Cleo Laine


Dame Cleo Laine, Lady Dankworth was an English singer and actress known for her scat singing. She was the wife of jazz composer and musician Sir John Dankworth and the mother of bassist Alec and singer Jacqui Dankworth. Laine had popular success with singles such as "You'll Answer To Me" and appeared in a range of musical theatre productions. She received a number of awards and honours including appointment as an OBE in 1979, and a Grammy in 1986; she became a dame in 1997.

Early life

Laine was born Clementine Dinah Bullock on 28 October 1927, in Southall, Middlesex, second of the three children of Sylvan Alexander Campbell and Minnie Blanche Bullock, and was registered under the name Clementine Dinah Bullock. Her father was a Black Jamaican veteran of the First World War who worked as a building labourer and regularly busked. Her mother was the child of white English parents from Wiltshire, both of whom had died some years before their daughter's first marriage to a man named Bullock in 1913.
The family moved constantly, but most of Laine's childhood was spent in Southall. Her parents married in 1933. She was raised as Clementina Campbell, but it was not until 1953, when she was 26 and applying for a passport for a forthcoming tour of Germany, that Laine found out her real birth name, owing to her parents not being married at the time and her mother registering her with the surname Bullock.

Education

Laine attended the board school on Featherstone Road, Southall, and was sent by her mother for singing and dancing lessons at an early age. She, her sister and brother all made uncredited appearances as street urchins in Alexander Korda's 1940 fantasy film The [Thief of Bagdad (1940 film)|The Thief of Baghdad], and afterwards she attended Mellow Lane Senior School in Hayes before going to work as an apprentice hairdresser, a hat-trimmer, a librarian, and in a pawnbroker's shop.

Career

At the age of 24 Laine joined John Dankworth's small group, the Johnny Dankworth Seven where she adopted the name “Cleo Laine”. Laine later played with his big bands, Johnny Dankworth & His Orchestra as well as Johnny Dankworth & His New Radio Orchestra, with which she performed until 1958. Dankworth and Laine married that year. She played the lead in Barry Reckord's play Flesh to a Tiger at London's Royal Court Theatre. The same year, she played the title role in The Barren One, Sylvia Wynter's adaptation of Federico García Lorca's Yerma. This led to other stage work, such as the musical Valmouth in 1959, the play A Time to Laugh in 1962, Boots with Strawberry Jam in 1968, and eventually to her role as Julie in Wendy Toye's production of Show Boat at the Adelphi Theatre in London in 1971. Show Boat had its longest run to date in that London production, 910 performances.
During this period, Laine had two major recording successes. "You'll Answer to Me" reached the British Top 10 while Laine was in the 1961 Edinburgh Festival production of Kurt Weill's opera/ballet The [Seven Deadly Sins (ballet chanté)|The Seven Deadly Sins]. In 1964, her Shakespeare and All that Jazz album with Dankworth was well received. Dankworth and Laine founded the Stables theatre in 1970, in what was the old stables block in the grounds of their home. It eventually hosted more than 350 concerts per year.
In 1972, Laine had a successful tour of Australia; she released six top-100 albums in that country throughout the 1970s. Her first performance in the United States was a concert later that year at New York's Lincoln Center, followed in 1973 by the first of her many Carnegie Hall appearances. Tours of the US and Canada soon followed, and with them a succession of record albums and television appearances, including The Muppet Show in 1977. This led, after several nominations, to her first Grammy award, in recognition of the live recording of her 1983 Carnegie concert. She kept touring into the 21st century, including in Australia in 2005. She performed live in the UK as late as 2018. Other important recordings during that time were duet albums with Ray Charles as well as Arnold Schoenberg's Pierrot Lunaire, for which she was nominated for a Grammy Award.
Laine played roles in Colette, a musical by Dankworth in 1979; and in Stephen Sondheim's A Little Night Music in 1983 and Franz Lehár's The Merry Widow the following year for Michigan Opera. In 1985 she originated the role of Princess Puffer in The [Mystery of Edwin Drood (musical)|The Mystery of Edwin Drood] on Broadway, for which she received a Tony nomination. In 1989, she received a Los Angeles critics' award for her portrayal of the Witch in Sondheim's Into the Woods. In May 1992, Laine appeared with Frank Sinatra for a week of concerts at the Royal Albert Hall in London.
In 1978, Derek Jewell of the Sunday Times dubbed her "quite simply the best singer in the world." Laine was billed as having a "five-octave range".

Personal life and death

In 1946, Laine married George Langridge, a roof tiler, with whom she had a son, Stuart. The couple divorced in 1957. Her son predeceased her, in 2019, aged 72.
In 1958, she married John Dankworth and the couple had two children together, bassist Alec Dankworth and singer Jacqui Dankworth. They were married until his death on 6 February 2010. That same day, Laine performed at a concert at The Stables to mark the venue's 40th anniversary. She then announced Dankworth's death at the end of the show to the shock of the audience.
Laine died at her home in Wavendon, on 24 July 2025, at the age of 97.

Awards and honours

Discography

Laine's recorded works include the following: