Helen Shapiro
Helen Shapiro was the first British act to release two Top 10
singles while still at school . . . She was only 14 when she cut
the specially conceived Don't Treat Me Like A Child - a
sure-fire hit.
Born in Bethnal Green, in London's East End, on 28 September
1946, Helen took vocal classes at the Maurice Berman Academy while
still attending school. EMI Records' producer, John Schroeder,
chanced to be at one of the classes and was greatly impressed with
such a strong voice soaring from a slip of a girl, barely in her
teens.
Schroeder arranged for her to audition for Norrie Paramor from
EMI's Columbia label, and like Schroeder before him, Paramor
refused to believe his eyes or ears.
Nonetheless he signed Shapiro as a recording artist, leaving
Schroeder to compose her debut release, Don't Treat Me Like A
Child.
A full promotional schedule backed the release, including
television and radio spots, which helped push the single to Number
3 in the British chart during May 1961. By contrast, the
follow-up, also penned by John Schroeder (with Mike Hawker) titled
You Don't Know was a smooth ballad which, under any
circumstances, would be alien to teenage interpretation.
The combination worked perfectly. Selling in excess of 40,000
copies daily, the single raced to the top of the charts where it
stayed for two weeks. International sales soared above one million
by the end of 1961, as it became a top seller in most European
countries.
Helen celebrated her fifteenth birthday on 28 September 1961.
She left school and was free to concentrate fully on her career
and fulfil her performing itinerary that included a season at the
London Palladium.
Walkin' Back To Happiness, again written by Schroeder
and Hawker, with advance orders of 300,000 entered the Top 10
immediately. And while You Don't Know descended, the new
release rose to the top - a position it occupied for four weeks.
Readers of the New Musical Express subsequently voted her
Top UK Female Singer.
To date, the young songstress had been totally reliant on her
composer's choice of material and indeed it had been entirely
compatible with her vocal ability and range. But Shapiro had ideas
of her own, as exemplified by a four-song EP comprising standard
material that included Goody Goody, which elevated the disc
into the EP chart.
During March 1962, after Helen had toured Britain for the first
time, Tell Me What He Said was issued. Written by Jeff
Barry, it soared to Number 2 thus denying Shapiro the distinction
of enjoying three consecutive chart-toppers with her first three
singles.
As if to push her preference for established tunes further, her
debut album, Tops With Me, released during April 1962,
featured her versions of several, including Lipstick On Your
Collar, previously recorded by Connie
Francis who enjoyed a British Number 3 hit with it during July
1959.
From recording artist, Shapiro turned to actress to secure the
starring role in It's Trad Dad, a British pop music movie. Let's
Talk About Love was lifted from the soundtrack to stall
outside the Top 20, a dismal result from a young lady who was more
familiar with the top end of the chart than the bottom.
In fact, unbeknownst to her, this poor showing signified the
start of the decline, beginning in August 1962 when Little Miss
Lonely peaked at Number 8. Despite being written by her
hit-making duo of Schroeder and Hawker, this would mark Helen's
last Top 20 hit.
Due to her previous success on the big screen, Shapiro was
included (albeit as a cameo appearance) in Play It Cool, a
movie starring Billy Fury. Her
contribution was two songs, But I Don't Care and Cry My
Heart Out; neither was issued as a single.
Instead the Bacharach/Hilliard composition Keep Away From
Other Girls was released. Originally recorded by the American
vocalist Babs Tino, it faltered in the Top 40 for Shapiro.
During February 1963, she once more headlined a British tour.
This time her support act was The Beatles
who gave her Misery, a composition written with her style
in mind. Norrie Paramor turned it down, preferring Queen For
Tonight as the next single.
Once again, Shapiro watched a single stagger into the Top 40.
In May 1963, following a recording session in Nashville,
Tennessee, Woe Is Me was issued, another staller in the Top
40. Yet, with the proper guidance, Helen Shapiro could have been
reinstated as a Top 10 artist because she recorded the original
version of It's My Party. American teenager Lesley
Gore took her version to Number 9 in the British chart during
June 1963, and topped the US chart after sales of one million
copies.
The second of Shapiro's Nashville sessions was issued in July
1963. Titled Not Responsible, it was her first single not
to receive a British chart placing. And when the Helen In
Nashville album itself was issued in October, that too bombed.
Another track was taken early in 1964. Shapiro covered the Peggy
Lee classic Fever. This almost desperate move to save
her career only reached the Top 40.
It was her last British hit, and to all intents and purposes,
her recording career was over.
The remainder of 1964 was spent touring abroad, particularly in
the Far East. In the spring of 1965 Helen performed Here In My
Arms in the British Song Festival held in Brighton. That
flopped. Nothing her management planned could rescue her from the
decline, so in 1967 she moved to the stage to appear in I'll
Get My Man.
Two years on, Helen Shapiro joined Humphrey Lyttelton and his
band on the Duke Ellington tribute album Echoes of the Duke,
and watched in the sidelines as compilations of her best material
were issued, including The Helen Shapiro 25th Anniversary Album
in 1986.
With the start of the 1990s she participated in several gospel
shows, including one with Cliff Richard.
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