American jazz singer Barbara Lea was born Barbara LeCocq on April 10, 1929 in Detroit, Michigan. Her stage name came about after her father, a onetime musician turned government official, changed the familyâs name to Leacock. She knew she wanted to be a singer from an early age and performed in numerous talent competition. After formal training at Wellesley College she became acquainted with singer Lee Wiley, and Wiley became something of a role model. Leaâs recording career began in 1955 with A Woman in Love, a collection of standards that included renditions of âLove Is Here to Stayâ and âCome Rain or Come Shineâ. 1956âs Barbara Lea expressed more of her personality. She would record two more albums in the fifties, but failing to find popular success she retreated from singing and became an actress during the 1960s. She returned to song in the 1970s, appearing on the show American Popular Song and that led to a renewed recording career. She released The Devil Is Afraid of Music in 1977, 20 years after her last LP. She would record and perform steadily into the 2000s, often appearing at the most celebrated jazz festivals. She became a beloved interpreter of the American songbook, delivering faithful renditions of works by Hoagy Carmichael, Rodgers and Hart, and Cole Porter among others. She released her final album, Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans in 2007, and passed away from Alzheimerâs on December 26, 2011.
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