1965: Formation and beginnings The Mamas & the Papas was formed by the husband and wife
John Phillips (formerly of
the Journeymen) and
Michelle Phillips, along with
Denny Doherty (formerly of
the Mugwumps). Both of these earlier acts were
folk groups active in 1964 and 1965. The last member to join was
Cass Elliot, Doherty's bandmate in the Mugwumps, who had to overcome John Phillips's concerns that her voice was too low for his arrangements, that her
obesity would be an obstacle to the band's success, and that her temperament was incompatible with his (Elliot struggled with obesity all her life and felt deeply insecure about her physical appearance). The group considered calling itself the Magic Cyrcle before switching to the Mamas & the Papas, inspired by the
Hells Angels, whose female associates were called "mamas". The quartet spent the period from early spring to midsummer 1965 in the
Virgin Islands "to rehearse and just put everything together", as John Phillips later recalled. Phillips acknowledged that he was reluctant to abandon folk music. Others, including Doherty and guitarist Eric Hord, have said he hung on to it "like death".
Roger McGuinn's view is that "[i]t was hard for John to break out of folk music because I think he was really good at it, conservative, and successful, too." Phillips also acknowledged that it was Doherty and Elliot who awakened him to the potential of contemporary pop, as epitomized by
the Beatles. Previously the Journeymen had played acoustic folk with banjo, and the Mugwumps played something closer to
folk rock, with bass and drums. The rehearsals in the Virgin Islands were "the first time that we tried playing electric". The band then traveled in 1965 from New York to Los Angeles for an audition with
Lou Adler, co-owner of
Dunhill Records. The audition was arranged by
Barry McGuire, who had befriended Cass Elliot and John Phillips independently during the previous two years and who had recently signed with Dunhill. The audition led to "a deal in which they would record two albums a year for the next five years", with a royalty of 5% on 90% of retail sales. Dunhill Records also tied the band to management and publishing deals, commonly known as a "triple hat" relationship. Cass Elliot's membership was not formalized until the paperwork was signed, with Adler,
Michelle Phillips and Doherty overruling John Phillips. The Mamas & the Papas made their first recording singing background vocals on McGuire's album
This Precious Time, although they had already released a single of their own by the time the album appeared in December 1965. The single "Go Where You Wanna Go", which was given a limited release in November, failed to chart. The follow-up, "
California Dreamin', has the same B-side, suggesting that "Go Where You Wanna Go" had been withdrawn. "California Dreamin was released in December, touted by a full-page advertisement in
Billboard on December 18. It peaked at No. 4 in the United States and No. 23 in the United Kingdom. "Go Where You Wanna Go" was covered by
the 5th Dimension on its album
Up, Up and Away and became a Top 10 hit.
1966–1967: If You Can Believe Your Eyes and Ears and The Mamas & the Papas The quartet's debut album,
If You Can Believe Your Eyes and Ears, followed in February 1966 and became its only No. 1 on the
Billboard 200. The third and final single from the album, "
Monday, Monday", Following Michelle's affair with Clark, John Phillips was determined to fire her. He told her she was fired on her birthday, June4, 1966, though she disputed whether he had the authority to do so. After consulting their attorney and record label, John, Elliot, and Doherty served Michelle with a letter expelling her from the group three weeks later.
Jill Gibson was hired to replace Michelle. Gibson was a visual artist and singer-songwriter who had recorded with
Jan and Dean. After being introduced to the band by its producer,
Lou Adler, Gibson soon took part in concerts in
Forest Hills (New York City),
Denver, Colorado, and
Phoenix, Arizona; television appearances including
The Hollywood Palace on ABC; and recording sessions. While Gibson was a quick study and well-regarded, the three original members concluded she lacked her predecessor's "stage charisma and grittier edge", and Michelle Phillips was reinstated on August 23, 1966. Jill Gibson left the band and was paid a lump sum from the group's funds.
The Mamas & the Papas peaked at No. 4 in the US and No. 24 in the UK, continuing the band's success. "I Saw Her Again" was released as a single in June 1966 and reached No. 5 in the US and No. 11 in the UK. There is a false start to the final chorus of the song at 2'42". While mixing the record,
Bones Howe inadvertently punched in the
coda vocals too early. He then rewound the tape and inserted the vocals in their proper position. On playback, the mistaken early entry could still be heard, making it sound as though Doherty repeated the first three words, singing "I saw her...I saw her again last night".
Lou Adler liked the effect, and told Howe to leave it in the final mix. "That has to be a mistake: nobody's that clever",
Paul McCartney told the group. The device was imitated by
John Sebastian in
the Lovin' Spoonful song "
Darling Be Home Soon" (1966), and by
Kenny Loggins in the song "
I'm Alright" (1980). "
Words of Love" was the second single from the album, released in November 1966 as a double A-side with "
Dancing in the Street". The record reached No. 5 in the US. "Dancing in the Street", which had been a hit two years earlier for
Martha and the Vandellas, struggled to No. 73. In the UK it was backed with "I Can't Wait" and peaked at No. 47. With Michelle Phillips reinstated, the group embarked on a small tour on the East Coast to promote the record. Their co-headlining band was Webster's New Word, two members being Gus Duffy and Jim Mason. At a September 1966 concert at
Fordham University in New York City, Duffy and Mason both noted that the group was clearly "high, drunk, or
tripping. When they got on stage, it was clear that these people shouldn't be on stage ... They tumbled onto the stage, shambled around, and just got nowhere".
1967–1968: The Mamas & the Papas Deliver and The Papas & the Mamas The Song Makers, 1967 After completing their East Coast tour, the group started work immediately on its third album,
The Mamas & The Papas Deliver. The first single from the album, "
Look Through My Window", was released in September 1966 before the last single from the previous album. It reached No. 24 in the US. The second single, "
Dedicated to the One I Love", released in February 1967, did better, peaking at No. 2 in both the US and the UK. The success of "Dedicated to the One I Love" helped the album, which was also released in February 1967, reach No. 2. The third single, "
Creeque Alley", released April 1967, chronicled the band's early history and reached No. 5 in the US. By June 1967, the strain on the group was apparent when it performed indifferently at the
Monterey International Pop Festival. The band was under-rehearsed, partly because John and Michelle Phillips and Lou Adler were preoccupied with organizing the festival, partly because Doherty arrived at the last minute from another sojourn in the Virgin Islands, and partly because he was drinking heavily in the aftermath of his affair with Michelle Phillips. The Mamas & the Papas rallied for its performance before 18,000 people at the
Hollywood Bowl in August with
Jimi Hendrix as the opener, which John and Michelle Phillips remembered as the apex of the band's career, saying, "There would never be anything quite like it again".
The Mamas & the Papas Deliver was followed in October 1967 by the non-album single "
Glad to Be Unhappy", which reached No. 26 in the US. "Dancing Bear" from the group's second album was released as a single in November, peaking at No. 51 in the US. Neither "Glad to Be Unhappy" nor "Dancing Bear" charted in the UK. The Mamas & the Papas cut their first three albums at
United Western Recorders in Hollywood, while the group's subsequent releases were recorded at the eight-track studio that John and Michelle Phillips had built at their home in Bel Air, at a time when four-track recording was still the norm. John Phillips said, "I got the idea to transform the attic into my own recording studio, so I could stay high all the time and never have to worry about studio time. I began assembling the state-of-the-art equipment and ran the cost up to about a hundred grand". While having his own studio gave John Phillips the autonomy he craved, it also removed the external discipline that may have been beneficial to a man who described himself as an "obsessive perfectionist". Doherty, Elliot and Adler found the arrangement uncongenial. Elliot complained to
Rolling Stone on October 26, 1968, "We spent one whole month on one song; just the vocals for 'The Love of Ivy' took one whole month. I did my [debut solo] album in three weeks, a total of ten days in the studio. Live with the band, not prerecorded tracks sitting there with earphones." The recording sessions for the fourth album stalled, and in September 1967 John Phillips called a press conference to announce that the Mamas & the Papas were taking a break, which the band confirmed on
The Ed Sullivan Show that aired on September 24. The Mamas & the Papas planned to give concerts at the
Royal Albert Hall in London and the
Olympia in Paris before taking time out on
Mallorca to "get the muse going again". When the group docked at Southampton on October 5, Elliot was arrested for stealing two blankets and a hotel key worth 10 guineas ($28) when in England the previous February. Elliot was transferred to London, where she spent a night in custody after being strip-searched, before the case was dismissed in the West London Magistrates' Court the next day. The hotel was less interested in the blankets than in an unpaid bill. Elliot had entrusted the money to her companion, Harris Pickens "Pic" Dawson III, who neglected to settle the account. The police were less interested in the blankets or the bill than in Dawson, who was suspected of international drug trafficking and was the sole subject of their questioning. Later, at a party hosted by the band to celebrate Elliot's acquittal, John Phillips interrupted Elliot as she was telling
the Rolling Stones'
Mick Jagger about her arrest and trial and said, "Mick, she's got it all wrong, that's not how it was at all." Elliot screamed at Phillips and stormed out of the room. Elliot was ready to quit, the Royal Albert Hall and Olympia dates were canceled, and the four went their separate ways. John and Michelle Phillips went to Morocco, Doherty returned to the United States, and Elliot went either to the United States (according to John Phillips) or to a rendezvous in Paris with Pic Dawson (according to Michelle Phillips). In an interview with
Melody Maker, Elliot unilaterally announced that the Mamas & the Papas had disbanded, saying "We thought this trip would give the group some stimulation, but this has not been so."
1968–1971: People Like Us and breakup John Phillips and Elliot reconciled to complete
The Papas & The Mamas, which was released in May 1968. The album was the band's first album not to go gold or reach the top 10 in America. "
Twelve Thirty (Young Girls Are Coming to the Canyon)" was released as a single in August 1967 The success of "Dream a Little Dream of Me" confirmed Elliot's desire to embark on a solo career, and by the end of 1968 it appeared that the group had split. John Phillips recalled, "Times had changed. The Beatles showed the way. Music itself was heading toward a technological and compositional complexity that would leave many of us behind. It was tough to keep up." The group met its demise officially in early 1969, as John Phillips recalled, saying "Dunhill released us from our contracts and we were history, though we still owed the label another album." Elliot, billed as Mama Cass, had released her solo debut
Dream a Little Dream in 1968, Phillips released
John Phillips (John, the Wolf King of L.A.) in 1970, and Denny Doherty followed with
Watcha Gonna Do? in 1971. Dunhill Records maintained momentum by releasing
Farewell to the First Golden Era in 1967,
Golden Era Vol. 2 in 1968,
16 of Their Greatest Hits in 1969 and the Monterey live album in 1970. The record company was determined to get the band's contractually obligated last album, for which it had given the band an extension until September 1971. The label warned the band that each member would be sued for $250,000 if the band did not deliver the album. A lawsuit and countersuit between the band and label were settled out of court, and it was determined that the band would record under John Phillips's label, Warlock Records, distributed by Dunhill Records. John Phillips wrote a collection of songs, which was arranged, rehearsed, and recorded throughout the year, depending on the availability of the other group members. Band members were rarely together at one time and most tracks were dubbed, one vocal at a time. The Mamas & the Papas' last album of new material,
People Like Us, was released in November 1971. The only single, "Step Out", reached No. 81 in the US. The album peaked at No. 84 on the
Billboard 200, making it the only album by the Mamas & Papas not to reach the top 20 in the US. Neither single nor album charted in the UK. Contractual obligations fulfilled, the band's split was final.
Post-breakup In 1986, John and Michelle Phillips were featured in the music video for
the Beach Boys' second recording of "
California Dreamin', which appeared on the album
Made in U.S.A. Denny Doherty was unavailable to participate. The Mamas & the Papas' own version of "California Dreamin was reissued in the UK and peaked at No. 9 in 1997. The song received a
Grammy Hall of Fame Award in 2001.
Cass Elliot Cass Elliot had a successful solo career, touring the US and Europe. She appeared frequently on television, including in two specials,
The Mama Cass Television Program on ABC in January 1969 and ''Don't Call Me Mama Anymore'' on CBS in September 1973. She recorded hits such as "Make Your Own Kind of Music" and "It's Getting Better" but never surpassed her two Dunhill Records albums,
Dream a Little Dream (1968) and
Bubblegum, Lemonade, and ... Something for Mama (1969). Elliot signed with
RCA Records, but none of the three albums she recorded for the label,
Cass Elliot,
The Road Is No Place for a Lady (both 1972), and ''
Don't Call Me Mama Anymore'' (1973), produced a charting single. Elliot died of heart failure in London on July 29, 1974, after completing a two-week engagement at the
Palladium. The shows were mostly sold out, and prompted standing ovations. Her former bandmates and Lou Adler attended her funeral in Los Angeles. Elliot was survived by her only child, Owen Vanessa Elliot, who was born in 1967.
John Phillips John Phillips's country-influenced solo album,
John Phillips (John, the Wolf King of L.A.), enjoyed critical favor but was not a commercial success, despite featuring the single "Mississippi", which reached No. 32 in the US.
Rolling Stone gave the album four stars when it was reissued in 2006, calling it "a genuine lost treasure". Denny Doherty said that if the Mamas & the Papas had recorded the album, it might have been their best. John Phillips wrote songs for the soundtrack to
Brewster McCloud (
Robert Altman, 1970) and original music for the soundtracks to
Myra Breckinridge (
Michael Sarne, 1970) and
The Man Who Fell to Earth (
Nicolas Roeg, 1976). He also wrote the ill-fated stage musical
Man on the Moon (1975). John Phillips wrote most of the tracks on the album
Romance Is on the Rise (1974) by his then wife
Geneviève Waïte, which he also produced, and he co-wrote "
Kokomo" (1988), which was a No. 1 hit for the
Beach Boys. Phillips was lost in a heroin addiction through much of the 1970s, a period that included his arrest and conviction in 1980 on a charge of conspiring to distribute narcotics for which he spent a month in jail in 1981. In later years, he performed with the
New Mamas and the Papas and appeared in revival shows and television specials. He told his side of the Mamas & Papas story in the memoir
Papa John (1986), and in the
PBS television documentary,
Straight Shooter: The True Story of John Phillips and the Mamas and the Papas (1988). Phillips died of heart failure in Los Angeles on March 18, 2001. Two albums were released immediately after his death,
Pay Pack & Follow (April 2001), which included material recorded in London and New York with members of
the Rolling Stones in 1976 and 1977, and
Phillips 66 (August 2001), an album of new material and reworkings that took its title from the age Phillips would have been when the album was originally slated for its release. A later archival series on
Varèse Sarabande included a reissue of
John Phillips (John, the Wolf King of L.A.) with bonus tracks (2006), sessions he recorded for Columbia with
the Crusaders in 1972 and 1973 released as
Jack of Diamonds (2007), his preferred mix of the Rolling Stones sessions released with other material as
Pussycat (2008), and his demos for
Man on the Moon released as
Andy Warhol Presents Man on the Moon: The John Phillips Space Musical (2009).
Denny Doherty Denny Doherty's solo career faltered after the appearance of
Whatcha Gonna Do? in 1971. The follow-up,
Waiting for a Song (1974), was not released in the US, although a 2001 reissue by Varèse Sarabande gained wider distribution and is now available as a digital download. The album features Michelle Phillips and Cass Elliot as background vocalists in what was to be Elliot's last recorded performance. A single from the album, "
You'll Never Know", made the
adult contemporary charts. Doherty turned to the stage, making a disastrous start in John Phillips's
Man on the Moon (1975). In 1977, he returned to his birthplace,
Halifax, Nova Scotia, where he played Shakespeare at the
Neptune Theatre under the tutelage of
John Neville. This led to television work, including a variety program, ''
Denny's Sho'', which ran for one season in 1978. Doherty hosted and voiced parts in the children's program
Theodore Tugboat, and acted in various series, including 22 episodes of the drama
Pit Pony. He also performed with the
New Mamas and the Papas (see below). An alcoholic through the 1960s and 1970s, he recovered in the early 1980s and stayed sober for the remainder of his life. In 1996, he was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame. and the off-Broadway Village Theater in New York in 2003. The original cast recording, featuring Doherty and supporting band, was released by Lewlacow in 1999. Doherty died on January 19, 2007, at his home in Mississauga, Ontario, from kidney failure, following surgery for an abdominal aortic aneurysm.
Michelle Phillips While Michelle Phillips's only solo album,
Victim of Romance (1977), made little impact, she went on to build a successful career as an actress. Her film credits include
The Last Movie (1971),
Dillinger (1973),
Valentino (1977),
Bloodline (1979), ''
The Man with Bogart's Face (1980), American Anthem (1986), Let It Ride (1989) and Joshua Tree (1993). Her television credits include Star Trek: The Next Generation, Hotel,
Knots Landing,
and Beverly Hills, 90210''. Michelle Phillips published a memoir, ''California Dreamin','' in 1986, the same year John Phillips published his. Reading the two books together was, according to one reviewer, "like reading the transcripts in a divorce trial". As the co-writer and owner of the copyright to "California Dreamin'", Michelle Phillips was an important contributor to the 2005 PBS television documentary ''California Dreamin': The Songs of the Mamas & the Papas''. As of 2026, she is the last surviving member of the band's original lineup. == The New Mamas & the Papas ==