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IMDbPro

Spade Cooley(1910-1969)

  • Actor
  • Producer
  • Writer
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Spade Cooley
Violinist and cellist, singer, actor, composer and songwriter ("Shame On You"), conductor, arranger and inventor who popularized western swing music on film and recordings, in person and on radio and television. When Spade was four, he and his parents John and Emma Cooley moved to Oregon where he studied classical violin and cello, and at the age of eight he began performing at community dances and hoedowns with his father. At age 22, his parents moved to Modesto, California where he earned a modest living playing in bars and outdoor events as well as in nearby Fresno and Stockton for polka parties and square dances. A persistent search for film work landed him a job at Republic Pictures as a stand-in for Roy Rogers with whom he shared a slight resemblance. Soon he was singing with the Riders of the Purple Sage and made his first recording in 1941 with the Cal Shrum. The Spade Cooley Orchestra was formed soon afterward as a headline attraction at the Venice Pier Ballroom and later at the Riverside Rancho in Los Angeles (where the popular Carolina Cotton joined the band as a bass fiddler, singer and yodeler), and the band opened the doors at the new Santa Monica Ballroom while recording for RCA Victor.

His eleven-year television career started at KTLA on August 5, 1948 where he broadcast live from the Santa Monica Ballroom, capturing seventy-five percent of the viewership. The orchestra dissolved in 1959 and Cooley began planning a never-built amusement park for Kern County to be called Water Wonderland which would feature boat races and swimming and incorporate a broadcast studio for a new television series. But health and financial problems ensued while at the same time his popularity was quickly fading.

Spade Cooley was always a driven man and a classic Type A personality; but alcohol became an issue as did marital discord and personal anger, and several heart attacks weakened him. According to reports, Spade was increasingly frustrated over the growing distance in his marriage and he exploded in shock, horror and violence at the moment his wife told him she had secretly been a part of a sex-love cult. (This may have been a partial or total fiction she created to get Spade to divorce her.) At that moment he lashed out blindly at her, rupturing her aorta which caused her death. Cooley, now frail and in a wheelchair throughout the first-degree murder trial, never forgave himself and refused a sanity hearing, but the judge imposed a life sentence at the California State Prison Medical Facility at Vacaville where Cooley, a model prisoner, founded a music program with a band and then an orchestra which gave concerts. He learned to play guitar and developed an electric violin.

In August 1969 Spade Cooley won a unanimous vote for parole to take effect the following February, and he was granted a three-day work furlough for his Vacaville orchestra to do an Alameda County Deputy Sheriff's Association concert at the Oakland Auditorium. Greeted with thunderous applause as in the old days, the officials and guests cheered Cooley throughout and, at the concert's conclusion, three thousand law-enforcement officers roared a thunderous standing ovation as Spade took bow after bow while friends, fans, prison guards and even relatives crowded the stage. Spade Cooley, out of breath, sat down in a chair, and then fell forward onto the floor, already dead.

His body was returned to the prison and was cremated. From that point, no one knows for certain what became of the remains of Spade Cooley.
BornDecember 17, 1910
DiedNovember 23, 1969(58)
BornDecember 17, 1910
DiedNovember 23, 1969(58)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

Photos29

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Known for

Casey Affleck, Jessica Alba, and Kate Hudson in The Killer Inside Me (2010)
The Killer Inside Me
6.1
  • Soundtrack("Shame on You")
  • 2010
Ed Harris in Pollock (2000)
Pollock
7.0
  • Soundtrack("The Honey Song")
  • 2000
Richard Farnsworth in Une histoire vraie (1999)
Une histoire vraie
8.0
  • Soundtrack("Y'Ready")
  • 1999
Chadwick Boseman in 42 (2013)
42
7.5
  • Soundtrack("Shame On You")
  • 2013

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Actor



  • Richard Conte and Constance Smith in The Big Tip Off (1955)
    The Big Tip Off
    6.1
    • Spade
    • 1955
  • Robert Clarke, Spade Cooley, Robert Karnes, Eddie Le Baron, Frank Rio, Jim Rio, Larry Rio, and Virginia Welles in Casa Manana (1951)
    Casa Manana
    6.2
    • Bandleader
    • 1951
  • Bill Edwards in Border Outlaws (1950)
    Border Outlaws
    6.5
    • Spade Cooley
    • 1950
  • Roddy McDowall, Spade Cooley, Ken Curtis, Tommy Doss, James Ellison, Hugh Farr, Karl Farr, Shug Fisher, Russell Hayden, Adele Jergens, Richard Lane, Lloyd Perryman, Sons of the Pioneers, Chuy Reyes, Barbara Wooddell, Chuy Reyes' Orchestra, and Virginia McPherson in Everybody's Dancin' (1950)
    Everybody's Dancin'
    5.0
    • Spade
    • 1950
  • Spade Cooley in The Silver Bandit (1950)
    The Silver Bandit
    3.2
    • Spade Cooley
    • 1950
  • Spade Cooley in The Kid from Gower Gulch (1950)
    The Kid from Gower Gulch
    3.7
    • Spade Cooley
    • 1950
  • Les Anderson, Don 'Red' Barry, Claude Casey, Spade Cooley, Cowboy Copas, Johnny Downs, Slim Gaut, Les Gotcher, Thurston Hall, Herman the Hermit, Mary Beth Hughes, Max Terhune, Wally Vernon, Britt Wood, The Broome Brothers, and The Tumbleweed Tumblers in Square Dance Jubilee (1949)
    Square Dance Jubilee
    4.0
    • Spade Cooley
    • 1949
  • Warren Mills, Noel Neill, June Preisser, Freddie Stewart, and Jerry Wald in Vacation Days (1947)
    Vacation Days
    4.1
    • Spade Cooley
    • 1947
  • Tumbleweed Tempo
    Short
    • Spade Cooley
    • 1946
  • Spade Cooley, Carolina Cotton, Charles Starrett, Spade Cooley Band, Frank Buckley, Gibby Gibson, 'Muddy' Berry, Dean Eacker, and 'Spike' Featherstone in Texas Panhandle (1945)
    Texas Panhandle
    5.7
    • Fiddle Player
    • 1945
  • The Trouble with Me
    Short
    • Leader, Spade Cooley's Western Dance Gang
    • 1945
  • My Chickashay Gal
    Short
    • Band Leader
    • 1945
  • Jess Barker, Bonita Granville, Allan Jones, and Fuzzy Knight in Senorita from the West (1945)
    Senorita from the West
    5.2
    • Bandleader
    • 1945
  • Charles Starrett in Outlaws of the Rockies (1945)
    Outlaws of the Rockies
    5.9
    • Singer Spade
    • 1945
  • Moe Howard, Larry Fine, Cappy Barra Boys, Spade Cooley, Jay Kirby, Curly Howard, Mary Beth Hughes, Gil Taylor, Paul Trietsch, Ken Trietsch, Charles Ward, The Hoosier Hotshots, and The Three Stooges in Rockin' in the Rockies (1945)
    Rockin' in the Rockies
    5.8
    • Spade Cooley (as Spade Cooley King of Western Swing)
    • 1945

Producer



  • The Spade Cooley Show
    8.6
    TV Series
    • producer
    • 1958
  • Roddy McDowall, Spade Cooley, Ken Curtis, Tommy Doss, James Ellison, Hugh Farr, Karl Farr, Shug Fisher, Russell Hayden, Adele Jergens, Richard Lane, Lloyd Perryman, Sons of the Pioneers, Chuy Reyes, Barbara Wooddell, Chuy Reyes' Orchestra, and Virginia McPherson in Everybody's Dancin' (1950)
    Everybody's Dancin'
    5.0
    • associate producer
    • 1950

Writer



  • Roddy McDowall, Spade Cooley, Ken Curtis, Tommy Doss, James Ellison, Hugh Farr, Karl Farr, Shug Fisher, Russell Hayden, Adele Jergens, Richard Lane, Lloyd Perryman, Sons of the Pioneers, Chuy Reyes, Barbara Wooddell, Chuy Reyes' Orchestra, and Virginia McPherson in Everybody's Dancin' (1950)
    Everybody's Dancin'
    5.0
    • original story
    • 1950

Personal details

Edit
  • Alternative name
    • Spade Cooley King of Western Swing
  • Born
    • December 17, 1910
    • Grand, Oklahoma, USA
  • Died
    • November 23, 1969
    • Oakland, California, USA(heart attack)
  • Spouse
    • Ella Mae Evans? - April 3, 1961 (her death)
  • Other works
    Album: "Spade Cooley Plays Billy Hill for Dancing" (RCA Victor).
  • Publicity listings
    • 2 Articles

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    He was convicted of murdering his second wife Ella Mae over alleged infidelities--they had an argument and he beat her to death. The murder happened on April 3, 1961 in front of his 14-year-old daughter Melody. He was sentenced to life in prison. He was furloughed in 1969 to appear at a police benefit show. While waiting backstage to come on, he had a sudden heart attack and died.
  • Quotes
    Playing the fiddle was as much a part of my life as breathing. I was knee-high to a stump and playing the fiddle, and my daddy played the fiddle and so did my granddad before him. So I came by it naturally, and later on I got it in my head to just flat quit schooling, the idea to be making money because being born poor and staying poor and being satisfied with it wasn't how I saw living out the rest of my natural life.
  • Nicknames
    • The King of Western Swing
    • The Six Bar Cowboys

FAQ

Powered by Alexa
  • When did Spade Cooley die?
    November 23, 1969
  • How did Spade Cooley die?
    Heart attack
  • How old was Spade Cooley when he died?
    58 years old
  • Where did Spade Cooley die?
    Oakland, California, USA
  • When was Spade Cooley born?
    December 17, 1910

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