"Mr. Lee" was written about a schoolteacher members of the group had. Contrary to popular belief, the song was originally written not to ridicule but to describe their former teacher factually. Upon meeting executives from Atlantic Records, Atlantic had the lyrics of "Mr. Lee" changed to create a love song.[4] Atlantic demanded the original lyric "ugliest teacher" to be changed to "handsomest sweetie".[5]
Recording
The Bobbettes recorded "Mr. Lee" during a recording session with Atlantic Records in 1957. Emma Pought and Reather Dixon shared the lead vocals on the recording. Emma Pought and Helen Gathers wrote three other songs during the session.[6]
Composition
The music of "Mr. Lee" was built around a blues sequence and had Jesse Powell on tenor saxophone alongside boogie-woogie music.[7]
Chart performance
"Mr. Lee" became the first recording to simultaneously become a Top Ten hit single—peaking at #6 on pop charts from Billboard, Cashbox and Music Vendor[8]—and reach #1 on the R&B charts in the United States.[9]
In 1959, The Bobbettes recorded an answer song to "Mr. Lee" called "I Shot Mr. Lee" with Atlantic Records. After Atlantic decided to shelve the song, The Bobbettes redid the song the following year with Triple-X Records.[11] "I Shot Mr. Lee" peaked at #52 on The Hot 100.[12] A lawsuit was later declared in July 1960 after Atlantic sued Triple-X for copyright infringement.[13] A ruling ordered the seizure of copies of the Triple-X recording.[14] "Mr. Lee" was #79 on Billboard's list of 100 Greatest Girl Group Songs of All Time.[15]
Certifications and awards
"Mr. Lee" sold 2 million copies[16] and led The Bobbettes to be awarded with platinum records by Atlantic Records.[17]
It also appeared in an episode of The Cosby Show. Clair (Phylicia Rashad) and her high school friend (Leslie Uggams) put on wigs and danced around the room as they sang it.
In the United Kingdom, the song was used in the CITV Saturday Morning TV Show Ministry of Mayhem. It was used as the theme song to introduce the character Mr Lee, who would deliver the ringtones for the Name That Tone game. Mr. Lee was played by Vincent Wong.
In 1985, it was used in the soundtrack of the Miami Vice episode, Golden Triangle-Part 2.
DJ Frank E. Lee of WXRT in Chicago used "Mr. Lee" as his show intro.