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Number of the Legislation for Hawaii Sunset Review Jan 8 1985

American vocalizer

Pat Boone

Boone in February 2011

Boone in February 2011

Background information
Birth name Patrick Charles Eugene Boone
Built-in (1934-06-01) June ane, 1934 (age 87)
Jacksonville, Florida, U.S.
Origin Nashville, Tennessee
Genres
  • Pop
  • traditional popular
  • state
  • gospel
  • vocal jazz
Occupation(s) Singer, actor, motivational speaker, spokesman
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1954–present
Labels
  • Republic
  • Dot
  • London
  • Stateside
  • Tetragrammaton
  • Melodyland (Motown)
  • Lamb & Lion Records
  • Hip-O
  • MCA
Associated acts Debby Boone
Website patboone.com

Musical artist

Patrick Charles Eugene Boone [1] (born June 1, 1934) is an American vocalist, composer, thespian, writer, television personality, motivational speaker, and spokesman. He was a successful pop vocalist in the Usa during the 1950s and early 1960s. He sold more than 45 million records, had 38 Pinnacle xl hits, and appeared in more than 12 Hollywood films.

According to Billboard, Boone was the second-biggest charting artist of the late 1950s, behind only Elvis Presley, and was ranked at No. 9 in its listing of the Superlative 100 Superlative forty Artists 1955–1995.[ii] Until the 2010s, Boone held the Billboard record for spending 220 consecutive weeks on the charts with one or more than songs each week.

At the age of 23, he began hosting a half-hour ABC variety television series, The Pat Boone Chevy Showroom, which aired for 115 episodes (1957–1960). Many musical performers, including Edie Adams, Andy Williams, Pearl Bailey, and Johnny Mathis, made appearances on the show. His cover versions of rhythm and blues hits had a noticeable effect on the development of the broad popularity of rock and roll. Elvis Presley was the opening deed for a 1955 Pat Boone show in Brooklyn, Ohio.[3] [4] [v]

Every bit an author, Boone had a number-one bestseller in the 1950s (Twixt Twelve and Twenty, Prentice-Hall). In the 1960s, he focused on gospel music and is a member of the Gospel Music Hall of Fame. He continues to perform and speak every bit a motivational speaker, a idiot box personality, and a bourgeois political commentator.

Early on life [edit]

Boone was born on June ane, 1934, in Jacksonville, Florida, the son of Margaret Virginia (née Pritchard) and Archie Altman Boone. He was raised in Nashville, Tennessee, where his family unit moved when he was two years old. Boone attended and graduated in 1952 from David Lipscomb High School in Nashville. His younger brother, whose professional person name is Nick Todd, was also a pop singer in the 1950s and is at present a church music leader.[6]

In a 2007 interview on The 700 Gild, Boone claimed that he is the great-dandy-smashing-nifty grandson of the American pioneer Daniel Boone.[7]

In November 1953, when he was 19 years old, Boone married Chicago-built-in[8] Tennesseean Shirley Lee Foley (April 24, 1934 – January 11, 2019[9]), also 19 years old, daughter of country music great Red Foley and his married woman, vocaliser Judy Martin. They had four daughters: Cheryl "Ruby-red" Lynn, Linda "Lindy" Lee, Deborah "Debby" Ann, and Laura "Laury" Gene. Starting in the late 1950s, Boone and his family unit were residents of Teaneck, New Bailiwick of jersey.[ten] Shirley Boone was a lesser known recording artist and television personality than her married man. She also founded a hunger-relief Christian ministry, Mercy Corps. She died in 2019, aged 84, at the couple'south Beverly Hills home from complications from vasculitis, which she had contracted less than a year earlier.[9]

Pat primarily attended David Lipscomb Higher, and later Lipscomb University in Nashville. He graduated in 1958 from Columbia Academy School of General Studies magna cum laude [eleven] having previously attended North Texas State Academy, now known as the University of North Texas, in Denton, Texas.[12]

Career [edit]

Music [edit]

Boone began his career by performing in Nashville's Centennial Park.[13] He began recording in Apr 1953 for Republic Records (not to be dislocated with the electric current label with that name), and by 1955, for Dot Records. His 1955 version of Fats Domino's "Ain't That a Shame" was a hit. This set the stage for the early role of Boone's career, which focused on covering R&B songs by black artists for a white American market place.[14] Randy Wood, the possessor of Dot, had issued an R&B unmarried by the Griffin Brothers in 1951 chosen "Tra La La-a"—a different vocal from the later LaVern Baker one—and he was keen to put out some other version after the original had failed. This became the B-side of the starting time Boone single "Two Hearts Two Kisses", originally by the Charms – whose "Hearts Of Stone" had been covered by the label's Fontane Sisters.

A number-ane single in 1956 by Boone was a 2nd comprehend and a revival of a then seven-year-sometime song "I Almost Lost My Mind", by Ivory Joe Hunter, which was originally covered by another black star, Nat King Cole. According to an stance poll of high-school students in 1957, the vocalizer was most the "two-to-one favorite over Elvis Presley among boys and preferred almost three-to-1 by girls ..."[fifteen] During the tardily 1950s, he fabricated regular appearances on ABC-TV's Ozark Jubilee, hosted past his father-in-law. He cultivated a safe, wholesome, advertiser-friendly image that won him a long-term production endorsement contract from Full general Motors during the late 1950s, lasting through the 1960s. He succeeded Dinah Shore singing the praises of the GM product: "Run into the United states in your Chevrolet ... bulldoze your Chevrolet through the Usa, America's the greatest state of all!" GM had also sponsored The Pat Boone Chevy Showroom.

Many of Boone's striking singles were covers of hits from black Rock and Roll artists. These included: "Ain't That a Shame" by Fats Domino; "Tutti Frutti" and "Long Tall Sally" by Little Richard;[16] "At My Front Door (Crazy Piffling Mama)" past The El Dorados; and the blues ballads "I Almost Lost My Mind" past Ivory Joe Hunter, "I'll be Home" by the Flamingos and "Don't Forbid Me" by Charles Singleton. Boone as well wrote the lyrics for the instrumental theme song for the movie Exodus, which he titled "This Land Is Mine". (Ernest Gold had equanimous the music.)

As a conservative Christian, Boone declined certain songs and film roles that he felt might compromise his behavior—including a part with sex symbol Marilyn Monroe. In 1 of his start films, Apr Beloved, the managing director, Henry Levin, wanted him to give co-star Shirley Jones a kiss (which was not in the script). Since this would be his first onscreen kiss, Boone said that he wanted to talk to his married woman first, to make sure it was all right with her.[17] He had his own pic production company, Cooga Mooga Productions.[18]

He appeared as a regular performer on Arthur Godfrey and His Friends from 1955 through 1957, and later on hosted his ain The Pat Boone Chevy Exhibit, on Th evenings. In 1959, Boone's likeness was licensed to DC Comics, beginning appearing in Superman'south Girl Friend, Lois Lane No. 9 (May 1959) before starring in his own serial from the publisher which lasted for v issues from September 1959 to May 1960.[nineteen] [twenty] In the early 1960s, he began writing a series of self-help books for adolescents, including Twixt Twelve and Twenty. The British Invasion ended Boone'south career every bit a hitmaker, though he continued recording throughout the 1960s. In 1966, he participated in the Sanremo Music Festival in Italian republic, performing the songs Mai mai mai Valentina alongside Giorgio Gaber and Se tu non fossi qui with Peppino Gagliardi. During his trip to Italy, he visited the headquarter of Ferrari in Maranello, near Modena, with the intention of buying a Superamerica Sports Car, merely Enzo Ferrari dissuaded him from purchasing that model past saying that in that location wouldn't have been enough room for Boone'due south iv daughters, and sold him a four-door Ferrari 2+2 instead. In a 2021 interview, Boone admitted having later sold the "Ferrari he didn't like" to Tom Smothers of the comedic duo Smothers Brothers.[21]

In the 1970s, he switched to gospel and country, and he continued performing in other media, also. In the 1960s and 1970s. the Boone family toured equally gospel singers and made gospel albums, such every bit The Pat Boone Family unit and The Family Who Prays.[22]

Pat and Debby Boone singing for a fan, 1997

In the early 1970s, Boone founded the record label Lamb & Lion Records. It featured artists such every bit Pat, the Pat Boone Family, Debby Boone, Dan Peek, DeGarmo and Key, and Dogwood.[23] In 1974, Boone was signed to the Motown country subsidiary Melodyland.[24]

In 1978, Boone became the offset target in the Federal Trade Commission's crackdown on false-merits product endorsements by celebrities. He had appeared with his girl Debby in a commercial to claim that all iv of his daughters had found a grooming named Acne-Statin a "real assistance" in keeping their skin clear. The FTC filed a complaint against the manufacturer, contending that the product did not really proceed skin costless of blemishes. Boone somewhen signed a consent order in which he promised non merely to stop appearing in the ads, merely likewise to pay about 2.v% of any money that the FTC or the courts might eventually society the manufacturer to refund to consumers. Boone said, through a lawyer, that his daughters actually did use Acne-Statin, and that he was "dismayed to learn that the production'southward efficacy had not been scientifically established as he believed."[25]

Motion-picture show [edit]

In 1956 Boone was ane of the biggest recording stars in the US. Several film studios pursued him for movies; he decided to go with 20th Century Flim-flam, which had made Elvis Presley's outset picture show.[26] Pull a fast one on reworked a play he had bought, Bernardine, into a vehicle for Boone. The resulting motion picture was a solid hit, earning $3.75 meg in the Us.[27]

Even more pop was April Love (1957), a remake of Home in Indiana. Boone regards it as 1 of his favourites, "the kind of motion picture I wish I could accept made 20 more of: a musical, appealing characters, some drama, a practiced storyline, a happy ending, it'south the kind of film which makes you experience good. I never wanted to make a depressing or immoral film."[28]

Less popular was a musical comedy Mardi Gras (1958), which was the last picture show of Edmund Goulding. However, Journey to the Center of the Earth (1959), a science fiction adventure tale, was a huge hit. Boone had been reluctant to exercise information technology, and needed to be persuaded by being offered the chance to sing several songs and given a percentage of the profits, but was glad he did.[29]

He produced and starred in a documentary, Salute to the Teenagers (1960), but did not make a film for a while, studying acting with Sanford Meisner. He returned with a military comedy, All Hands on Deck (1961), a mild hitting.[thirty]

He was one of several names in some other remake, Country Off-white (1962), a box part disappointment. Musicals were becoming less fashionable in Hollywood, so Boone decided to take on a dramatic office in the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer-distributed movie The Main Attraction (1962) for Seven Arts Productions, his commencement movie outside Pull a fast one on. It was an unhappy experience for Boone as he disliked the implication his grapheme had sex activity with Nancy Kwan's and he got into several public fights with the producers.[31] He had a bargain with Fox to make 3 films at $200,000 a pic with his production company. This was meant to start with a thriller, The Yellowish Canary (1963), in which Boone would play an unsympathetic grapheme. New management came in at the studio which was unenthusiastic about the picture but considering Boone had a pay or play deal, they decided to go far anyhow, just with a much shorter budget. Boone even paid some money out of his own pocket to help complete it.[32]

Boone's next moving picture for Play a joke on was some other depression-budget try, The Horror of It All (1963), shot in England. He shot a comedy in Ireland, Never Put Information technology in Writing (1964) for Allied Artists. Boone'southward tertiary moving-picture show for Fox was an "A" production, Goodbye Charlie (1964), but Boone was in support of Debbie Reynolds and Tony Curtis. He was one of the many names in The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965). He appeared in The Perils of Pauline (1967), a airplane pilot for a Telly series that did not eventuate, which was screened in some theatres. Boone's final film of annotation was The Cross and the Switchblade (1970).

Later work [edit]

In 1997, Boone released In a Metal Mood: No More than Mr. Dainty Guy, a collection of heavy metal covers.[22] To promote the album, he appeared at the American Music Awards in blackness leather. He was then dismissed from Gospel America, a TV show on the Trinity Broadcasting Network. After making a special advent on TBN with the president of the network, Paul Crouch, and his pastor, Jack Hayford, many fans accepted his explanation of the leather outfit existence a "parody of himself". Trinity Broadcasting then reinstated him, and Gospel America was brought back.[33]

In 2003, the Nashville Gospel Music Association recognized his gospel recording piece of work by inducting him into its Gospel Music Hall of Fame. In September 2006, Boone released Nosotros Are Family: R&B Classics, featuring embrace versions of 11 R&B hits, including the title track, plus "Papa's Got A Brand New Bag", "Soul Man", "Get Downward Tonight", "A Woman Needs Love", and vi other classics.[34]

In 2010, plans were announced for the Pat Boone Family Theater at Broadway at the Beach in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.[35] The attraction was never congenital.[36]

In 2011, Boone acted as a spokesperson for Security One Lending, a reverse mortgage visitor.[37] Since at least 2007[38] Boone has acted every bit a spokesperson for Swiss America Trading Corporation, a banker of gold and silver coins that warns of "America'south Economic Collapse".[39]

Personal life [edit]

Religion [edit]

Boone grew upward in the Church building of Christ.[forty] In the 1960s, Boone's wedlock to Shirley Foley nearly came to an finish because of his employ of alcohol and his preference for attention parties. However, after coming into contact with the Charismatic Motility, Shirley began to focus more on her religion and somewhen influenced Pat and their daughters toward a similar religious focus.[41] At this time, they attended the Inglewood Church of Christ.

In the bound of 1964, Boone spoke at a "Project Prayer" rally attended past 2,500 at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles. The gathering, which was hosted past Anthony Eisley, a star of ABC's Hawaiian Eye series, sought to flood the The states Congress with messages in support of mandatory school prayer, following ii decisions in 1962 and 1963 of the United States Supreme Court which struck downwards mandatory prayer equally conflicting with the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.[42] Joining Boone and Eisley at the Project Prayer rally were Walter Brennan, Lloyd Nolan, Rhonda Fleming, Gloria Swanson, and Dale Evans. Boone declared, "what the communists want is to subvert and undermine our young people. ... I believe in the power of aroused Americans, I believe in the wisdom of our Constitution. ... the power of God."[42] It was noted that Roy Rogers, John Wayne, Ronald Reagan, Mary Pickford, Jane Russell, Ginger Rogers, and Pat Buttram had endorsed the goals of the rally and would also take attended had their schedules not been in conflict.[42]

In the early 1970s, the Boones hosted Bible studies for celebrities such as Doris 24-hour interval, Glenn Ford, Zsa Zsa Gabor, and Priscilla Presley at their Beverly Hills home. The family then began attending The Church On The Way in Van Nuys, a Square Gospel megachurch pastored by Jack Hayford.[33]

On an April 22, 2016, broadcast of Fox News Radio'due south The Alan Colmes Show, Boone discussed an episode of Saturday Dark Alive which included a sketch entitled God Is a Boob Man; the sketch parodied the film God'due south Not Expressionless 2, in which Boone had a role.[43] He described the sketch every bit "blasphemy", stating that the Federal Communications Commission should forbid whatsoever such content, and that it should revoke the broadcast licenses of whatever "network, or whoever is responsible for the shows".[43]

Politics [edit]

Boone supported Barry Goldwater in the 1964 Usa presidential election.[44]

In the 2007 Kentucky gubernatorial election, Boone campaigned unsuccessfully for incumbent Republican Ernie Fletcher with a recorded automated telephone message stating that the Democratic Party candidate Steve Beshear would support "every homosexual cause." As role of the campaign, Boone asked, "Now do you want a governor who'd similar Kentucky to be another San Francisco?"[45]

On August 29, 2009, Boone wrote an article comparing American political liberalism to cancer, likening it to "black filthy cells".[46]

In December 2009, Boone endorsed conservative Republican John Wayne Tucker'due south entrada in Missouri'southward tertiary congressional district against incumbent Russ Carnahan (D) in the 2010 midterm elections.[47] In 2010, Boone endorsed Republican Clayton Trotter in the race for Texas's 20th congressional district with an ad entrada referencing his song Speedy Gonzales about the Looney Tunes character, which critics have characterized as offensive stereotypes.[48] [49]

Boone received a lifetime achievement honor at the 38th annual Conservative Political Activity Conference held in Feb 2011.[50]

In June 2016, Boone, forth with Mike Huckabee and executive producer Troy Duhon, all of whom were involved in the motion picture God'due south Not Dead 2, sent a alphabetic character to California Governor Jerry Dark-brown in opposition to Senate Pecker 1146[51] which "prohibits a person from being subjected to discrimination" at California colleges. Other than schools that train pastors and theology teachers, schools "might no longer be allowed to rent Christian-only staff, teach religious ideas in regular classes, require attendance at chapel services, or keep bathrooms and dormitories restricted to either males or females."[52]

Basketball game [edit]

Boone is a basketball fan and had ownership interests in two teams. He owned a team in the Hollywood Studio League called the Cooga Moogas. The Cooga Moogas included Neb Cosby, Rafer Johnson, Gardner McKay, Don Murray, and Denny "Tarzan" Miller.[53]

With the founding of the American Basketball Clan, Boone became the majority owner of the league's team in Oakland, California, on February 2, 1967.[53] The team was get-go named the Oakland Americans, just was later renamed equally the Oakland Oaks, the proper noun nether which it played from 1967 to 1969.[53] The Oaks won the 1969 ABA title.[54]

Despite the Oaks' success on the courtroom, the team had severe financial issues. By August 1969, the Bank of America was threatening to foreclose on a $1.2 million loan to the Oaks,[55] and the squad was sold to a group of businessmen in Washington, D.C., and became the Washington Caps.[56]

Boone later played for the Virginia Creepers, an 80–84 age group Senior Olympic squad that narrowly lost to the gold medal-winning squad; Boone aged out (by turning 85) on June 1, 2019.[57]

Discography [edit]

Filmography [edit]

  • 1955: The Pied Piper of Cleveland (documentary)
  • 1957: Bernardine
  • 1957: April Love
  • 1958: Mardi Gras
  • 1959: Journey to the Heart of the World
  • 1960: Salute to the Teenagers (Telly documentary) (producer and host)
  • 1961: All Easily on Deck
  • 1962: Country Fair
  • 1962: The Main Allure
  • 1963: The Horror of It All
  • 1963: The Yellow Canary
  • 1964: Never Put It in Writing
  • 1964: Goodbye Charlie
  • 1965: The Greatest Story Ever Told
  • 1967: The Perils of Pauline
  • 1969: The Pigeon
  • 1970: The Cantankerous and the Switchblade
  • 1989: Roger & Me (documentary)
  • 1990: Music Machine (voice of Mr. Conductor)
  • 1991: Benny'due south Biggest Battle (vocalization of Mr. Conductor)
  • 1994: Precious Moments: Simon the Lamb (voice of The Shepherd)
  • 1997: Space Ghost Coast to Declension (TV series)
  • 2000: The Eyes of Tammy Faye (documentary)
  • 2008: Hollywood on Fire (documentary)
  • 2016: Boonville Redemption
  • 2016: God's Non Expressionless two
  • 2017: A Cowgirl's Story
  • 2022: The Mulligan

Box-office ranking [edit]

Boone was considered one of the near popular box-office stars in the U.S. as judged by the Quigley Poll of Pic Exhibitors in its Annual "Summit Ten MoneyMakers Poll":[58]

  • 1957: tertiary nigh popular star
  • 1958: 11th most popular
  • 1959: 22nd about pop
  • 1960: 22nd about popular

Bibliography (works published by Boone) [edit]

  • Twixt Twelve and Xx: Pat talks to Teenagers (1958) Prentice Hall
  • "Between Y'all, Me and the Gatepost" (1960) Prentice Hall
  • The Solution to Crisis-America (1970) F. H. Revell Co, ISBN 0-8007-8081-vii
  • A Miracle Saved My Family (1971) Oliphants, ISBN 0-551-00640-4
  • The Real Christmas (1972) F. H. Revell Co, ISBN 0-8007-0546-seven
  • Joy! (1973) Creation Firm, ISBN 0-88419-060-9
  • My Blood brother'south Keeper? (1975) Victory Printing, ISBN 0-85476-237-X
  • My Faith (1976) C. R. Gibson Co, ISBN 0-8378-1764-1
  • To Be or Not to Exist an SOB: A Reaffirmation of Business concern Ethics (1979) Wordware Publishing, Incorporated, ISBN 0-89015-737-5
  • The Honeymoon Is Over (1980) Creation House, ISBN 0-88419-130-3
  • Marrying for Life: A Handbook of Marriage Skills (1982) HarperCollins Publishers, ISBN 0-86683-674-eight
  • Pray to Win (1982) Putnam Pub Group, ISBN 0-399-12494-2
  • Pat Boone'south Favorite Bible Stories (1984) Creation House, ISBN 0-88419-245-8
  • Pat Boone'south Favorite Bible Stories for the Very Immature (1984) Random House of Canada, Limited, ISBN 0-394-85891-three
  • A Miracle a Day Keeps the Devil Away (1986) Revell, ISBN 0-8007-0693-5
  • New Song (1988) Affect Books, ISBN 0-86608-003-ane
  • Phenomenon of Prayer (1989) Zondervan, ISBN 0-310-22131-5
  • The Homo Touch: The Story of the National Easter Seal (1990) Certification Review, ISBN 0-914373-22-6
  • Jesus Is Alive (1990) Thomas Nelson Inc, ISBN 1-55894-219-10
  • Double Agent (2002) Publish America, Incorporated, ISBN 1-59129-469-X
  • Goodnight, Whatever You Are!: My Journey with Zacherley, the Cool Ghoul (2006) Tradeselect Limited, ISBN 1-933384-03-4
  • Pat Boone's America: A Pop Culture Treasury of the By Fifty Years (2006) B&H Publishing Group, ISBN 0-8054-4376-two
  • Culture-Wise Family: Upholding Christian Values in A Mass-Media World (2007) Gospel Light Publications, ISBN 0-8307-4355-3
  • The Marriage Game (2007) New Leafage Press, Inc., ISBN 0-89221-114-8
  • Questions Near God: And the Answers That Could Change Your Life (2008) Lighthouse Publishing, ISBN 1-935079-13-1
  • Pat Boone Devotional Book (2009) G. K. Hall, ISBN 0-8161-6630-vii

Bibliography [edit]

  • University of Northward Texas Alumni Directory, Pat (Charles Eastward.) Boone, (1994) OCLC 768191551
  • ASCAP Biographical Dictionary, fourth edition, compiled for the American Social club of Composers, Authors and Publishers, past Jaques Cattell Press, R. R. Bowker (1980) OCLC 7065938 ISBN 0-8352-1283-ane ISBN 978-0-8352-1283-0
  • Biographical Dictionary of American Music, edited by Charles Eugene Claghorn (1911–2005), Parker Publishing Co., West Nyack, New York (1973) OCLC 609781 ISBN 0-13-076331-4 ISBN 978-0-13-076331-0
  • Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism, past Randall Herbert Balmer, Baylor University Press (2004) OCLC 191038717 ISBN 1-60258-038-three ISBN 978-one-60258-038-1
  • The Encyclopedia of Folk, Country & Western Music, second edition, by Irwin Stambler (built-in 1924) and Grelun S. Landon (1923–2004), St. Martin's Press (1983) OCLC 8430828 ISBN 0-312-24818-0 ISBN 978-0-312-24818-five
  • Baker'south Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, eighth edition, revised by Nicolas Slonimsky, Macmillan Publishing Co. (1992) OCLC 24246972 ISBN 0-02-872415-one ISBN 978-0-02-872415-7
  • Baker'southward Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, ninth edition, edited by Laura Kuhn, Schirmer Books (2001) OCLC 44972043 ISBN 0-02-865525-7 ISBN 978-0-02-865525-3

References [edit]

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  2. ^ Joel Whitburn (1996). Billboard Volume of Acme 40 Hits, The. Billboard. p. 806.
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  35. ^ Jump, Jake (December 31, 2010). "Pat Boone Family Theater replaces NASCAR café in Myrtle Embankment". The Dominicus News. Archived from the original on Feb 4, 2013. Retrieved December 31, 2010.
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External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Pat Boone at IMDb
  • Pat Boone at AllMovie
  • Pat Boone at The Interviews: An Oral History of Television
  • Brief biography, by Tom Simon, December 25, 2002
  • Paradigm of Pat Boone with his wife Shirley and their 4 children subsequently disembarking a plane in Los Angeles, California, 1959. Los Angeles Times Photographic Annal (Collection 1429). UCLA Library Special Collections, Charles E. Young Research Library, University of California, Los Angeles.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_Boone