Cliff Edwards â born in Hannibal, Missouri on June 14, 1895 â was a singer, musician and actor best known as the voice of Jiminy Cricket in two classic Walt Disney cartoons - Pinocchio (1940) and Fun and Fancy Free (1947) â and as the voice of Dandy (Jim) Crow in Walt Disneyâs Dumbo (1941). He grew up in Hannibal, but left school at the age of 14 and moved to St. Louis, Missouri and sang in local saloons. He taught himself to play ukulele and earned the nickname Ukulele Ike, which was given to him by a club owner who couldnât remember his real name. His first brush with success was the song âJa-Daâ, which was written by pianist Bob Carleton. Both Cliff Edwards and Carleton turned it into a vaudeville hit and he soon became a popular act, eventually performing as part of the infamous Ziegfeld Follies. He began making phonograph records in 1919 and became one of the most popular singers of the 1920s, recording many pop hits including âIâll See You in My Dreamsâ, âCalifornia, Here I Comeâ, and many others. He soon branched out and appeared in George and Ira Gershwinâs first Broadway musical Lady be Good in 1924. Cliff Edwards recorded many more hits including âPaddlinâ Madeleine Homeâ (1925) and âI Canât Give You Anything but Loveâ (1928). One of his most popular songs was the original version of âSinginâ in the Rainâ (1929), which has become a classic due to later versions of the song. His popularity led directly to the rise of ukulele sales. Cliff Edwards signed with movie studio MGM and appeared in 33 films over the next four years (1929-1933). He also began hosting radio shows in 1932 and would continue to do so until the mid-1940s. However, his popularity began to wane when the publicâs attention switched to crooners instead of former vaudeville performers. Although he wasnât experiencing the same amount of fame, he was asked to voice the character Jiminy Cricket for Walt Disneyâs full-length cartoon Pinocchio. Cliff Edwardsâ performance of the song âWhen You Wish Upon a Starâ became one of the most beloved musical performances in Disney history. He was then asked to voice the character of Dandy (Jim) Crow, the head crow in Dumbo (1941). While the crow characters were later considered controversial due to racial overtones, his performance of âWhen I See Elephants Flyâ is still considered a classic song in Disneyâs large musical catalog. Cliff Edwardsâ fame waned in the late 1940s but was revived in the 1950s when Arthur Godfrey popularized the ukulele again. He began performing on television and continuing to voice Jiminy Cricket in several Disney shorts. Cliff Edwards suffered financial problems beginning in the 1930s thanks to gambling, drugs, alcohol, debt, bankruptcies, and three divorces. During his final years, he lived in a home for destitute actors. Cliff Edwards died on July 17, 1971, at the age of 76.
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