The Beverley Sisters were an English female close harmony traditional pop vocal and light entertainmenttrio, consisting of three sisters from London. They were eldest sister Joy (born Joycelyn Victoria Chinery, 5 May 1924[nb 1][2][3] – 31 August 2015), and twins Teddie (born Hazel P. Chinery, 5 May 1927) and Babs (born Babette Patricia Chinery,[4] 5 May 1927[5] – 28 October 2018). The sisters were each appointed MBE in 2006.
The Beverley Sisters were most popular during the 1950s and 1960s, and became well-known through their radio and television appearances. Their style was loosely modelled on that of their American counterparts, The Andrews Sisters. Their notable successes included the Irving Berlin-penned "Sisters" and the Christmas songs "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus", "Little Donkey", and "Little Drummer Boy", while in the United States they charted with a version of Greensleeves.[6] They also toured the cabaret circuit, and were known for their matching outfits, which they wore both on- and off-stage.
Early lives
The sisters were born in Bethnal Green, London to Victoria Alice Miles and George Arthur Chinery (married 1916), who were known as the music hall act Coram and Mills,[7] and are related to the Lupino acting and performing family.[8] The eldest, Joy, was born on 5 May 1924; the twins, Babs and Teddie, were born on Joy's third birthday, 5 May 1927. They were evacuated to Northamptonshire during the Second World War and received secretarial training.[9]
Career
During the Second War, the sisters auditioned successfully to take part in an advertising campaign for the malt drinkOvaltine.[10] Jock Ware, photographer for the Ovaltine poster campaign encouraged them to audition for BBC Radio. They did so in November 1944, changing their name to the Beverley Sisters on the advice of BBC producer Cecil Madden, who became their manager.[9] They met Glenn Miller who, shortly before his disappearance, offered them the opportunity to record with members of his orchestra.[11]
Immediately after the war they toured with Eric Winstone and his Orchestra,[8] and began making regular appearances on the BBC's early television programmes. They also performed for NBC in the US with surviving members of the Glenn Miller Orchestra. After their return to Britain, promoter Val Parnell booked them to appear at the London Palladium with Gracie Fields; although Fields refused, without explanation, to appear with them.[citation needed]
The following year they performed with Danny Kaye. The BBC gave them their own television series, initially called Three Little Girls on View but later renamed as Those Beverley Sisters, which ran for seven years and on which they gave live performances of popular songs of the day.[6]
In 1956, their version of the traditional song "Greensleeves", orchestrated by Roland Shaw, became their only US chart hit, reaching no.41 on the Billboardpop chart.[7][16] Generally preferring live cabaret and television appearances over recording work,[7] the song "Sisters", written by Irving Berlin and originally recorded in 1954 by Rosemary Clooney and her sister Betty, became their theme song;[6] it has been claimed that Berlin wrote the song for the Beverley Sisters.[11]
The sisters are widely credited as having been the highest paid female entertainers in the UK for more than 20 years.[10][11] In 1952, 1958 and 1978, they appeared at the Royal Variety Performance.[17][18][19] In January 1961, they appeared on the radio show, Desert Island Discs.[20] They appeared on the television show Stars on Sunday.[21] They were the subjects of This Is Your Life in 1969 when they were surprised by Eamonn Andrews. They also appeared in 1977 on the BBC TV's long running variety show The Good Old Days.[citation needed]
Their career was revitalised in the 1980s, after their children – who had begun performing together as the Foxes – invited them onstage at the London Hippodrome, encouraged by club owner Peter Stringfellow. A review in The Stage in March 1985 described the Sisters when appearing in Stringfellow's Hippodrome cabaret as "clad in shimmering pink" and said they had "acquired a glamour and universality that only time and experience can produce".[22] The sisters began performing again for British troops, as well as in gay clubs in Britain, and they produced a new album, Sparkle.[6][7][10] The Beverley Sisters drew comparison with the Spice Girls in the late 1990s, especially with regard to the marriages of Joy to England footballer Billy Wright and Posh Spice, Victoria to David Beckham.[23]
They performed as part of the Queen's Golden Jubilee celebrations in 2002, and toured with Max Bygraves that year, the 50th anniversary of their appearance at the Royal Variety Performance. They also took part in the D-Day 60th anniversary memorial concerts in 2004.[6][7][10]
They entered the Guinness World Records in 2002, as the world's longest surviving vocal group without a change in the original line up.[24] As late as 2009, the sisters appeared in concerts and matinee shows in the United Kingdom. They forged links with the Burma Star Association, as well as McCarthy & Stone, where the sisters were invited to open each new housing development designed specifically for retired people. They later fully retired and lived near each other in Barnet.[11]
Personal lives and honours
After a brief early marriage to American musician Roger Carocari (who adopted the surname Carey), later dissolved,[9] Joy married the Wolverhampton Wanderers and England football captain Billy Wright on 28 July 1958 at Poole Register Office, a year before he retired as a player. They were married for 36 years until Wright died of cancer in September 1994. Joy died on 31 August 2015 at the age of 91.[25]
Babs married Scottish dentist James Mitchell in 1963 but the marriage did not last. She suffered a cut forehead and shock when a passenger in a car accident in North Harrow on Boxing Day 1967 and was confined to a Harley Street Nursing Home for at least three weeks.[26][27] Babs died on 28 October 2018, also at the age of 91, leaving no children.[28]
Teddie was engaged to Alyn Ainsworth,[29] but married the British waterskiing champion Peter Felix. She is the last surviving sister.[30]
Robert Tredinnick, in the Gramophone Notes column of The Tatler in January 1952, opined the Beverleys were the best sister act on gramophone since the Boswell Sisters in the early 1930s and "have the gift of making their personalities apparent to an unseeing audience".[31]
^Although many sources give later years for their births, official records show 1924 and 1927, and Joy confirmed her age as 87 in a 2011 interview. All three sisters have the same birthday.[1]