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IMDbPro

Charlie Parker(1920-1955)

  • Music Department
  • Composer
  • Soundtrack
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Charlie Parker, Sven Bollhem, Max Roach International Jazz Festival
Charles Christopher Parker Jr. was born on August 29, 1920, in a suburb of Kansas City, Missouri, to Charles Parker Sr. and his 18-year-old wife Addie. His father ran out on the family when Charlie was just a little boy. When he was 11 his mother bought him an alto saxophone for his birthday. By the time he was 15 Charlie was working as a musician in the flourishing Kansas City jazz scene. He also began drinking heavily and using drugs, which were also a part of the KC jazz scene, as were illegal after-hours gambling casinos.

Charlie became more experienced by playing with various bands, including those of Lawrence Keyes and Harlan Leonard, before joining Jay McShann's band in 1940. The band was widely heard on radio across the country, so Charlie's saxophone playing became well known, even though people didn't know his name, so he became known as the Yardbird, or just The Bird. While still in Kansas City, Charlie reached a breakthrough: tired of playing solo with the same scales, he discovered that if he used a higher interval of the chords from a popular song or melody line, with a pianist or guitarist adding the appropriate new chords, he finally could play the sound he always had been hearing in his head. Essentially turning the melody line inside out, he began experimenting with this new style, which became known as "bebop".

Charlie played with McShann in New York City until 1942, when he left for brief stints with the bands of pianist Earl 'Fatha' Hines and singer Billy Eckstine. The association with the Hines Orchestra was a significant one because of the other musicians, who included trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie. By 1945 Charlie was back in New York and leading his own small groups. He got married, but continued to live like a nomad, traveling from place to place and spending almost every other night in a hotel or boarding house. He also became a drug addict, and as his addiction increased so did his appetite, and he began putting on weight.

Charlie took part in the first bebop recording session in 1945. With Gillespie and Miles Davis, he recorded songs like "Billie's Bounce" and "Koko" for Savoy Records. Not long afterward, he recorded such classic songs as "A Night in Tunisia" and "Yardbird Suite" for another small label, Dial Records. In the late 1940s Charlie toured Europe, where he was received like visiting royalty. He made several tours of Cuba, where he began experimenting with large string sections and Afro-Cuban rhythms. After a few years of relative stability, however, Charlie began a downward slide. He got hooked back on drugs again (heroin was his favorite), he began nodding out on bandstands, getting into fistfights and pawning his saxophones for drug money. Aware of the effects of drug use, he chastised younger sax players who emulated his heroin use.

By the early 1950s Charlie's drinking and drug use made him gray and prematurely lined. His self-abuse began to infringe on his musical ability. During this time, Charlie was befriended by a wealthy European baroness who was living in New York, loved his jazz music and helped him out when he needed it. In early 1955, on his way to a gig in Boston, Charlie stopped by her apartment for a visit. Alarmed by his obvious ill health, she had her personal doctor examine him, which revealed that he had stomach ulcers and many other health problems, the result of his years of drinking and drug use. The doctor recommended hospitalization, but the stubborn Charlie refused to consider it. The baroness got him to rest at her place for a few days.

On March 12, 1955, the baroness found Charlie Parker dead, slumped over in an easy chair in front of the TV set in her apartment. He was 34 years old. An autopsy revealed such damage to the inside of his body that the doctor who performed the autopsy thought Charlie was a man at least 50 years old. Charlie Parker's legend grew even larger after his death. Fans scrawled "Bird Lives!" on walls of jazz clubs from New York, to Los Angeles, to Paris, France. To this day, more than 40 years after his death, Bird remains jazz's single most venerated figure.
BornAugust 29, 1920
DiedMarch 12, 1955(34)
BornAugust 29, 1920
DiedMarch 12, 1955(34)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • Awards
    • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

Photos18

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Known for

Brad Pitt, Morgan Freeman, and Kevin Spacey in Seven (1995)
Seven
8.6
  • Soundtrack("Now's the Time")
  • 1995
Mel Gibson in Hors de contrôle (2010)
Hors de contrôle
6.6
  • Soundtrack("Embraceable You")
  • 2010
Le Convoi de la peur (1977)
Le Convoi de la peur
7.7
  • Soundtrack("I'll Remember April")
  • 1977
Forest Whitaker in Bird (1988)
Bird
7.1
  • Soundtrack("Lester Leaps In", "I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me", "Ornithology", "Lover Man", "April in Paris", "All of Me", "Now's The Time", "Cool Blues", "Laura", "This Time The Dream's On Me", "Ko Ko", "Parker's Mood")
  • 1988

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Music Department



  • Thierry Genovese, Rcn, and Yossi Benavraham in Il était une fois (2024)
    Il était une fois
    Podcast Series
    • Songwriter and Singer
    • singer
    • 2025
  • Jazz Dispute
    Video
    • Soundtrack
    • 2006
  • Dresden
    5.8
    • composer: song "Big Foot"
    • 1999
  • George Shearing: Lullaby in Birdland
    Video
    • music: "Donna Lee" and "Moose the Mooche"
    • 1992
  • Jean-François Pauvros in Sept Solos (Marmaduke/Charlie Parker) (1983)
    Sept Solos (Marmaduke/Charlie Parker)
    TV Short
    • music: marmaduke
    • 1983
  • Le souffle au coeur (1971)
    Le souffle au coeur
    7.5
    • music
    • 1971
  • Jazz i Montmartre
    TV Movie
    • Music Department
    • 1962

Composer



  • Alien: Gemisi
    Short
    • Composer
    • 2025
  • Eastwood Symphonic - Une affaire de Famille (2023)
    Eastwood Symphonic - Une affaire de Famille
    7.0
    TV Special
    • Composer
    • 2023
  • Una anciana asturiana
    Short
    • Composer
    • 2004
  • Anne Alvaro and Christiane Millet in Le goût de plaire (1989)
    Le goût de plaire
    Short
    • Composer
    • 1989

Soundtrack



  • Darker Than You Think
    • performer: "Now's the Time"
    • writer: "Now's the Time"
    • In Development



  • Daniel Craig in Queer (2024)
    Queer
    6.4
    • performer: "Perdido"
    • 2024
  • Jonathan Bailey and Matt Bomer in Fellow Travelers (2023)
    Fellow Travelers
    8.2
    TV Mini Series
    • performer: "Leap Frog"
    • writer: "Leap Frog"
    • 2023
  • Yuri Lowenthal and Nadji Jeter in Marvel's Spider-Man 2 (2023)
    Marvel's Spider-Man 2
    9.1
    Video Game
    • performer: "Donna Lee"
    • writer: "Donna Lee"
    • 2023
  • A Jazzman's Blues (2022)
    A Jazzman's Blues
    6.8
    • writer: "Ornithology"
    • 2022
  • Chiwetel Ejiofor and Naomie Harris in The Man Who Fell to Earth (2022)
    The Man Who Fell to Earth
    7.2
    TV Series
    • performer: "Ornithology"
    • writer: "Ornithology"
    • 2022
  • Tessa Thompson and Nnamdi Asomugha in Pour l'amour de Sylvie (2020)
    Pour l'amour de Sylvie
    6.8
    • performer: "My Little Suede Shoes"
    • writer: "My Little Suede Shoes"
    • 2020
  • Bruce Willis, Alec Baldwin, Willem Dafoe, Edward Norton, and Gugu Mbatha-Raw in Brooklyn Affairs (2019)
    Brooklyn Affairs
    6.8
    • performer: "Relaxing with Lee"
    • writer: "Relaxing with Lee"
    • 2019
  • Rachel Brosnahan in La fabuleuse Mme Maisel (2017)
    La fabuleuse Mme Maisel
    8.7
    TV Series
    • performer: "All The Things You Are"
    • performer: "Scapple From The Apple"
    • writer: "Scapple From The Apple" (uncredited)
    • 2017
  • Eryn Wilson, Tim W. Kelly, David Van Horn, Fraser Brown, Shara Connolly, Phil Brown, Emmett Skilton, Chelsie Preston Crayford, Ben Van Lier, Phil Peleton, Ian Bell, Matt Whelan, Andrew Blair, Adam Jonas Segaller, Alexandra Corin Johnston, Akira Matsumoto, Jade Albany Pietrantonio, and Holly Shervey in American Playboy: The Hugh Hefner Story (2017)
    American Playboy: The Hugh Hefner Story
    7.5
    TV Mini Series
    • performer: "Chi Chi"
    • writer: "Chi Chi"
    • writer: "Bloomdido" (uncredited)
    • 2017
  • Liev Schreiber in Ray Donovan (2013)
    Ray Donovan
    8.3
    TV Series
    • performer: "Laird Baird" (uncredited)
    • 2015
  • Ioan Gruffudd in Forever (2014)
    Forever
    8.2
    TV Series
    • performer: "Ornithology"
    • writer: "Ornithology" (uncredited)
    • 2014
  • John Hawkes and Elle Fanning in Low Down (2014)
    Low Down
    6.1
    • writer: "Barbados"
    • 2014
  • Chiwetel Ejiofor and Thandiwe Newton in Half of a Yellow Sun (2013)
    Half of a Yellow Sun
    6.1
    • writer: "My Little Suede Shoes"
    • 2013
  • Bi no tsubo (2006)
    Bi no tsubo
    TV Series
    • performer: "Si Si"
    • writer: "Si Si"
    • 2013
  • Big Sur (2013)
    Big Sur
    5.7
    • performer: "Tiger Rag"
    • 2013

Personal details

Edit
  • Alternative name
    • Charlie 'Bird' Parker
  • Height
    • 1.75 m
  • Born
    • August 29, 1920
    • Kansas City, Missouri, USA
  • Died
    • March 12, 1955
    • New York City, New York, USA(pneumonia, heart failure and cirrhosis of the liver following drug abuse)
  • Spouses
      Chan Parker1950 - March 12, 1955 (his death, 2 children)
  • Other works
    Single: "This Is Always" (Dial Records).
  • Publicity listings
    • 1 Biographical Movie
    • 2 Print Biographies
    • 1 Portrayal
    • 5 Articles

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    Inducted into the Hall of Famous Missourians, 1994.
  • Trademark
      Often performed with Dizzy Gillespie
  • Nicknames
    • Bird
    • Yardbird
    • Charlie Chan
    • Sparrow

FAQ

Powered by Alexa
  • When did Charlie Parker die?
    March 12, 1955
  • How did Charlie Parker die?
    Pneumonia, heart failure and cirrhosis of the liver following drug abuse
  • How old was Charlie Parker when he died?
    34 years old
  • Where did Charlie Parker die?
    New York City, New York, USA
  • When was Charlie Parker born?
    August 29, 1920

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