Andy Williams: Hitting the High Notes
The Legendary Songsmith Is Still Entertaining Audiences in His 80s, With No Signs of Slowing Down
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Singer Andy Williams, performing at his theatre in Branson, Mo. (CBS)
And it all begins with a tried-and- true ritual: He warms up his pipes in the shower. . .
"Mooooooon Reiver …. la de da de da . . . "
He dresses, always looking sharp, burns off a little energy back stage, a quick check of the fly, and then . . . show time!
"It really is a good show. It's just, it's fun, it's family-friendly, without being hokey, you know?" said CBS News correspondent Cynthia Bowers.
"Good. That's what we want," Williams said.
He's pushing 82, but still pounding out the melodies. Williams does six shows a week at his own theater in Branson, Mo. Over the years, Williams has made scores of albums (including his new "Best of" CD) and recorded hundreds of songs, so there are plenty to choose from - but he always includes "Moon River."
It's been his signature song ever since he used it to open the TV show that made him a star.
From 1962 until 1971 "The Andy Williams Show" aired on NBC.
"The show was very popular," Williams said. "And then when you have a really popular television show, everybody wants to get on it."
From Basie to Bennett to Bing, the biggest stars of the time appeared aside Andy, including Judy Garland in 1965.
It's an appearance Williams remembers most fondly for a comedy sketch they performed . . .
"She started to show me how to put on makeup, drawing on a mustache. All crooked, you know, and eyebrows were funny," he laughed. "And then put a little powder on. We're getting more powder on, and eventually she ends up putting powder on a big pillow, you know, a great big pillow, and whacking me with it. Anyway, it was really funny. It really was funny. She's such a great actress."
"Well, and it was a side of her that people really didn't get to see," said Bowers
"No. And it was a great bit. It really was."
Andy Williams was a natural for TV it seemed, able to play the straight man in comedy sketches, dance a little, and sing a lot. His musical range allowed him to seamlessly duet with any singer, whether singing R&B with Ray Charles, rock 'n' roll with the Beach Boys, or pop standards with Vic Damone, Tony Bennett and Bing Crosby.

And then there were the Osmonds, who charmed the audience when they debuted as children in 1963. "Everybody wanted to see 'em again," Williams said. "So, I said, 'Would you like to come back next week?' And they said, 'Oh, yeah.' And so they did. They came back for six years, every week."
And they virtually grew up before America's eyes.
The Osmonds reminded Williams of another family . . . his own.
"It seems like some of your earliest memories involve singing, wither listening to your mom or wanting to be a part of the action with your brothers," said Bowers.
"My two older brothers and my father and mother were the church choir," Williams said. "That was it. This little Presbyterian church. And I wanted to sing in the choir, too."
"In Williams' new memoir, "Moon River and Me" (Viking), he details how he began his singing career as a boy to fulfill a dream - his father's dream.
"That wasn't my passion to sing, you know; it was his," he said. "It was his passion to do something with us."
Williams grew up in a modest clapboard house on a hill in a tiny Iowa town called Wall Lake. His father, a railroad worker, had big plans for his four singing sons.
"I think he would do anything he could to get out of Wall Lake, Iowa, and to move on, and do something a little better."
The family moved to Des Moines, and before long, the Williams brothers landed a radio job. Andy was seven.
"We were on "The Iowa Barn Dance Frolic" for about six years," William said.
The boys' father would urge them to practice, to do better, with a tough message:
"'You're not quite as good as the rest, so you've got to work harder,' which for a little kid, that stuck in my mind."
"It worked?"
"Well, yeah, it did. Because we did work harder. And I did all my life. I couldn't get that out of my head, ever."
The brothers' big success came when they teamed with singer-song writer Kay Thompson after the family had moved to Los Angeles.
"The act was so exciting, and it was just jam-packed all the time," Williams said. "And so we were suddenly making more money than anybody. I mean, it was just phenomenal."
The act broke up after a couple of years, and Andy struggled as a soloist, but he eventually landed his first TV job, singing on "The Tonight Show with Steve Allen" in 1954.
"You know, after two-and-a-half years, I had had two or three hit records. So I could go now into better places and sing, you know, pop songs and do a different kind of act."
Williams was becoming a star, and in 1960, he was featured on CBS' "Person to Person," where he was asked if he thought he'd ever settle down and get married.
"Well, I would like to get married someday, yes," he said.
Not long after that interview Andy met Claudine Longet, a young French dancer, in the most bizarre way:
"Well, she was pushing her car on the highway in Las Vegas," Williams laughed. "And my manager and I were driving down there. And we saw this lovely girl and her girlfriend, who was also quite pretty, pushing this car. And so, being gallant - and also because they looked very good - we stopped to see if we could help them."
Within a year, the couple was married. That was 1961. They had three children, two sons and a daughter. The whole family would often appear together on Andy's famous Christmas specials.
But the pressures of a performer's life would take their toll on the marriage. Andy and Claudine split in 1975.
"We just sort of grew apart. I was never home," Williams said.
"Do you regret that?" Bowers asked.
"Yes, I do," he said. "For the marriage, for the kids, for everything. You know? It was all my fault. I just didn't take care of my marriage."
The couple would be thrust together a year later when tragedy struck, when Longet shot and killed her new boyfriend, professional skier Spider Sabich, in Aspen, Colorado. Good looking and athletic, he was enormously popular in Aspen. Claudine claimed the shooting was an accident, but was put on trial for manslaughter.
Williams stood by her in the courtroom. "I did. I stood by her during that whole thing, because I thought it was unfair. I thought she was innocent. I thought it was an accident. My children were there. I wanted to make sure that I took care of them as best I could."
Claudine was found guilty of misdemeanor criminal negligence and served 30 days in jail.
It was not the first time Williams' life had been touched by violence. In the 1960s, he'd become close with Bobby Kennedy.
"I wasn't into politics or anything; the only time I got into politics was when he said, 'Would you be a delegate for me from California?' And I said, 'Sure.' And then about two weeks later, I called him. I said, 'I just thought about this. Hey, I hope I didn't just screw this all up, because I just realized I'm a Republican!'"
After Kennedy was assassinated, Williams sang at the funeral.
41 years later, Williams finds himself involved with politics in a very different way.
"Did you expect to be called out for your political views at this point in your life?" Bowers asked.
"No, I made a mistake in an interview to the press in London," Williams said.
A few weeks ago, as Williams set out to promote his new book, an article in a British newspaper said Williams accused President Obama of following a Marxist theory and wanting the country to fail.
"And so I had to backtrack a little there, because you know he is the most charismatic man we've ever had since John F. Kennedy in political office. But I should have just left it at that. You know, instead of saying I think he's taking our country in the wrong direction."
Usually Williams can be found far away from controversy, at home in Branson. He and wife Debbie (they married in 1991) live in a large lakeside house, just minutes from his Moon River Theatre.
They've filled the house with artwork, perhaps Andy's true passion, that he's collected over the years.
"I need to live with them, and I look at 'em every day," he said.
"He does," said his wife Debbie. "He walks through the house at night before we go to bed. And he truly loves his pieces. And he will switch them around. And that's what I love about it. He's just buying art."
He's also got his own restaurant here, the Moon River Grill, of course. His 18 gold and two platinum records line the bar.
His show still draws an enthusiastic crowd . . . so he'll keep on going.
"As long as I'm singing well. I don't wanna get out there and people say, 'Oh, he isn't, you know, like he used to be,' or, 'He isn't as good.'"
"Would you know? Or would someone tell you, do you think?" Bowers asked.
"When they start booing!" he laughed.
By that measure . . . Andy Williams ought to be crooning for a long time to come.
For more info:
andywilliams.com
"Moon River and Me" by Andy Williams (Viking)
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- I thought Andy Williams came off as a stand up guy when he talked about his life and family. Unlike others I have seen profiled on this show.
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- I have idolized Andy Williams since I was a child, throwing tantrums if I couldn't watch his show. A slight disappointment came 10 years ago when I sent him a demo cd, fed ex and he never as much as sent a letter in reply. As an accomplished singer now, I still look forward to the holiday shows I put together. I wish I could have just one chance to sing with him.
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- ANDY WILLIAMS and CHARLIE GRACIE--SHARE NUMBER 1 HONORS WITH "BUTTERFLY"
Andy Williams is one classy human being--not to mention a great entertainer. My wife and I met him at a book signing in Bergen County last week. Andy covered my father's (CHARLIE GRACIE) original version of BUTTERFLY in 1957 and both records sailed to the top of the Billboard Charts in 1957--selling over a million a piece. Andy was also kind enough to do a spot in a PBS documentary on my dad entitled: CHARLIE GRACIE: FABULOUS! in 2007. Another great honor. My dad is now 73-one of the pioneers of early rock 'n' roll and still going strong as well. As Andy said in an interview: 'age isn't important, its what you do with your time that counts." AMEN! Croon on Andy! Sincerely, CHARLIE GRACIE, JR. - Reply to this comment
- Was Barbra Striesand or Old Blue Eyes asked why they sang other people's songs? Andy Williams was a part of all our lives in Canada and the States. What a joy to watch those clips again. Thanks.
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- THANK YOU Ben2715! :-)
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- THANK YOU Ben2715! :-)
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- In one snippet, the Osmond Brothers were singing a song I'm trying very hard to remember. I think part of the lyric was "come with me..." Can anyone identify this song? Thanks.
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- Not sure if this is the song you were thinking of, but the segment included a rare clip of them doing Simon & Garfunkel's "Keep the Customer Satisfied." Williams' latter series (1969-71) made an effort to be current with the music of the day, and so the Osmond Brothers began moving away from barbershop harmonies and toward S&G and even a Motown medley. Great stuff!
- Andy Williams voice is as clear and smooth as it has ever been. He lives to perform for his fans. It is absolutely amazing to hear his golden voice sing the favorites that we all grew up with. For all of you out there who havent' been to his theatre you are missing a legend in his own time. Take the time..........you'll be glad you did.
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- What is the name of the song from the clip with with Vic Damone, and where can I find it?
"She flutters by, catching every eye, dancing in the light, what a sight, pretty butterfly..."
There is a song called "Butterfly" on many Andy Williams CDs, but it's not this song. Nor did I find it on Vic Damone's albums.
I remember the tune, being brought up in the 60's, and would like to add it to my collection. Can anybody help me? - Reply to this comment
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- The song is "Pretty Butterfly," a bossa nova tune that Andy originally recorded in his 1966 album, "In the Arms of Love." The album has been reissued on CD in the States on the Collectables label and in the UK on Sony/Columbia. "Pretty Butterfly" is indeed a pretty and sophisticated tune, not to be confused with "Butterfly," Andy's 1957 rockabilly hit that went on to become his first no. 1 record.
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