Star Facts
  • Category Radio

    Address 6609 Hollywood Blvd.

    Ceremony date 02/08/1960

About
Vincent Lopez
Born:
1895-12-30,
Brooklyn,
New York,
USA
Education:
NA
Ethnicity:
Caucasian
Death Date:
1975-09-20
Addition Websites

Vincent Lopez

Vincent Lopez was an American bandleader and pianist.

Vincent Lopez was born of Portuguese immigrant parents in Brooklyn, New York and was leading his own dance band in New York City by 1917. On November 27, 1921 his band began broadcasting on the new medium of entertainment radio; the band’s weekly 90-minute show on Newark, NJ station WJZ boosted the popularity of both himself and of radio. He became one of America’s most popular bandleaders, and would retain that status through the 1940s.

He began his radio programs by announcing “Lopez speaking!”.His theme song was “Nola,” Felix Arndt’s novelty ragtime piece of 1915, and Lopez became so identified with it that he occasionally satirized it. Lopez worked occasionally in feature films, notably The Big Broadcast. He was also one of the very first bandleaders to work in Soundies movie musicals, in 1940. He made additional Soundies in 1944.

Noted musicians who played in his band included Artie Shaw, Xavier Cugat, Jimmy Dorsey, Tommy Dorsey, Mike Mosiello and Glenn Miller. He also featured singers Keller Sisters and Lynch, Betty Hutton and Marion Hutton. Lopez’s longtime drummer was the irreverent Mike Riley, who popularized the novelty hit “The Music Goes Round and Round.”

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