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micky dolenz

Micky Dolenz

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Micky Dolenz

Dolenz at the 2009 premiere of Whatever Works
Born George Michael Dolenz, Jr.
March 8, 1945 (1945-03-08) (age 64)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Other name(s) Mickey Braddock, The Monkees
Occupation Actor, Musician
Years active 1956–present
Spouse(s) Samantha Juste
Trina Dolenz
Donna Quinter (2002–present)
Official website

George Michael Dolenz, Jr. (born March 8, 1945) is an American actor, musician, television director and theatre director; he is best known for his role as the drummer/vocalist in the 1960s made-for-television band The Monkees.

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[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life

Dolenz was born in Los Angeles, California, the son of George Dolenz, a Hollywood character actor, and his wife Janelle Johnson. Dolenz began his show business career in 1956 when he starred in a children’s show called Circus Boy under the name Mickey Braddock.[1] In the show, he played an orphaned boy who is the water boy for the elephants in his uncle’s one-ring circus at the start of the twentieth century. The program ran for three years, after which Dolenz made sporadic appearances on network TV shows and pursued his education. He also played with a couple of obscure rock and roll bands, including one called The Missing Links. Dolenz went to Ulysses S. Grant High School in Valley Glen, Los Angeles, California and graduated in 1962.

[edit] "Micky and the One Nighters"

Micky doesn't like to remember being in a band that was an opening act for Eddie Hodges. He was hired because he had no income and Eddie felt he needed something to sustain him. The Missing Links was originally a tour band that Eddie Hodges created using Micky as a backup singer for an Eddie Hodges tour. Eddie gave him a job because he had nothing else going for himself. The band included Larry Duncan, Jim Stanley, Mike Swain and Danny DeLacey. Micky was a contentious figure and was fired after a brief tour with the Links. The only song he knew was "Cherry Pie." Eddie hired him anyway because he was a fellow child actor.

[edit] The Monkees

In 1965, Dolenz was cast in the television sitcom 'The Monkees and became the drummer and lead vocalist for the band created for the show. Micky said later that someone at Screen Gems forgot to contact his agent to inform him the series was picked up by NBC; he wound up learning about his new job by reading the announcement in Variety. He was not at that time a drummer and needed lessons even to be able to mime credibly.[citation needed] (Interestingly, he learned to play right-handed and left-footed.) He wrote a few of the band’s songs as well as providing the lead vocals for such hits as "Last Train to Clarksville" and "I'm a Believer". Towards the end of the series’ hectic two-year run, Dolenz directed and co-wrote what turned out to be the show’s final episode.[citation needed]

Dolenz said in a 2009 interview that The Monkees was this show that wanted to be inspired by a famed rock group, The Beatles. Like his co-star Davy Jones, Dolenz was also a huge Beatle fan himself when he actually met the group and went on tour with them, when he was only 22, he got the chance to met everybody in the band, esp. George Harrison, and became good friends. Once when not touring, he smoked pot with Paul McCartney. Dolenz did a Pizza Hut commercial with ex-Beatle Ringo Starr, and Dolenz's own bandmates in 1995.

While in the UK on tour with the group, Dolenz met future wife Samantha Juste, the girl who pretended to put the records on the jukebox on the BBC's "live" pop series, Top of the Pops. The couple had a daughter, Ami Dolenz, who was an actress in the 1980s. Dolenz and Juste divorced in 1975.[citation needed]

[edit] Post-Monkees

Dolenz at the Tribeca Film Festival, June 2007.

After the show ended and the band broke up, Dolenz hoped to continue a recording career, and released several singles on MGM Records (and its subsidiaries) in the early 1970s. He also continued performing, providing voice-overs for a number of Saturday-morning cartoon series including The Funky Phantom, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kids, Devlin and Wonder Wheels (from The Skatebirds), and made guest appearances on prime time shows including Adam-12 and My Three Sons.[citation needed] He also auditioned for the role of Fonzie on the series Happy Days, but lost out to Henry Winkler.[citation needed] Dolenz eventually reunited with fellow Monkee Davy Jones and Monkee songwriters Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart for an album called Dolenz, Jones, Boyce & Hart and a lengthy tour spanning 1975 and 1976, continuing with Jones on tour in 1977 and finishing up with a role (with Jones) in a stage production of the Harry Nilsson musical The Point! in London, playing the part of Arrow, Oblio's (Jones) pet dog.[citation needed]

After the show’s run, he remained in England and began directing for the stage and television, as well as producing several of the shows he directed. In 1980, Dolenz produced and directed the sitcom Metal Mickey,[2] featuring a small metallic robot with the catch-phrase "boogie boogie". Due to the similar nature of the character's name and his own, causing chaos on set, it was at this time that Micky Dolenz officially changed his name to Michael Dolenz.[citation needed]

In the early 1980s, Dolenz directed a stage version of Bugsy Malone, the cast of which included a then-unknown 14-year-old Welsh actress Catherine Zeta-Jones.[3]

From 1983 to 1984 he was responsible for creating and producing the British children's television show Luna.[4]

In 1986, a screening of the entire Monkees television series by MTV led to renewed interest in the group, followed by a 20th Anniversary Tour, a greatest hits album and a brand new LP, Pool It! in 1987. The group's original albums were reissued and all of them hit the record charts at the same time. The group also found chart success with a new recording, "That Was Then, This Is Now" hitting the Top 20 on Billboard in the U.S.

Since 1986, Dolenz has joined the other ex-Monkees for periodic reunion tours, with the last one in 2001, and has performed as a solo performer from time to time. He has continued to direct for television both in the United Kingdom and in the United States and had occasional acting gigs, including roles in the TV series The Equalizer and as the Mayor on the cable TV series Pacific Blue.[citation needed]

In 2009, Micky inked a deal to record an album of the classic songs of Carole King, titled “King For A Day”. The album (released on Gigitone Records) was produced by Jeffrey Foskett, who has worked extensively with Brian Wilson, and played on Wilson’s 2004 Grammy-winning version of SMiLE. King’s songs “Pleasant Valley Sunday”, “Sometime in the Morning”, and “The Porpoise Song (Theme From Head)” have emerged as signature songs from The Monkees.

Dolenz has studied for a Bachelor of Arts degree with the Open University in the UK.[citation needed]

[edit] Other

Dolenz provided the voice of Arthur in the first season of the animated series The Tick.[5] Dolenz also played one of Alan Matthews' bandmates in the sitcom Boy Meets World, and later joined Davy Jones and Peter Tork in another episode but they did not play themselves.[citation needed]

Dolenz provided the voice of Two-Face's twin henchmen in the two-part episode "Two-Face" on Batman: The Animated Series.[6]

In 2005, Dolenz replaced Dan Taylor as the morning disc jockey at oldies radio station WCBS-FM in New York.[citation needed] On June 3, 2005, Dolenz celebrated his 100th show with a special morning show at B.B. Kings. At 5:00 pm, WCBS-FM announced that the station would replace its oldies format with a "Jack" format. WCBS-FM has since returned to its oldies format. It was recently announced that Dolenz will do a New York Radio Greats Shift February 3, 2008.[dated info]

In 2005, after the format change at WCBS-FM, Dolenz went on tour with his sister, singer Coco Dolenz. In June 2006, Dolenz played Charlemagne at the Goodspeed Opera House for the revival of the musical Pippin in East Haddam, Connecticut. As of January 2007, he was touring in that role.

In a September 2006 radio interview, Dolenz reported that he is the current voice of Snuggle the Fabric Softener Bear.[3] He appeared in Rob Zombie's Halloween remake as Derek Allan, the owner of the gun shop where Dr. Loomis (played by Malcolm McDowell) buys a gun in his search for Michael Myers. On April 25, 2007, Dolenz was featured on American Idol on the "Idol Gives Back" episode when the show filmed celebrities singing and dancing to "Stayin' Alive" by the Bee Gees.

Dolenz participated in the 2008-09 season of CMT's "Gone Country", competing against fellow celebrities, Sheila E (who eventually won), Taylor Dayne, George Clinton, and Richard Greico.

[edit] Personal life

Dolenz has been married three times and is the father of four daughters. With Samantha Juste, Ami Bluebell (b. January 8, 1969). With Trina Dolenz, he had the other three: Charlotte Janelle (b. August 8, 1981), Emily Claire (b. July 25, 1983), and Georgia Rose (b. September 3, 1984). Dolenz married his third wife, Donna Quinter, in 2002. Dolenz answered "no" when asked whether he believed in the existence of a God, adding "God is a verb, not a noun."[7]

[edit] Songs written or co-written by Micky Dolenz

  • "You and I" (Written by Micky Dolenz and Davy Jones)
  • "Savin' My Love for You" (Written by Micky Dolenz and Davy Jones)
  • "Zilch" (Written by Micky Dolenz, Davy Jones, Michael Nesmith and Peter Tork)
  • "Randy Scouse Git" (Written by Micky Dolenz)
  • "Band 6" (Written by Micky Dolenz, Davy Jones, Michael Nesmith and Peter Tork)
  • "Just A Game" (Written by Micky Dolenz)
  • "Shorty Blackwell" (Written by Micky Dolenz)
  • "Little Girl"* (Written by Micky Dolenz)
  • "Bye Bye Baby Bye Bye"* (Written by Micky Dolenz, Klein)
  • "Mommy and Daddy" (Written Micky Dolenz)
  • "Never Enough" (Written by Micky Dolenz)
  • "Unlucky Stars" (Written by Micky Dolenz)
  • "Regional Girl" (Written by Micky Dolenz)
  • "It's My Life" (Written by Micky Dolenz)
  • "Midnight Train" (Written by Micky Dolenz)
  • "Goin' Down" (Written Micky Dolenz, Davy Jones, Peter Tork, Diane Hilderbrand, Michael Nesmith)

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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