He was born on September 16, 1936, in
Brooklyn, New York, into an
Italian-American family. On his return to the United States, Frankie joined a comedy group, before making his first recordings as a singer for
MGM Records in 1958. His second record, "Fake Out", written by his brother Johnny Sardo (born 1941) and released by
ABC-Paramount, became a regional hit, and he was invited to join the 1959
Winter Dance Party tour starring
Buddy Holly,
Ritchie Valens,
The Big Bopper (J.P. Richardson), and
Dion and the Belmonts with Sardo as the opening act (most of the tour's posters mistitled his song "Fake Out" as "Take Out"). After the tour concert at Clear Lake, Iowa on February 2, 1959, Sardo traveled to the next venue by bus with Dion and the Belmonts and other performers on the tour, while Holly, Valens, and Richardson took a plane. The plane crashed in the early hours of February 3, killing the
three stars and pilot Roger Peterson. Sardo continued to release singles on several different record labels until 1962; on some, he performed with his brother as a duo, Frankie and Johnny. Using the name Frank Avianca, he worked as a film actor and producer. His film credits included co-writing the lyrics of several songs for the movie ''
Hell's Angels '69 (1969). He produced Clay Pigeon (1971), co-produced The 14, also known as Existence
(1973); produced and acted in The Human Factor (1975); and appeared in Matilda (1978). He then co-wrote and co-produced the horror film Blood Song (1982), and also co-wrote and co-produced the feature-length animated film Ferretina - The Promise''. He lived in many places including England, Canada and California. In 1982, after wrapping up his horror film
Blood Song, Sardo returned to California and married his young love, Hedda Britt, in a civil ceremony at their home in Chatsworth. In 2010, Frank was interviewed by the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame about his experiences on the 1959 tour. Frankie Sardo died of cancer in
Somers, New York on February 26, 2014, aged 77. ==Filmography==