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Connie Haines(1921-2008)

  • Actress
  • Soundtrack
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Connie Haines
Popular dark-haired "Big Band" singer Connie Haines may have been petite in size (less than 5' tall) but she possessed a sturdy set of pipes to compensate and was adored by her large fan base during the swinging war years. Performing alongside Frank Sinatra in both the Harry James and Tommy Dorsey bands way back when, she was known for her cool, doll-like vocals, quivery vibrato, and zesty, rhythmic stylings -- 25 of her more than 200 recordings, including "Let's Get Away From It All" and "Friendship", sold more than 50,000 copies. Other classic singles from Connie ranged from the torchy stylings of "Stormy Weather" and "My Man" to the cooing innocence of "Snooty Little Cutie" and "Shoo Fly Pie and Apple Pan Dowdy" to the hep and swinging "Let's Choo Choo Choo to Idaho".

She was born Yvonne Marie Antoinette JaMais on January 20, 1921 in Savannah, Georgia, but changed her name to the peppier-sounding Connie Haines to take up less space on the theater marquee at the time she joined Harry James' band. She grew up in Jacksonville, Florida (from age 5) and started to perform at the encouragement of her mother, who was a music and dance teacher. Winning a dance contest, she went on to perform for various Rotary and Kiwanis clubs and, by age 9, was known on radio as "Baby Yvonne Marie, the Little Princess of the Air" while being backed by her own 30-piece orchestra. Around that time, she also fought a near-fatal bout with rheumatic fever.

Winning more talent contests along the way she evolved into a teen sensation and performed on Fred Allen's radio show. At age 18, she hooked up with Harry James before joining Tommy Dorsey's outfit in 1940. During that period, she and Sinatra duoed famously on such songs as "Oh, Look at Me Now" and "You Might Have Belonged to Another". By 1942, Connie had landed a regular singing gig with the Abbott and Costello radio show. She was such a hit that her 13-week contract was extended to 4 years. She found herself in demand on all the popular radio shows of the day -- Kay Kyser, Hoagy Carmichael and Skitch Henderson, to name but a few.

It was wartime and Connie, along with many of the other popular vocalists of her day, treated film audiences to specialty numbers in a number of fun, frivolous musicals that were primarily designed as escapist fare or patriotic morale-boosters. In both Moon Over Las Vegas (1944) and Twilight on the Prairie (1944), she sang songs alongside prolific singer/songwriter (and later popular adult "Mousketeer") Jimmie Dodd. In the latter, a musical western, she was even given a co-starring role. In A Wave, a WAC and a Marine (1944), she sang "Time Will Tell" and "Gee, I Love My G.I. Joe" and in the Van Johnson/Esther Williams starrer Jamais deux sans toi (1950), in which she again had an acting role, she contributed a fine version of "Of All Things".

Connie's last film appearance was in the romantic musical short Birth of a Band (1954) in which she warbled the classic standards "I Can't Give You Anything But Love" and "I've Got the World on a String". A highly religious woman, she teamed with singer Beryl Davis and Hollywood icons Jane Russell and Rhonda Fleming during the 1950s in a gospel quartet. They scored a hit with the 1954 song "Do Lord".

Connie continued performing for decades in nightclubs, cabarets and revivals despite a number of life-threatening illnesses/injuries which included a bout with cancer (for which she had a double mastectomy in 1984) and a 2002 car accident that left her with two broken vertebrae in her neck. She finally retired in 2006 at age 85. During her career, she performed for Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Ronald Reagan and George Bush.

The "Nightingale from Savannah" was married and divorced twice. Her first was to WWII flying ace Robert De Haven in 1945. That marriage produced a son (Robert Jr.) and a daughter (Kimberly). Her subsequent marriage to popular bandleader Del Courtney (1910-2006) lasted from 1966 to 1972. Connie died in Clearwater, Florida, at age 87 of myasthenia gravis, an autoimmune neruomuscular disease. She was survived by her children and the one woman who influenced her the most -- her mother and manager, Mildred, who was 109 at the time of Connie's death on September 22, 2008.
BornJanuary 20, 1921
DiedSeptember 22, 2008(87)
BornJanuary 20, 1921
DiedSeptember 22, 2008(87)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

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Known for

Van Johnson, John Lund, and Esther Williams in Jamais deux sans toi (1950)
Jamais deux sans toi
6.3
  • Peggy Elliot
  • 1950
Sally Eilers, Ann Gillis, Elyse Knox, and Richard Lane in A Wave, a WAC and a Marine (1944)
A Wave, a WAC and a Marine
7.9
  • Singer - Freddie Rich Orchestra
  • 1944
Twilight on the Prairie (1944)
Twilight on the Prairie
  • Ginger
  • 1944
Alan Dinehart, Barbara Jo Allen, David Bruce, and Anne Gwynne in Moon Over Las Vegas (1944)
Moon Over Las Vegas
6.5
  • Singer Connie Haines
  • 1944

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actress



  • Red Skelton in The Red Skelton Show (1951)
    The Red Skelton Show
    8.1
    TV Series
    • Clara Appleby II
    • 1963
  • Birth of a Band
    Short
    • Connie - Band Singer
    • 1954
  • Hollywood Theatre Time
    8.0
    TV Series
    • 1951
  • Van Johnson, John Lund, and Esther Williams in Jamais deux sans toi (1950)
    Jamais deux sans toi
    6.3
    • Peggy Elliot
    • 1950
  • Hollywood House
    TV Series
    • 1949
  • Sally Eilers, Ann Gillis, Elyse Knox, and Richard Lane in A Wave, a WAC and a Marine (1944)
    A Wave, a WAC and a Marine
    7.9
    • Singer - Freddie Rich Orchestra
    • 1944
  • Twilight on the Prairie (1944)
    Twilight on the Prairie
    • Ginger
    • 1944
  • Alan Dinehart, Barbara Jo Allen, David Bruce, and Anne Gwynne in Moon Over Las Vegas (1944)
    Moon Over Las Vegas
    6.5
    • Singer Connie Haines
    • 1944
  • Idaho
    Short
    • Connie Haines
    • 1942
  • Eleanor Powell, Tommy Dorsey, and Red Skelton in Croisière mouvementée (1942)
    Croisière mouvementée
    6.4
    • Singer in Tommy Dorsey Orchestra (uncredited)
    • 1942
  • Constance Moore, Bert Wheeler, and Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra in Las Vegas Nights (1941)
    Las Vegas Nights
    5.2
    • Singer in Tommy Dorsey's Band (uncredited)
    • 1941

Soundtrack



  • Birth of a Band
    Short
    • performer: "I Can't Give You Anything but Love", "I've Got the World on a String"
    • 1954
  • Van Johnson, John Lund, and Esther Williams in Jamais deux sans toi (1950)
    Jamais deux sans toi
    6.3
    • performer: "Let's Choo Choo Choo to Idaho", "You Can't Do Wrong Doin' Right", "Of All Things"
    • 1950
  • Record Party (1947)
    Record Party
    Short
    • performer: "When You Wore a Tulip", "The Egg and I", "Miss Cinderella"
    • 1947
  • Sally Eilers, Ann Gillis, Elyse Knox, and Richard Lane in A Wave, a WAC and a Marine (1944)
    A Wave, a WAC and a Marine
    7.9
    • performer: "Time Will Tell", "Gee, I Love My G.I. Joe"
    • 1944
  • Twilight on the Prairie (1944)
    Twilight on the Prairie
    • performer: "Salt Water Cowboy", "And Then", "Let's Love Again", "Texas Polka"
    • 1944
  • Constance Moore, Bert Wheeler, and Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra in Las Vegas Nights (1941)
    Las Vegas Nights
    5.2
    • performer: "The Trombone Man Is the Best Man in the Land" (uncredited)
    • 1941

Personal details

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  • Born
    • January 20, 1921
    • Savannah, Georgia, USA
  • Died
    • September 22, 2008
    • Clearwater Beach, Florida, USA(myasthenia gravis)
  • Spouses
      Del Courtney1966 - 1972 (divorced)
  • Publicity listings
    • 1 Print Biography
    • 3 Articles
    • 1 Pictorial

Did you know

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  • Trivia
    When Haines died at age 87, she was survived by her 109-year-old mother, Mildred JaMais (1899-2010).

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