This article is about the singer, who in the early 1950s, recorded for MGM Records. For the actress, see Virginia Gibson.
Virginia Nelson (born Virginia Marie Shoemaker; November 22, 1924 Rochester, New York – November 27, 1998 Nyack, New York), professionally known as Ginny Gibson, was a prolific New York recording vocalist. Gibson recorded jingles and popular songs. Her married surname, beginning around 1946, was Nelson. In 1958, she married Richard Dennis Criger (1925–2001). She divorced Criger in 1976.[1][2][3] Gibson also recorded under the alias "Ginny Blue."[4]
Career
Virginia Shoemaker, as a performer, began singing at age 6 for WHAM radio in Rochester, New York.[5] In 1950, Gibson signed a contract with MGM Records. She was the first to record the song s "Mr. Sandman," "If I Give My Heart to You," and "Dansero." Her recording of "Whatever Lola Wants" from Damn Yankees won national radio and jukebox play. Her manager while at MGM was Joan Javits (né Joan Ellen Javits; born 1931), who in 1953, co-wrote Santa Baby with Philip Springer (born 1926). The other co-composer, Tony Springer, listed in the 1953 Catalog of Copyright Entries, was a fictitious name. Joan was the niece of New York Senator Jacob K. Javits.
Gibson also sang radio and TV commercials, including the famous "Chiquita Banana," "Hello, Bryers Calling," "Winston Tastes Good," "The Dodge Boys," "Wouldn't You Really Rather Have a Buick?" and "Pepsodent Toothpaste."
10661 (April 1950) Ginny Gibson With Van Horne Quartet Side A: "You're Finding Out How Much I Love You" Carl G. Lampl (1898–1962) (music) Buddy Kaye (words) 48-S-551 Side B: "Where in the World" Ginny Gibson, vocalist Gibson Boys, vocalists 48-S-550 Carl G. Lampl (1898–1962) Buddy Kaye
11276 Buddy Kaye Quintet Ginny Gibson Side A: "The Sunday Morning Song" 48-S-552 Carl G. Lampl (1898–1962) (music) Buddy Kaye (words) Side B: "The Goodnight Song" 48-S-553 Buddy Kaye Carl G. Lampl (1898–1962)
11383 (1952) Ginny Gibson Side A: "Too Far Between Kisses" 48-S-817 Side B: "You Blew Me a Kiss" 48-S-816 (Audio on YouTube)
11435 (1953) Ginny Gibson With Orchestra LeRoy Holmes, conductor Side A: "The Kiss" (from the 1953 film Niagara) Haven Gillespie (words) Lionel Newman (music) 53-S-5 Side B: "Condemned Without a Trial" Hal Blair (né Harold Keller Brown; 1915–2001) (w&m) Don Robertson (w&m) 53-S-6
11499 Ginny Gibson With Joe Lipman Side A: "Unless You're Really Mine" Ted Varnick (w&m) Nick Acquaviva (w&m) 53-S-199 (Audio on YouTube) Side B: "Lonely Lover" 53-S-198 Herbert Nelson[a] (music) Fred Jacobson[b] (words)
11571 (1953) Ginny Gibson With Joe Lipman Side A: "Dansero" 53-S-345 Heyman-Daniels-Parker Side B: "No More Tears" 53-S-344 Frank Feraco (words) Harry Siskind (words) Paul Todd (music) OCLC761848657
11672 Ginny Gibson With orchestra Joe Lipman, director Side A: "Baton Rouge" Bob Merrill (w&m) 53-S-608 Side B: "Don't Stop Kissing Me Goodnight" Sheb Wooley (w&m) 53-S-610
11913 (1954) Ginny Gibson With Joe Lipman Side A: "Once There Was a Little Girl" 54-S-355 Hayward Morris (1922–1977) (music) Lee Kauderer[c] (words) Side B: "Like Ma-A-D" 54-S-357 Alice D. Simms (w&m) Irving Roth (music)
12019 (July 1955) Ginny Gibson With Orchestra Joe Lipman, conductor The Four Jingles (on Side B) Side A: "Chihuahua Choo-Choo" ("Chi-Wa-Wa") From the Los Angeles revue: That's Life (1954) Jay Livingston (w&m) Ray Evans (w&m) 55-XY-219 Side B: "Am I Asking Too Much?" Robert Bergman (w&m) Harry Evans (w&m) George Ames (w&m) 55-XY-217
12113 (1955) Ginny Gibson With Orchestra And the Jingles Joe Lipman, conductor Side A: OHH ("How I Love Ya'") Parker 55-XY-578 Side B: "If You Want To Make Me Happy" Harold Solomon (music) Jack Segal (words) 55-S-765 OCLC80800669
12517 Ginny Gibson With orchestra Joe Lipman, conductor And with the Jingles Side A: "If That Would Bring You Back To Me" Eddie Seiler (w&m) Sol Marcus (w&m) 55-XY-580 Side B: "The Places I've Been" Sy Muskin Sol Parker 55-XY-577
5468 (1950) Recorded March 14, 1950, New York Ginny Gibson Bobby Sherwood And His Orchestra (same musicians as 5405) Side A: "Cherry Bounce" Charles Columbus (w&m) 3238 (Audio on YouTube) Side B: "Doodle-Doo-Doo" Art Kassel (w&m) Mel Stitzel (music) 3236
Voco V30T (1951) Ginny Gibson (singer and narrator) With the Voco Orchestra Side A: Little Red Ridinghood Ted Murry (pseudonym of Murray Mencher(de); 1898–1991) (music) Raymond Leveen (1893–1984) (words)
Tops for Tots V33 Bob Kennedy (narrator and singer) Ginny Gibson (narrator and singer) Sides A & B: Cinderella
47-4510 (1952) The Three Suns Artie Dunn (vocal refrain) Ginny Gibson (vocal refrain) Side A: "Stolen Love" Anna Marie Sickle (w&m) Marlene Feinstein (w&m) E2-VB-5543 OCLC80134629 (Audio on YouTube) Side B: "Cool, Cool Kisses"
EPB 3051 (1953) (7" 45 rpm; 2 discs) LPM 1185 (1956) (LP) Music by Starlight Hugo Winterhalter and his Orchestra Eddie Heywood (piano); Ginny Gibson (vocals) Stuart Foster (stage name for Tamer Aswad; 1923–1968) OCLC12935721, 288945583
45-6027 (1953) Ginny Gibson And the Shepherds (Side A) With Billy Mure, guitarist (Side A) With the Country Slickers (Side B) Side A: "If the End of the World Came Tonight" Sid Lippman (music) Sylvia Dee (words) 45-T5-107 Side B: "Ain't It Great to Be Crazy" Sid Lippman (music) Sylvia Dee (words) 45-T5-108 Note: Red record vinyl OCLC81824861, 732376947
45-9717 (Jun 1956) Don Costa Orchestra With Ginny Gibson Side A: "Lullaby To An Angel" Dick Broderick[d] (w&m) 346-N1 OCLC80793325 Side B: "Magic Melody" Earl Stanley Shuman (born 1923) (words) Mort Garson 345-N1 OCLC84532230
45-9786 (February 1957) With orchestra and chorus Don Costa, director Side A: "I Pledge Allegiance To Your Heart" William "Bill" Norvas (w&m) AMP 45-695 Side B: "A Pair of Fools" Bennie Benjamin (w&m) Sol Marcus (w&m) AMP 45-696 Re-released by: Sparton Records 370R (catalog no.)
9872 (December 1957) Ginny Gibson Side A: "September 'til June" Sol Parker (né Solomon Peskin; 1919–2010) (w&m) Dick Broderick[d] (w&m) 3044 Side B: "Homing Pigeon" Mel Mandel[e] (words) Marvin Kahn (1915–1969) (music) 3045 Re-released by: Sparton Records 520R (catalog no.)
F703 (1962) Ginny Gibson Side A: "Hand of Love" Dick Broderick[d] 61-L-7 Side B: "Stay Here, Bluebird" Adaptation from Massenet's "Elegy" Fay Tishman (1913–2006)[f][6] (words and arr.)
85276 (July 1962) Ginny Gibson Dick Wess Orchestra Side A: "As The World Turns" Dick Charles (music) Fay Tishman (words) ZTSP 85276 Side B: "That's How Love Comes" Dick Charles (music) Robert Wilde (pseudonym of Robert Goldstein) (w&m)
DC102469 (1969) Ginny Gibson Side B: "Lonely Little Christmas Tree" Dick Charles DC102469B
442-45 (October 1955) Ginny Gibson Accompanied by the Song Spinners Side A: "Wanting You" Robert Maurice Wilson (born 1921) (w&m) DA-350-45 Side B: "Mommy's Little Angel" Glenn Gibson (pseudonym of Bert Davis)[7][g] DA-349-45 "Wanting You" also Released by Derby Cat No. 810; mx DA-171 OCLC82887565
Kama Records
K-35 (May 1962) Ginny Gibson R. Wess Orchestra Side A: "You Pass This Way" ("Only Once") Sunny Skylar (w&m) Al Frisch (né Albert T. Frisch; 1916–1976) R. Wess (arr.) 500 Side B: "Bluesville" Dick Charles Dick Criger
Bud's Bandwagon was a radio program of the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service, aired five days a week for four years. Bud Widom (né Leonard Widom; 1918–1976) was the DJ host. The music was from extant recordings rather than live performances.[8]
Family
Ginny Gibson's father, Wayne A. Shoemaker (1902–1962) had, at one time, been Public Relations Director of the Rochester Civic Music Association. Wayne Shoemaker was also a strong regional chess player — affiliated with the Finger Lakes Chess Society.
Death
Virginia M. Criger died November 27, 1998, in Nyack, New York. She was buried in Mount Repose Cemetery, Haverstraw, New York. Etched at the top of her tombstone are the words of the title song she once recorded, "You Pass This Way Only Once." And at the bottom are the words, "Our Beloved 'Ginny Gibson.'"[9]
^Fred Jacobson (né Friedrich Alex Jacobson; 1914–1988) was an Austrian-born American songwriter. He sometimes published songs under pseudonyms Fred Jay and Fritz Jahn.
^Lee Kauderer (né Leon Kauderer; 26 February 1919 Philadelphia – 15 April 1969 Philadelphia), in 1954, founded Marlyn Music Publishers, Inc., in New York, a member of BMI. He also owned Overbrook Publishing, a member of ASCAP. And, with Harold Lipsious (né Harold Bernard Lipsius; 1913–2007), he co-owned Sherwood Artists Management, Inc. In 1955, musician-arranger-manager Teddy McRae became General Manager of Marlyn Music ... all located at 650 Fifth Avenue, New York. As a songwriter, he published over 100 songs; although he was primarily a Philadelphia-based osteopathic physician.
^ abcdDick Broderick was the pseudonym of Dick Criger (né Richard Dennis Criger; 1925–2001) who was married to Ginny Gibson from 1958 to 1976, when they divorced.
^Mel Mandel (aka Mel Mandell) was a lyricist and music journalist. He also wrote lyrics under pseudonym Robert Lean.
^Fay Tishman (née Frances Fay Hartman; 1913–2006) was a member of ASCAP (see ASCAP Biographical Dictionary, 4th ed., 1980 – below, under "Inline citations")
^"Glenn Gibson" was a pseudonym for Bert Davis, which, in turn, was a pseudonym for Bertha Davis, of which there were two Bertha's married to music publisher and producer Joe Davis – (i) Bertha Thalheimer (1997–1939) and (ii) Bertha "Bert" Kapp (1903–1973), sister of record producer and executive, Jack Kapp. In the case of "Bert Davis," Musicologist Eugene Chadbourne of AllMusic raises questions of songwriter attribution, not specific to "Mommy's Little Angel," but to all works connected to Joe Davis, including works under other pseudonyms, including Howard Richards, Billy Collins, Rinky Scott Jones, Phoebe Snow (not the famous one), Glenn Gibson, and Adrienne Garblik. "Garblik" was surname of the husband of his daughter, Lucille Joan (1927–2002). ("Bert 'Bertha' Davis," biography, by Eugene Chadbourne, AllMusic, online; retrieved June 15, 2017)
Inline citations
^ ab"Virginia 'Ginny Gibson' Criger," 73, Former Television, Radio and Recording Artist," Journal News, April 28, 1998, pg. 10 (retrieved June 12, 2017, viawww.newspapers.com/clip/60928457)