Mary Wells
Born
in Detroit on 13 May 1943, Mary Wells started singing at the age
of ten, and actually auditioned for the Tamla Motown label in
1961, when, at 18, she came from nowhere and presented the label
with her own composition, Bye Bye Baby - which became her
first single release and her first American hit.
A year later she enjoyed a million-selling single success with
the Smokey Robinson song Two Lovers - and she emerged as
the 'First Lady' of Tamla Motown.
By the time My Guy was released in 1964 she was one of
Tamla's most successful artists. That same year she recorded Once
Upon A Time with Tamla's 'Leading Man' Marvin Gaye and toured
Britain with The Beatles.
Sadly, her career had reached its summit and she left Motown in
1968 for 20th Century Fox, followed by excursions to Atco and
Jubilee.
The 1970s saw no great commercial success for Mary - with the
exception of a re-release of My Guy in 1972 which once
again reached the British Top 20, although by then she was married
to songwriter Cecil Womack and had virtually retired from the
music business to concentrate on family life. They later divorced.
In 1990 Wells was diagnosed with cancer of the larynx and had
to sell most of her possessions to pay for the medical treatment
(which left her singing voice destroyed). In 1992 she was
hospitalised for pneumonia and died on 26 July 1992, aged 49.

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