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Quiz about Americas Girl Singer Rosemary Clooney
Quiz about Americas Girl Singer Rosemary Clooney

America's Girl Singer: Rosemary Clooney Quiz


George's Aunt Rosie had one of the great voices of the last century. How well do you know her and her work?

A multiple-choice quiz by braunda. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Author
braunda
Time
4 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
206,886
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
6 / 10
Plays
211
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Question 1 of 10
1. What year was Rosemary Clooney born? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. Speaking of those other two Clooney children, what are their names? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Rosemary Clooney was a success in her early 20s and was signed to a contract with Capitol Records. However, it wasn't until 1951 when she recorded a song Mitch Miller convinced her to do that she became a household name. What was that song? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. Rosemary Clooney married an actor 16 years her senior and had five children in six years (Gasp!). Who was her babies' daddy? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Rosemary Clooney co-starred in the top-grossing picture of 1954. What was it? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. Rosemary Clooney only made a handful of films and had a shortlived television show in the 1950s. Most of her success came from recordings, television guest appearances, and concerts. What song marked her first appearance on the U.S. Billboard charts? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. Rosemary Clooney seemed to be a woman who had it all, but it all fell apart in the 1960s, and she was hospitalized for drug addiction and mental illness. One event at which she was present was particularly traumatic. What did she witness up close and personal? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. During Rosemary's breakdown years, she did a series of commercials for a product with which she became identified. What was it? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. In 1976, the bad times got better. Rosie got an offer from an old friend to tour with him, and these appearances marked her comeback. She soon resumed her career, this time identifying primarily as a jazz singer. Who was her savior? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. One of Rosemary Clooney's sons married the daughter of another 1950s popular music star, Pat Boone. Which daughter became Rosie's daughter-in-law? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. What year was Rosemary Clooney born?

Answer: 1928

May 23, to be precise, in Maysville, Kentucky, the oldest of three children. Her family moved to Cincinnati, the parents split up and the mother remarried and moved to California with the youngest child. Rosemary and her sister remained with their father who subsequently departed also, leaving the two teenagers on their own.
2. Speaking of those other two Clooney children, what are their names?

Answer: Betty, Nick

Betty and Rosemary Clooney started out as a duo. They worked for orchestra leader Tony Pastor for three years in the 1940s, then Betty returned home to work in local radio while Rosemary remained as a solo. Betty passed away in 1976 of a brain aneurysm at the age of 44. Nick Clooney, an actor, is best known as a longtime host on the American Movie Channel and newspaper columnist based in Cincinnati.

He ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the U.S. Congress in Kentucky in 2004. He and his wife, Nina, are the parents of beautiful boy George.
3. Rosemary Clooney was a success in her early 20s and was signed to a contract with Capitol Records. However, it wasn't until 1951 when she recorded a song Mitch Miller convinced her to do that she became a household name. What was that song?

Answer: Come On-a My House

Rosemary (by now known as "Rosie" to her fans) did not like the song. She thought it was demeaning, and she particularly felt uncomfortable putting on an Italian accent. She also thought the lyrics were risque. Her fans, obviously, disagreed, and she achieved her first gold record. "Abba Dabba Honeymoon" (Spelled variously as "Aba Daba") was a hit for Debbie Reynolds and Carleton Carpenter (you remember him, of course). "They're Either too Young or too Old" is a Rosemary Clooney song, but it was recorded in the 1940s and referred to the men left at home during World War II. Finally, the Oscar winning "High Hopes" (from the film "A Hole in the Head") was performed by Frank Sinatra.
4. Rosemary Clooney married an actor 16 years her senior and had five children in six years (Gasp!). Who was her babies' daddy?

Answer: Jose Ferrer

Jose and Mel Ferrer are no relation to each other, but are frequently confused. (The Bill Pullman and Bill Paxton of their day, I suppose.) Both were actors, and both were married to beautiful, talented women.
Jose Ferrer won an Academy Award in 1952 for "Cyrano de Bergerac." Television audiences might remember him as Stephanie Van der Kellan's father on "Newhart" in the 1990s.

Mel Ferrer was Audrey Hepburn's first husband. Jose Melis was Jack Paar's bandleader on "The Tonight Show" in the '50s, and Mel Torme, dubbed "The Velvet Fog" much to his chagrin, was another popular cabaret singer and contemporary of Rosie's.
5. Rosemary Clooney co-starred in the top-grossing picture of 1954. What was it?

Answer: White Christmas

"White Christmas" had a spectacular array of music and dancing talent in its four leads: Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Vera Ellen, and Rosie. The latter played sisters and one of the most memorable numbers in the film is when they sing a song called "Sisters" which is later performed in semi-drag by Crosby and Kaye. If you know the tune, it's hard to get out of your head! "Marty" won the Best Picture Oscar for 1955, but no one has ever confused Rosemary Clooney with Ernest Borgnine. "Two Weeks in Love" (1950) contained the "classic" "Abba Dabba Honeymoon." Finally, "Roman Holiday" was the first film of the other Mrs. Ferrer, Audrey Hepburn, released in 1953.
6. Rosemary Clooney only made a handful of films and had a shortlived television show in the 1950s. Most of her success came from recordings, television guest appearances, and concerts. What song marked her first appearance on the U.S. Billboard charts?

Answer: You Started Something

It was 1948. The other songs are all beautiful standards involving pronouns, but "You Started Something" was certainly an appropriate beginning for Rosie.
7. Rosemary Clooney seemed to be a woman who had it all, but it all fell apart in the 1960s, and she was hospitalized for drug addiction and mental illness. One event at which she was present was particularly traumatic. What did she witness up close and personal?

Answer: The assassination of Robert Kennedy

Rosie was a staunch R.F.K. supporter, and was standing quite near the podium when Sirhan Sirhan struck. After several other incidents such as breaking down on stage and cursing an audience in Reno and sobbing incoherently at a press conference she had called to announce her retirement, she admitted herself to Mt. Sinai hospital for treatment.

She was in therapy for many years, working in small clubs when she could.
8. During Rosemary's breakdown years, she did a series of commercials for a product with which she became identified. What was it?

Answer: Bounty Paper Towels

All these products had celebrity spokeswomen: Jan Minor (Madge the Manicurist) for Palmolive, Florence Henderson for Wesson Oil, and Anna Maria Albergetti for Good Seasons, but Rosie was the "Bounty Lady." (Subsequently, she was succeeded by Nancy Walker, a diner waitress named (what else?) "Rosie."
9. In 1976, the bad times got better. Rosie got an offer from an old friend to tour with him, and these appearances marked her comeback. She soon resumed her career, this time identifying primarily as a jazz singer. Who was her savior?

Answer: Bing Crosby

It may have been Rosie's comeback, but it was Crosby's farewell. He died in 1977, and this was his final tour. The two did a duet of "Slow Boat to China" that brought down the house. Even though "Come On-a My House" was huge, Rosie didn't have anything to do with Mitch Miller after the 1950s! Danny Kaye was, as mentioned above, a co-star in "White Christmas," and Clooney and Hope worked together in other concerts and television shows.
10. One of Rosemary Clooney's sons married the daughter of another 1950s popular music star, Pat Boone. Which daughter became Rosie's daughter-in-law?

Answer: Debby Boone

Debby Boone has recorded a CD called "Reflections of Rosemary." Brave girl. By the way, I found it enormously convenient for this question that Pat Boone had four daughters. Thanks, Pat!
Source: Author braunda

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