• The song was a hit for
Sammy Davis Jr. in the year of its publication, peaking at No. 17 on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart and at No. 6 on the
Billboard Easy Listening chart. •
Andy Williams included the song on his 1963 album
Days of Wine and Roses and Other TV Requests. • In 1963
Shirley Bassey released this song as a Columbia Record single and her version reached No. 38 (Australia) and No. 47 (UK). •
Lesley Gore included a version of the song on her 1963 debut album, ''
I'll Cry If I Want To''. •
Sergio Franchi covered this song on his 1963 album
Broadway, I Love You. •
George Maharis covered the song on his 1963 album
Just Turn Me Loose! •
Perry Como covered the song on his 1963 release
The Songs I Love. • In 1964, jazz pianist
Vince Guaraldi featured a
latin jazz cover on his album
The Latin Side of Vince Guaraldi. A live version appeared on
The Navy Swings the following year (not released until 2010). •
P. J. Proby recorded the song for his third album
P J Proby...In Town (1965). • Italian crooner
Johnny Dorelli performed the song in English in 1966, followed by an Italian version (as "Che Uomo Inutile" on his 1967 album ''
L'Immensità''. • Lesser chart records were recorded by:
Robert Goulet and the writer, Anthony Newley.
James Brown recorded "What Kind of Fool Am I?" for his 1970 album
Soul on Top. •
Bill Evans recorded the song for his album
Alone (Again) in December 1975, not released until 1977. Various other recordings of it by Evans are also available. •
Jacky Terrasson and
Tom Harrell included the song in their 1991 album
Moon and Sand. • "What Kind of Fool Am I?" is also known as the
signature song of
Regine Velasquez. Done in a
power ballad style and with powerful vocals, the song reached platinum status on its 1994 CD-release and is included on her multiplatinum international album
Listen Without Prejudice. It achieved at least 2× platinum per Asian country in the cited year. • The American indie folk rock band
Deer Tick recorded a cover of the song on their 2007 album
War Elephant. •
Clay Aiken recorded the song on his 2010 album
Tried and True. •
Brian Stokes Mitchell recorded the song for his 2012 album "Simply Broadway." ==Parodies and popular culture==