When she was 13, Bee signed with Capitol Records, releasing her first single, Tennessee Tango. However, it was I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus, released late in 1952, that was her first major success. In 1953, she recorded Don't Start Courtin' in a Hot Rod Ford, a duet with Tennessee Ernie Ford. The following year, she left Pinky Lee's show for Ford's daytime television show. Bee's career continued to grow, as she had more hit singles -- including Young Romance, Don't Look Back, and 5 Points of a Star -- and appeared on a variety of television shows. By the late '50s, her live shows were drawing large, record-breaking crowds.
In the early '60s, Bee began to move her talents to other areas, acting in several musical plays (+The Boy Friend, +Finian's Rainbow, +Paint Your Wagon) and movies (#Chartreuse Caboose, #The Young Swingers), as well as becoming a fixture in Las Vegas. However, her recording career began to decline after she signed to Liberty Records in 1962. After two unsuccessful years there, she moved to MGM in 1965, releasing the It's Great...It's Molly Bee album. Bee found her greatest success at MGM the following year with Losing You/Miserable Me.
By the late '60s, Bee had fallen prey to drug addiction and had to take several years off the road as she rebuilt her life. She re-emerged in 1975 with Good Golly Ms. Molly, this time on Cliffie Stone's Granite record label. Her comeback was successful, producing two charting singles: She Kept on Talking and Right or Left at Oak Street. In 1982, she released her final album, Sounds Fine to Me, which failed to match the performance of Good Golly, although she remained a popular concert draw. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi