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Mary Wells

Mary Esther Wells was an American singer, who helped to define the emerging sound of Motown in the early 1960s.

Life and career
1943–1961: Early life and career Mary Esther Wells was born near Detroit's Wayne State University on May 13, 1943, to Geneva Campbell Wells, a mother who worked as a domestic, and Arthur Wells, an absentee father. One of three children, she contracted spinal meningitis at the age of two and struggled with partial blindness, deafness in one ear and temporary paralysis. At age 10, Wells contracted tuberculosis. During her early years, Wells lived in Black Bottom and struggled with poverty. By age 12, she was helping her mother with house cleaning work. Wells used singing as her comfort from her pain, first singing in a Detroit Baptist church at the age of ten. By her teen years, she participated in talent shows. But Wells initially had no plans to be a professional singer until Detroit-based artists Little Willie John, Jackie Wilson and The Miracles began having mainstream hits. By the late 1950s, R&B and doo-wop groups formed all over the city and Wells unsuccessfully tried joining several groups. Wells eventually was discovered by Johnnie Mae Matthews in 1960, who signed her to her Northern Records label. Despite the promise of producing her, Wells left after Matthews failed to book a session due to Matthews's attention on the Distants, led by future Temptations founder Otis Williams. Following her graduation from Northwestern High School in June 1960, Wells sought to be a songwriter and penned a song titled "Bye Bye Baby" in the hopes of her idol Jackie Wilson singing it. With the help of Robert Bateman, who was working with Wilson's former songwriter and Tamla Records founder Berry Gordy, Wells spotted Gordy at Detroit's 20 Grand nightclub the following month, where he was busy with his acts Marv Johnson and the Miracles and eventually presented the song to a weary Gordy who ordered her to sing the song, to which Wells did. Impressed by Wells's performance, he offered Wells a record deal with his recently formed Motown imprint, a subsidiary of his first label, Tamla. Wells signed the following day on July 8 with her mother present and recorded 22 takes of "Bye Bye Baby" at United Sound Systems. But her next single, the ballad "Strange Love", failed to make either chart. In November 1961, Wells's debut album, ''Bye Bye Baby I Don't Want to Take a Chance'', also failed to chart. 1962–1964: Commercial success Gordy assigned Smokey Robinson to compose Wells's next single. Inspired by the calypso pop of Harry Belafonte, as well as the growing girl group craze of that period, Robinson composed the pop song "The One Who Really Loves You", which Wells sung under a softer, sweeter tone. Released in February 1962, the song was an immediate hit, reaching number two on the R&B Sides chart and number eight on the Hot 100. In late 1962, the Robinson-composed "Two Lovers" was released as the next single and became her third consecutive top ten single on the Hot 100, peaking at number seven and became her second R&B number one. "Two Lovers" became her first million-selling single and Wells was awarded a gold disc. In October 1962, Wells was the major headliner of the first Motortown Revue, where her energetic performances were often the highlight of the Revue. Throughout 1963, Wells continued to enjoy success. Her third studio album, Two Lovers and Other Great Hits, became her first charted album, peaking at number 49 on the Billboard Top LPs chart. Wells's next hit, "Laughing Boy", broke her top ten streak, peaking at number 15 on the Hot 100. After the follow-up, "Your Old Standby", barely cracked the top 40, Wells began working with Holland-Dozier-Holland, resulting in the rock-inflected hit "You Lost the Sweetest Boy" while enjoying a double sided hit with the song and the Robinson-penned "What's Easy for Two Is Hard for One". In March 1964, Motown released the Robinson-composed "My Guy" and in May, the song became Wells's first and only number one single on the Billboard Hot 100, replacing Louis Armstrong's "Hello, Dolly!" at the top spot, staying there for two weeks. Both singles were notable for breaking the Beatles' uninterrupted fourteen-week streak inside the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100. "My Guy" became Wells's second million-seller. After a stressful period in which Wells and the label battled over multiple issues after her records failed to chart successfully, the singer asked to be let go in 1965 and left with a small settlement. Though a re-issue, Wells promoted the single heavily and appeared on the British TV show Top of the Pops for the first time. Wells occasionally toured during that time but wouldn't record again until signing with Epic Records in 1981 after Larkin Arnold viewed one of her concerts, leading to the release of the album, In and Out of Love, which produced the top 20 club hit, "Gigolo", in 1982. Following the release of the album, Easy Touch, on the CBS subsidiary 51 West, she left the label and after appearing on the Emmy Award-winning special, Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever, singing "My Guy", Wells settled on touring the oldies circuit. On the April 21, 1984, edition of American Top 40, Casey Kasem reported that Wells was attempting to establish a hot dog chain. In 1990, Wells made her final recording for Ian Levine's Motorcity Records. That same year, a benefit concert was held by fellow Detroit native Anita Baker. Wells was also given a tribute by friends such as Stevie Wonder and Little Richard on The Joan Rivers Show. In 1991, Wells brought a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against Motown for royalties she felt she had not received upon leaving Motown Records in 1964 and for loss of royalties for not promoting her songs as the company should have. Motown eventually settled the lawsuit by giving her a six-figure sum. That same year, she testified before the United States Congress to encourage government funding for cancer research: ==Personal life==
Personal life
During her teen years when she was being mentored by Johnnie Mae Matthews, Wells was reportedly involved with Otis Williams. According to other published reports, after her affair with Williams ended, she also got involved with Wilson Pickett. Wells married twice: first, in 1961, to Detroit singer Herman Griffin; they divorced in 1963. Despite rumors, she never dated fellow Motown singer Marvin Gaye, who would go on to have successful duet partnerships with Kim Weston, Tammi Terrell and Diana Ross after Wells had left Motown. Throughout 1965, she got involved with R&B superstar Jackie Wilson and Chicago-based producer Carl Davis. At one point, Wells and Davis were engaged. In 1966, Wells married singer-songwriter Cecil Womack, formerly of the Valentinos, and the younger brother of musician Bobby Womack. The marriage lasted until 1977 and they produced three children: Cecil Jr., Harry, and Stacy. She had a fourth child, Sugar, with Curtis Womack (Cecil's brother). ==Death==
Death
In the summer of 1992, Wells's cancer returned and she was rushed to the Kenneth Norris Jr. Cancer Hospital in Los Angeles with pneumonia. With the effects of her unsuccessful treatments and a weakened immune system, Wells died on July 26, 1992, at the age of 49. After her funeral, which included a eulogy given by her old friend and former collaborator, Smokey Robinson, Wells was cremated, and her ashes were laid to rest in Glendale's Forest Lawn Memorial Park, in a Womack family crypt. Family friend Sam Cooke is buried in The Garden of Honor, about to the west. ==Legacy and accolades==
Legacy and accolades
Wells is often referred to as the "First Lady of Motown" as well as "the Queen of Motown" due to becoming the first female star artist to emerge from the label. As a Motown artist, Wells was the first solo artist on the label to produce a top 40 crossover single, doing so with 1961's "I Don't Want to Take a Chance" and was also the first Motown artist to produce multiple top ten hits on the Billboard Hot 100 between 1962 and 1963. When "My Guy" hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in the late spring of 1964, it was only the third Motown-associated single to reach the top after the Marvelettes' "Please, Mr. Postman" and Little Stevie Wonder's "Fingertips" and the first number one single on the Motown imprint, predating the Supremes' "Where Did Our Love Go". During her thirty-year career, Wells sent 23 songs to the Billboard Hot 100, including 12 top 40 singles, seven top 20 singles, four top ten singles and a number one hit while on the R&B charts, she sent 21 songs on the chart including 19 top 40 singles, 16 top 20 singles, 14 top ten singles, six top 5 singles and three number one singles. Her 1968 composition and recording, "Two Lovers History", from her album ''Servin' Up Some Soul'' was sampled by Yasiin Bey and Talib Kweli on the song "History" off the former's The Ecstatic in 2009. In 1987, Wells was a finalist for induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame but failed to get in. Wells earned one Grammy Award nomination during her career. In 1989, Wells was honored with the Pioneer Award from the Rhythm and Blues Foundation during its inaugural year. A year later, the foundation raised more than $50,000 to help with her treatment after her illness had wiped out all of her finances. Wells was inducted into the Michigan Rock and Roll Legends Hall of Fame in 2006. She was inducted into the National Rhythm & Blues Hall of Fame in 2017. ==Discography==
Discography
Singles • 1960: "Bye Bye Baby" (US No. 45) • 1961: "I Don't Want to Take a Chance" (US No. 33) • 1962: "The One Who Really Loves You" (US No. 8) • 1962: "You Beat Me to the Punch" (US No. 9) • 1962: "Two Lovers" (US No. 7) • 1963: "Laughing Boy" (US No. 15) • 1963: "Your Old Standby" (US No. 40) • 1963: "You Lost the Sweetest Boy" (US No. 22) • 1963: "What's So Easy for Two Is So Hard for One" (US No. 29) • 1964: "My Guy" (US No. 1, UK No. 5) • 1964: "Once Upon a Time" (US No. 19) • 1964: "What's the Matter with You Baby" (US No. 15) • 1964: "Ain't It the Truth" (US No. 45) • 1964: "Stop Takin' Me for Granted" (US No. 88) • 1965: "Use Your Head" (US No. 34) • 1965: "Never, Never Leave Me" (US R&B No. 15) • 1965: "He's a Lover" (US No. 74) • 1965: "Me Without You" (US No. 95) • 1966: "Dear Lover" (US No. 51, R&B No. 6) • 1966: "Can't You See (You're Losing Me)" (US No. 94) • 1966: "Such a Sweet Thing" (US No. 99) • 1968: "The Doctor" (US No. 65, R&B No. 22) • 1969: "Never Give a Man the World: (US R&B No. 38) • 1969: "Dig the Way I Feel" (US R&B No. 35) • 1981: "Gigolo" (US Club No. 13, R&B No. 69) Charted albums • 1963: Two Lovers and Other Great Hits (No. 49 U.S.) • 1964: Together (No. 42 U.S.) • 1964: Greatest Hits (No. 18 U.S.) • 1964: Mary Wells Sings My Guy (No. 111 U.S.) • 1965: Mary Wells (No. 145 U.S.) ==References==
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