Lullaby"
  • "I Want Somebody to Cheer Me Up"
  • "I'm Sorry Sally"
  • "Nothing on My Mind"
  • "When the Moon Hangs High"
  • "Roll Along, Prairie Moon"
  • "Alone at a Table for Two"
  • "Yours Truly"
  • "Lily of Laguna"

References

  1. DeLong, Thomas A. (1996). Radio Stars: An Illustrated Biographical Dictionary of 953 Performers, 1920 through 1960. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-7864-2834-2. P. 95.
  2. Bodian, Nat. "Ted Fiorito: The Newark Son of Italian Immigrants Who Became One of Greats of American Music," Virtual Newark..
  3. "Clara, Lu 'N' Em Start New Series On NBC-WFBC Tonight". The Greenville News. South Carolina, Greenville. June 26, 1936. p. 20. Retrieved November 2, 2019 via Newspapers.com.
  4. Jasen, David A. (1988). Tin Pan Alley: the Composers, the Songs, the Performers and Their Times. Donald I. Fine, Inc. p. 141. ISBN 1556110995.
  5. Songwriters Hall of Fame
  6. Scarberry, Alma Sioux (September 1, 1929). "Harriet Lee is a radio beauty". Asheville Citizen. p. C-6 via Newspapers.com.open access
  7. "Dance to These". Herald and Review. Illinois, Decatur. The Decatur Herald. October 28, 1927. p. 7. Retrieved April 6, 2016 via Newspapers.com. open access
  8. Whitburn, Joel (1986). Joel Whitburn's Pop Memories 1890-1954. Wisconsin, USA: Record Research Inc. p. 157. ISBN 0-89820-083-0.
  9. Twenty Million Sweethearts at IMDb
  10. What Price Jazz at IMDb
  11. Broadway Gondolier at IMDb
  12. Rhythm Parade at IMDb

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