Johnny O'Keefe
Johnny
O'Keefe produced more Top 40 hits than any other Australian
recording artist. He had a total of 29 hits spanning 1958 - 1974,
five Number One's and another eight in the Top 10.
He also released more records than any other Australian rock
artist - 53 singles, 52 EPs and 65 albums (he appeared on 111 LPs
in total).
O'Keefe made his stage debut at the age of four when he played
the role of Dopey in the Waverley College production of Snow White
and the Seven Dwarfs. John was unable to read or memorise the
script and so improvised his way through the entire play.
In January 1957, Johnny O'Keefe formed his backing group The
Deejays and together they became Australia's first genuine
professional rock act. Never short of confidence, Johnny bluffed
his way to his first recording contract with Festival Records.
Out of frustration at not being signed, Johnny began telling
people he had signed with the label and 'leaked' the story to
Valda Marshall, a columnist at the Sydney Sun Herald.
Ken Taylor of Festival Records read the story and tauntingly
telephoned Johnny 'congratulating' him on supposedly being signed
to the label.
The conversation did lead to an audition and Johnny
was eventually signed to Festival, and became the first Australian
to make the local charts in March 1958, with Wild One.
O'Keefe's second single, Love Letters In The Sand, was
so bad that he had Festival delete it from their catalogue, and
for many years denied its existence. The disc became a collector's
item selling for hundreds of dollars.
During his 1960 tour of the USA his record company promoted him
as 'The Boomerang Kid' and arranged a boomerang throwing
competition in New York's Central Park as a publicity stunt. The
idea was that anyone who could beat 'The Boomerang Kid' was given
$5.
Unfortunately Johnny arrived drunk and as a result, he beat
only two of the hundreds of people who had turned up. The stunt
cost Liberty Records thousands of dollars.
On 27 June 1960, Johnny's red Plymouth Belvedere collided head
on with a truck on the highway near Kempsey. His car was virtually
demolished and at first it was feared Johnny's injuries (pictured
at right) would be
fatal. He eventually made it out of hospital in just over two
weeks.
In January 1960, O'Keefe hit Number One with She's My Baby,
and the following year I'm Counting On You became the
biggest selling single of 1961.
Also in 1961, John wound up in a
Tooting Bec (London) mental asylum after an abortive American
tour.
In June 1975 O'Keefe lodged a thirty page submission to the
Australian Industries Assistance Commission requesting a grant of
$153,000 to take a packaged Australian tour to Russia. His request
was denied.
Johnny O'Keefe died on 5 October 1978. His last public
appearance was on the Seven Network's Sounds
program taped on 30 September.
In 1987 Iggy Pop recorded a version of Johnny's The Wild One
retitled Real Wild Child, for inclusion on his album Blah
Blah Blah, The song was released as a single and became a huge
hit in the US and Australia.
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