'', 15 April 1961 The group that later became the Shirelles was formed in 1957 by four teenage girls from
Passaic,
New Jersey, under the name the Poquellos (or Pequellos). The founding members,
Shirley Owens (born June 10, 1941, Henderson, NC),
Doris Coley (August 2, 1941, Goldsboro, NC– February 4, 2000, Sacramento, CA), Addie "Micki" Harris (January 22, 1941, High Point, NC – June 10, 1982, Atlanta, Georgia), and Beverly Lee (born August 3, 1941, Passaic, NJ), entered a talent show at
Passaic High School at the suggestion of a teacher. After hearing them sing "I Met Him on a Sunday", a song they had written for the show, their classmate Mary Jane Greenberg convinced the reluctant Poquellos to meet with her mother,
Florence, the owner of
Tiara Records. After several months of avoiding Greenberg and telling her that they were not interested in singing professionally, they were booked to Tiara. By the end of the year they had changed their name to the Shirelles, a combination of the first syllable of Owens's given name and -el, reminiscent of then-popular group
the Chantels, after briefly using the name the Honeytunes. That year, they released their first song, "I Met Him on a Sunday"; after local success, it was licensed to
Decca Records for national broadcast and charted at No. 50. The song was influenced by
doo-wop, but infused with
pop melodies. Tiara Records, along with the Shirelles' contract, was sold to
Decca Records in 1959 for $4,000; Greenberg stayed as the manager, securing performances for the group, including one at the
Howard Theatre in
Washington D.C. After two singles did poorly, including their first release—with Coley as lead vocalist—of "
Dedicated to the One I Love", a cover of
the "5" Royales song of the same name, Decca returned them to Greenberg and gave up on them, considering them a
one-hit act. On Greenberg's new label,
Scepter Records, they rereleased "Dedicated to the One I Love" as a single, which peaked at No. 89; Wayne Wadhams, David Nathan, and Susan Lindsay in
Inside the Hits attribute the low rating to poor distribution. In order to better promote the group, Greenberg asked songwriter
Luther Dixon, who had previously worked with
Perry Como,
Nat King Cole, and
Pat Boone and co-written the 1959 hit "
16 Candles", to write for and produce songs for them. Dixon accepted. Their first single produced with Dixon, "
Tonight's the Night", was released in 1960 and peaked at No. 39. The success of "Tonight's the Night" led to the girls being booked to perform with several major artists, such as
Etta James and
Little Richard, and facilitated Scepter's move to a larger office. It was followed by "
Will You Love Me Tomorrow", written by husband-wife songwriting team
Gerry Goffin and
Carole King; the song went on to become the first
Billboard number-one hit by an African-American girl group, possibly the first by any girl group. "Tonight's the Night" was later used as the title song for the 1961 album ''
Tonight's the Night'', which also included "Will You Love Me Tomorrow" and "Dedicated to the One I Love". After the success of their singles, the Shirelles became frequent guests of
Murray the K, who hosted them on his "All Star Rock Shows" on the New York radio station
WINS. During this same period they reissued "Dedicated to the One I Love", which peaked at No. 3, followed by "
Mama Said", then "
Baby It's You", written by
Burt Bacharach,
Luther Dixon, and
Mack David, "
Soldier Boy", and "
Boys", with saxophonist
King Curtis. In 1963 Dixon left Scepter, which presaged a tailing-off of the number of the Shirelles' singles to chart. However, they carried on performing and recording.
Dionne Warwick replaced Owens and Coley, who took leave to marry their fiancés, in concerts and the group continued to record material. That year, their song "
Foolish Little Girl" reached the pop/R&B Top 10, and they performed two songs, "31 Flavors" and "You Satisfy My Soul," for the soundtrack of the film ''
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World''; "31 Flavors" was also used to promote
Baskin-Robbins. However, later in 1963, the Shirelles learned that the
trust, holding their royalties, that they were supposed to receive from Scepter on their 21st birthdays, did not exist. In response, they left the label, and later filed a
breach of contract suit against the company. Scepter met this with a
countersuit for quitting; both suits were withdrawn in 1965, after an agreement was reached. Knowing that Scepter had lied about the trust disappointed the Shirelles, who felt deceived. In a 1981 interview with Bruce Pollock, Owens said that Greenberg had put on a "mother routine", which the girls had "fall[en] for ... completely". ==Later career==