Carmen Cavallaro
from New York, NY
May 6, 1913 - October 12, 1989 (age 76)
Biography
"The Poet of the Piano," Carmen Cavallaro was born May 6, 1913 in New York City; though a classically-trained performer, in time he expanded into pop arrangements in the mode of his chief inspiration, Eddy Duchin. After a four-year stint as the featured soloist with bandleader Al Kavelin, in 1937 Cavallaro moved on to a series of other society big bands, including those helmed by Abe Lyman, Enric Madriguera, and Meyer Davis; in the early 1940s, he began leading his own groups, making his name on the hotel circuit and on radio. Settling in Hollywood in 1944, he appeared in films including #Hollywood Canteen, #Out of This World and #The Time, the Place and the Girl, and in 1945 also scored a hit with Chopin's Polonaise; after the war, he additionally hosted a radio program for NBC, #The Sheaffer Parade. Signing to Decca, Cavallaro recorded a series of best-selling 78s including Cavallaro Plays Ellington, Music at Midnight and For Latin Lovers, and in 1956 he ghosted Tyrone Power's piano playing in the big-screen biopic #The Eddy Duchin Story. He died in 1989. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi
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