400 ATTEND FUNERAL SERVICES FOR COLE . . . FEBRUARY 27, 1965

Motor City Radio Flashbacks logo (MCRFB)From the MCRFB NEWS archive: 1965

NAT KING COLE REMEMBERED

 

 

 


EDITORIAL

LONG LIVE THE KING

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The King – Nat Cole – truly merited that title. As an all-around entertainer, as an across-the-board artist who appealed to all types of audiences, whether Top 40 or Good Music -he had no peers.

He was also a King in that he was the complete artist. His showmanship came through in all media -records, live performances, TV.

He was great, too, in that he could maintain his niche during an age when freak sounds and fads came to the fore. The public realized that his talent was grounded in musicianship; that his charm derived both from his profound knowledge of jazz and “the roots” and in his polished musical sophistication.

But perhaps the greatest thing about him – the element which really adds luster to his memory – is the fact that he was a gentleman in the true sense; that is, a gentle man.

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Billboard February 27, 1965


 

NAT KING COLE 1919-1965
NAT KING COLE 1919-1965

LOS ANGELES — Some 400 friends and relatives of Nat King Cole attended funeral services at St. James Church here, Thursday, (18) in a final tribute to the artist who died of lung cancer Monday (15) at St. John’s Hospital, Santa Monica. Another 3,000 persons waited outside the Episcopal church.

A caravan of limousines brought such celebrities as Jack Benny, Frank Sinatra, Jerry Lewis, Edie Adams, Gene Barry, Jose Ferrer, Rosemary Clooney, Danny Thomas, Vic Damone, Sammy Davis, Eddie (Rochester) Anderson, Frankie Laine and George Jessel to the church.

When the silver hearse pulled up to the church, pallbearers of the bronze coffin included James Conkling, former president of Warner Bros. Records; Glenn Wallichs, chairman of the board of Capitol Records; Harold Plant, the artist’s business manager, and Henry Miller, Cole’s business agent.

Jack Benny, who delivered the eulogy, called Cole “a great professional who gave so much and had so much to give.” He added: “Here I stand, a man granted so many years of life, good health, a measure of contentment, delivering a eulogy for a man whose span of life was so short. Nat Cole was an institution, a tremendous success as an entertainer, but an even greater success as a man, husband, father and friend.”

After the funeral services, the procession proceeded to Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale for brief interment ceremonies.

Honorary pallbearers included Cab Calloway, Duke Ellington, Jack Benny, Ricardo Montalban, George Burns, Nelson Riddle, Gordon Jenkins, Peter Lawford, Edward G. Robinson, Gov. Edmund G. Brown of California, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy of New York and Count Basie.

Cole leaves his widow, Mrs. Maria Cole; a son, Kelly, and four daughters, Timolin and Casey (twins), and Carol and Natalie. He also leaves two brothers, Edward and Fred, and a sister, Evelyn. END

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(Information and news source: Billboard; February 27, 1965)



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One thought on “400 ATTEND FUNERAL SERVICES FOR COLE . . . FEBRUARY 27, 1965”

  1. Hi, I now live in Mt.Airy,NC. I was born & raised in Detroit. I’ve given George Griggs lots of airchecks in the past. I have some great audio interviews that I’d conducted myself between 2011 & 2015 with Robin Seymour,Bob Green,Russ Gibb(WKNR),Larry Miller,Roy Feldman,John O”leary(WABX),Richard D.Haase(WHND),Leni Sinclair,1960″s promoter Bob Harris & early Detroit jazz historian Lars Bjorn among others. You are welcome to post them. The interviews amount to a great & comprehensive history of Detroit as a magnet for local & national musicians. My phone number is 586-224-2042, 336-429-2518 or 336-320-2746. Thank you for your website. Excellent work! Larry Mischel

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