60s Superstars

60s Superstars

NCAA Quiz: Name the four players who averaged 33 points per

game for their career. [Hint: All went on to the NBA and played

at least some in the 1970s.] Answer below.

The Mamas and the Papas

With the death of John Phillips, I thought we”d take a look back

at the superstar rock group that he founded in 1965. Phillips, the

son of a career marine officer, was born on Parris Island, SC in

1935. He was an all-state hoops player but really didn”t know

what he wanted to do, bouncing around between jobs and stints

in college (he went to George Washington for a spell, as well as

3 months at the Naval Academy). Finally, he settled down in

Greenwich Village, NY where he became a member of the folk

trio the Journeymen (which included Scott McKenzie). Then in

1962, he married Michelle Gilliam, a California girl who had

come to New York to be a model, and the new Mrs. Phillips joined

her husband”s group.

Meanwhile, Canadian Denny Doherty had been a member of the

Halifax Three, a group which included future Lovin” Spoonful

member Zal Yanovsky. Doherty and Yanovsky joined Ellen

Cohen (Cass Elliot) and her group, Cass Elliot and the Big Three.

They changed their name to the Mugwumps and added John

Sebastian. [Then Yanovsky and Sebastian split to launch

Spoonful.]

When the Mugwumps broke up, Doherty joined the New

Journeymen. John Phillips then thought that he, Michelle, and

Denny should go the Virgin Islands (St. Thomas) and rehearse

the material that Phillips was working on. Elliot was down there

as a waitress and joined them at rehearsals. [Something tells me

these guys weren”t exactly getting up at the crack of dawn, if you

know what I mean.]

Well, the 4 of them got along pretty well so they decided to head

to California, where they met ex-New Christy Minstrel Barry

McGuire (#1 “Eve Of Destruction) who hooks them up with

producer Lou Adler. Adler toys with the name the Magic Circle

before settling on the Mamas & the Papas.

You”ll recall from your 60s history that a rock group fronted by

two men and two women was rare (like nonexistent). Well, in

early 1966 the group released John Phillips” tune “California

Dreamin”” and it ran up to #4 on the Billboard Charts. Two

months later, “Monday, Monday,” another Phillips composition,

hit #1.

But you had your basic sexual tension in the marriage of John

and Michelle, which interfered in the creative process, so to

speak, so Michelle was fired from the band. A month later, the

two reconciled and she was welcomed back. Pheww, that was close.

In early ”67, the Mamas & the Papas won a Grammy for

“Monday, Monday” and that spring had the #2 “Dedicated To

The One I Love” (a smashing remake of the Shirelles hit), as

well as the autobiographical “Creeque Alley,” written by

Phillips, which peaked at #5. [Coupled with the other #5”s from

1966, “I Saw Her Again” and “Words Of Love,” and you had six

Top Five”s in the span of about 15 months.]

Separately, John wrote the #4 “San Francisco (Be Sure To Wear

Some Flowers In Your Hair)” for friend Scott McKenzie in the

summer of ”67 and there was another big Phillips project, the

Monterey Pop Festival.

In the spring of 1967, Phillips, along with Adler and San

Francisco promoter Bill Graham (not to be confused with the

Rev. Billy Graham), financed a 3 night event where over 50,000

fans paid just $3-$6.50 a ticket to see some of the following:

First, the major introductions to an American audience for Jimi

Hendrix, Janis Joplin (with her Big Brother & The Holding

Company), and the Who…plus…Jefferson Airplane, Laura

Nyro, the Byrds, Johnny Rivers, Simon & Garfunkel, the Steve

Miller Blues Band, Buffalo Springfield, Eric Burdon and the

Animals, Lou Rawls, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Paul

Butterfield Blues Band, Canned Heat, Country Joe and the Fish,

Otis Redding, Moby Grape, and Hugh Masekela. [The Beach

Boys were on the bill, as well, but Brian Wilson was having one

of his days so they bailed.]

Well, Monterey also proved to be the last time the Mamas & the

Papas performed together. And by 1968 there were simply too

many problems, particularly the ongoing issue of John and

Michelle”s marriage. So in June of that year, John, Denny, and

Cass wrote Michelle to inform her that she was fired once again.

The next month the whole group broke up and John and Michelle

divorced.

Michelle went on to a successful acting career, Cass launched a

so-so solo career (the #12 “Dream A Little Dream Of Me” being

her only real winner), Doherty had zero success on his own, and

John Phillips did drugs and alcohol.

Actually, in 1973 the group announced a huge suit against their

Dunhill label for “systematic cold-blooded theft of perhaps up to

$60 million, stolen from each and every artist who recorded for it

during a 7-year period” and John ended up living off his

royalties.

Then on July 29, 1974 Mama Cass died while in London at

singer Harry Nilsson”s place. She was just 32 yet the massive

one suffered a heart attack while choking on a ham sandwich and

inhaling vomit. [It must have taken a crane to remove her from

Nilsson”s flat. And, getting off track, did you know that he wrote

Three Dog Night”s “One?” Actually, I was also surprised to see

that his “I Guess The Lord Must Be In New York City” only

made it to #34. A travesty.]

In 1980, John Phillips was arrested for cocaine possession in Los

Angeles and was sentenced to five years, but it was later reduced

to 30 days and probation. In and out of rehab, Phillips and

Denny Doherty did team up for a 1982 oldies tour, using John”s

daughter MacKenzie Phillips along with Spanky McFarlane to

round out the group. [MacKenzie was also a mess, you”ll recall.

And I used to live behind the institution the two of them hung out

at! It wasn”t as bad a location as it sounds. But every now and

then you”d hear a scream in the night. Huh, I”d muse.]

John Phillips wasn”t totally finished as a songwriter though. In

1988, he co-wrote along with Scott McKenzie…for whom

MacKenzie Phillips was named, incidentally…and Mike Love

the Beach Boys #1 “Kokomo,” a tune which I have written on

numerous occasions in this space tarnishes my favorite group”s

image.

So there you have it, another rock legend gone. Over the coming

years they are really going to start dropping like flies. [Sources:

“The Encyclopedia of Pop Rock and Soul,” Irwin Stambler;

“VH1: Rock Stars Encyclopedia;” “The Rolling Stone

Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll;” Richard Pearson / Washington

Post]

Follow-Up

When I wrote my little bit about the Williams Sisters” act this

weekend in a tournament in California, I didn”t realize the cover

story for the March 27 issue of the National Enquirer read:

“Wimbledon Fixed? – The Shocking Story – Venus & Serena

Williams” family member charges: Dad ordered Serena to lose.”

Well, since the Enquirer has actually broken a few stories

recently, particularly concerning the Clinton pardons, I thought

I”d pick up my first copy in about 15 years. Alas, there really

isn”t anything new. The Williams continue to tank matches,

depending on the wishes of father Richard. And it was duly

noted by the Wimbledon press last year that Serena tanked to

Venus in their semifinal confrontation. This whole issue will

only grow. We need a Mike Wallace “60 Minutes” piece on it.

Bob Hayes

It isn”t football season but I just had to acknowledge a little note

I saw over the weekend concerning Hayes”s deteriorating health.

For the past month, the former track and football star has been in

a hospital battling heart, liver and kidney ailments, along with

the aftermath of his prostate surgery. Doctors allowed him to

attend a high school track meet named for him. “I know the odds

are against me, but I”ve got more to do,” he told the crowd.

Bob Hayes hasn”t had an easy life. Many of his problems were

of his own making, but I just wanted to remind you all of his

impact on the football field after he captured gold in the 100-

meter dash at the 1964 Olympics.

Drafted in the 7th round out of Florida A&M by Dallas, “Bullet

Bob” Hayes was an immediate force. He may not have caught

everything thrown to him, but man was he exciting. In his 11-

year, injury-riddled, career (10 seasons with the Cowboys),

Hayes had 371 receptions for exactly a 20.0 average. And he

had 71 touchdowns, a helluva percentage. Perhaps his most

spectacular year was in 1970 when he caught just 34 passes, but

they were for 889 yards (a 26.1 avg.) and 10 TDs.

Finally, back to his track exploits, Hayes still holds the record for

most consecutive wins at 100-meters, 49. That”s phenomenal.

[Edwin Moses had a 107-event streak in the 400-meter hurdles

but, as awesome as that truly is, there is far more competition in

the 100-meter dash.] So hang in there, Bob. We”re rootin” for

ya.

Crocs

Well, perhaps I shouldn”t admit this but I treated myself to “The

Crocodile Hunter” Monday night. Far more importantly, though,

was a note that Johnny Mac passed along, a Reuters story from

Malaysia, concerning a fatal croc attack over the weekend. On

Friday, a man and his two-year-old boy were bathing in the river

(idiots) when they were attacked by a 15-foot crocodile. The

father pushed his son to safety (well, that was thoughtful of

him…kind of like taking your kid to watch the Battle of the

Bulge and then throwing him in a ditch right before a tank

crushes him) and the animal dragged Dad under.

In February, Reuters reports that a croc was killed after it had

eaten a child at a different Malaysian river. Clearly, the animals

are miffed that the Malaysian government isn”t doing enough to

reform its system of crony capitalism, and this is a way of

sending the message…reduce corruption. At least that”s my

reading of things…I could be wrong.

Top 3 songs for the week of 3/21/70: #1 “Bridge Over Troubled

Water” (Simon & Garfunkel) #2 “The Rapper” (The Jaggerz)

#3 “Give Me Just A Little More Time” (Chairmen of the Board)

NCAA Quiz Answer: Career scoring average – Pete Maravich

(LSU) 44.2 ppg., Austin Carr (Notre Dame) 34.6, Oscar

Robertson (Cincinnati) 33.8, Calvin Murphy (Niagara) 33.1.

Maravich then played 10 seasons in the NBA, averaging 24.2.

*Pistol Pete didn”t have the 3-point shot until his last season. He

would have lit it up even more, otherwise.

Carr played 10 years and averaged 15.4.

The Big “O” played 14, averaging 25.7 ppg., 7.5 rebounds, and

9.5 assists. Awesome babee!

Murphy hung out for 13 seasons and averaged 17.9. I thought

this was kind of interesting, Murphy had the 3-point shot his last

4 seasons and only hit 10 of 72 attempts.

Next Bar Chat, Friday.