Entertainment

Former Monkee Davy Jones Dies at Age 66

Davy Jones, a onetime teen heartthrob as a member of the 1960s made-for-television pop band The Monkees, died on Wednesday after suffering a heart attack near his home in Florida, according to his longtime publicist. He was 66.

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Davy Jones, a onetime teen heartthrob as a member of the 1960s made-for-television pop band The Monkees, has died.

Jones reportedly suffered a heart attack Wednesday near his home in Florida, according to his longtime publicist.

He was 66.

Davy Jones death

According to reports, Jones was stricken while attending to horses he kept in Indiantown, Florida, spokeswoman Helen Kensick said.

Born in Manchester, England, Jones was the lone British member and teen idol of the rock group featured for two seasons on the NBC comedy series “The Monkees.” The prime-time hit was inspired in part by the Beatles film “A Hard Day’s Night” and ran from the fall of 1966 to August 1968.

Although not allowed to play their own instruments on their early records, Jones and his three group members — Micky Dolenz, Mike Nesmith and Peter Tork — had several hits that sold millions, including “Last Train to Clarksville” and “I’m a Believer.”

Jones got his start in entertainment at 11-year-old as an actor on the British soap opera “Coronation Street” before landing a role as the Artful Dodger in a West End production of “Oliver!” He went on to originate that role for the Broadway production and earned a Tony nomination.

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But Jones gained wider stardom after trying out for a role for a TV series being created about the misadventures of four Beatles-like rock musicians called the Monkees. Two members of the group, Nesmith and Tork, were musicians with performing and recording experience, while Jones and Dolenz were primarily actors who more or less dabbled in music.

According to Jones, the four were selected largely on the basis of their physical chemistry.

“We looked for different types of guys to be part of this idea,” he recalled in an account posted on his website. “Micky, Peter, Mike and I were put together in one scene and everyone said, ‘That’s it … magic! We’ll use you four.”

ADEPT PERFORMERS

Reuters reports:

“Although disparaged by critics as the “Pre-Fab Four” for the manufactured way in which the band came together, the group proved to be adept performers who were eventually given control of their own recordings.

Veteran label executive Don Kirshner, the show’s musical coordinator, was ultimately fired from the series when producers sided with the stars in a standoff over their musical autonomy.

The TV series, introduced by its catchy theme, “Hey, Hey, We’re the Monkees,” debuted as an immediate ratings hit weeks after the group’s first single, “Last Train to Clarksville,” had topped the pop charts in the autumn of 1966.

The group collaborated early on with some of the major songwriters and session musicians of the day, including Neil Diamond, Carole King, Glen Campbell and Hal Blaine.

The Monkees’ self-titled first LP topped the album charts that October, and the popularity of the group generated a wave of merchandising, including toys, games and lunchboxes. But their only feature film, “Head,” was a box-office flop.

After their fifth album, the group began to splinter, releasing two more albums as a trio without Tork and one last LP as a duo following Nesmith’s exit in 1969.

Jones went on to pursue a less-heralded solo career and appeared as himself in a popular 1971 episode of the hit sitcom “The Brady Bunch,” in which the show’s character, Marcia Brady, was president of a Davy Jones fan club and tried to get the singer to perform at her school prom.

He made another cameo as himself in the 1995 “The Brady Bunch Movie.”

Three members of the Monkees, Jones, Tork and Dolenz, teamed up for a 20th anniversary reunion tour in 1986 and regrouped again for a tour three years later. A final reunion album by all four original Monkees, “Justus,” was released in 1996, in conjunction with a TV special.

A 45th anniversary tour, again without Nesmith, was launched last year.

In addition to his wife, Jones is survived for four daughters from two previous marriages.”

Source Reuters


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