Monda's family moved from Ohio to California in the mid–1940s. He and his sister performed in vaudeville and shows around Hollywood. As a child, Monda appeared in the films
The Glass Wall and
Go for Broke! At 13, he was chosen to play
Eddie Cantor as a boy in the film
The Eddie Cantor Story, in which he performed six songs, including dance routines. At 16, he had a featured role in
The Midnight Story. He began songwriting as a young man and received a degree in mathematics. His first production with
Moonglow Records was "Don't Do It Some More", by The Cindermen, credited under the pen name Daddy Dewdrop. After Moonglow, he signed with Four Star Music publishing company where he stayed for seven years. He made most of his recordings during this period. He was signed to Verve Records as an artist and recorded his first album,
Truth, Lies, Magic and Faith. Two years later, after producing music for the Saturday morning cartoon series
Groovie Goolies, he released the song "Chick-A-Boom", originally written for the show. Monda put together a backing band of studio musicians, including Tom Hensley, who later became the musical director for
Neil Diamond, and Butch Rillera, who became a member of the group
Redbone and recorded a version of the song, retitled "
Chick-A-Boom (Don't Ya Jes' Love It)". The tune, which was distributed by
Sunflower Records, became a top 10 hit in the United States, peaking on the
Billboard Pop Singles chart at #9 in 1971 and at #3 on Cashbox. Other charted records include "Fox Huntin' on the Weekend" and "Chantilly Lace", and after a change of labels to Inphasion Records, he had another chart record, "Nanu, Nanu, (I Wanna Get Funky Wich You)" and "The Real Thing". He appeared in several underground films, including
The Michael Girard directed Troma films,
Oversexed Rug Suckers from Mars,
Body Parts and the indie film
The Artichokes. He recorded an album called
Or Durvs under the alias "Lu Janis". ==Discography==