Priscilla Paris

The youngest and most photogenic member of the Paris Sisters, willowy Priscilla Paris was the featured vocalist on the trio's 1961 Phil Spector-produced girl group classic "I Love How You Love Me." She later mounted a little-noticed solo career, and also evolved into a songwriter of some distinction. Born in San Francisco in 1945, Paris was still in kindergarten when she joined older siblings Albeth and Sherrell in the Paris Sisters. Their mother Faye was the quintessential stage parent, a former opera singer who continued her career vicariously through her children, and in 1954 she engineered a backstage visit during an Andrews Sisters performance at the Warfield Theater that so impressed the popular World War II trio that they invited the Paris girls on-stage for encore performances of the canteen classics "Rum and Coca Cola" and "Beer Barrel Polka." An MCA Records executive in the audience signed the Paris Sisters to the label's Decca imprint immediately thereafter, and the single "Ooh La La" appeared by year's end. Despite the snowballing popularity of rock & roll, the Paris Sisters' Decca efforts adhered to the increasingly old-fashioned vocal harmony approach popularized by the Andrews Sisters and the McGuire Sisters -- after Decca cut its losses, the siblings briefly signed to Imperial in 1957, but spent the next four years without a record deal.

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