Lon Satton
Lon Satton was an American singer and actor based in the United Kingdom. He is widely known for originating the role of Poppa in Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical Starlight Express, for which Satton received a 1984 [Laurence Olivier Awards|1984 Olivier Award] nomination for Olivier [Award for Best Actor in a Musical|Best Actor in a Musical]. He is sometimes credited as Lonnie Sattin.
Early life
One of nine children, Satton was born in Jacksonville, Florida, in 1927, the son of Church of God in Christ minister C. T. Staton. His family moved to Philadelphia at an early age. Satton attended Temple University, and initially considered following in his father's footsteps as an evangelist, but developed an interest in entertainment after winning a singing contest.Career
As a singer, Satton performed in many jazz clubs, and for a time was a vocalist under Earl Hines and the Cotton Club Revue. In Chicago, he joined a theatre troupe that saw him begin a career in Off-Broadway and Broadway theatre. He starred opposite Barbara McNair in the 1958 musical The Body Beautiful. He also recorded several records for Capitol Records.Satton made his film debut with an uncredited part in the B-movie The Human Duplicators. He was the second actor to play Lt. Jack Neal on the soap opera One Life to Live. In the early 1970s, he relocated to the United Kingdom. He played a supporting role as a CIA agent in the James Bond film Live and [Let Die (film)|Live and Let Die].
In 1971, he acted in Emil Dean Zoghby and Ray Pohlman's musical Catch My Soul, at the Prince of Wales Theatre in London with Lance LeGault and Sylvia McNeill. The following year, Satton acted in The Threepenny Opera, at the same venue. In 1977, he acted in Loften Mitchell's musical Bubbling Brown Sugar in London. He sang the Henry Mancini-Leslie Bricusse song “Move ‘Em Out” in 1978’s Revenge of the Pink Panther.
Arguably his best known role was as Ramblin' Poppa McCoy in Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical Starlight Express, which satton continuously played from the show's opening in 1984 until 1996. His performance earned him an Olivier Award nomination for an Olivier Award for [Best Actor in a Musical|Best Actor in a Musical].
Personal life
Satton had two children with his wife, actress Tina Sattin. His cousin was jazz singer Dakota Staton.Filmography
Film
- 1968: For Love of Ivy - Harry
- 1970: The Invincible Six - Mike
- 1970: Hello-Goodbye - Cole Strutter
- 1971: Welcome to the Club - Marshall Bowles
- 1972: Steptoe and Son - Pianist
- 1973: Live and Let Die - Harold Strutter
- 1978: Revenge of the Pink Panther - Sam Spade and the Private Eyes #1
- 1990: The March - Jack Harris
Television
- 1969: One Life to Live - Lieutenant Jack Neal
- 1975: Space 1999 - Benjamin Ouma
- 1975: Quiller - Jim Lane
- 1994: The Lenny Henry Show - Chief of police