Cindy Birdsong

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Cindy Birdsong (center) with The Supremes in 1970, on the cover of the Right On LP.
Cindy Birdsong (center) with The Supremes in 1970, on the cover of the Right On LP.

Cindy Birdsong (born Cynthia Ann Birdsong, December 15, 1939, in Mount Holly Township, New Jersey) is an American singer. Originally a member of Patti LaBelle & the Bluebelles, Birdsong is most notable for being a member of The Supremes from 1967 to 1972 and 1974 to 1976.

[edit] Biography

Cindy Birdsong grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Birdsong's family soon left Philadelphia for Camden, New Jersey. After spending time as a nurse, Birdsong moved back to Philadelphia, where she met singer Patricia Holte and replaced Sandra Tucker as a member of The Ordettes.[1] Within a couple of years, their group name changed to Patti LaBelle & the Bluebelles, and they found success with the singles "I Sold My Heart to the Junkman", "You'll Never Walk Alone" and "Down the Aisle".

Birdsong's affiliation with LaBelle ended when Berry Gordy, Jr. of Motown Records offered her a deal to replace Florence Ballard as a member of The Supremes in 1967. After spending some time as Ballard's stand-in (Ballard and Birdsong superficially resembled one another), Birdsong officially joined Diana Ross & the Supremes, as the group renamed itself immediately prior to her joining, in July 1967.

For her first two and a half years as a Supreme, listeners did not hear Birdsong's voice on most of the Supremes' newest singles. Except for featured backgrounds on several collaborations with The Temptations and album tracks, Birdsong and fellow member Mary Wilson did not sing backing vocals on the group's later singles, including hits such as "Love Child" and "Someday We'll Be Together".

On the evening of December 2, 1969, Birdsong was attacked at knifepoint in her Hollwood apartment by a maintenance man who worked in her building. The man forced her to tie up two of her friends who were visiting at the time, then tied her up and kidnapped her in a car. As they headed south towards Long Beach, Birdsong managed to jump from the speeding car onto the Hollywood Freeway. A nearby car stopped to assist her and took her to a local hospital where she was treated for various knife wounds and bruises. Her captor was subsequently arrested in Las Vegas four days later.

Diana Ross left the Supremes for a solo career in 1970, at which point Jean Terrell was brought in as the new lead singer. The same year, Birdsong was married to Charles Hewlett. Birdsong continued to perform with the Supremes until 1971, when she became pregnant with her first child. Birdsong officially left the Supremes in April 1972, after completing the sessions for the Floy Joy album. Her replacement, Lynda Laurence, had already joined Mary Wilson and Jean Terrell onstage and on the Flo Joy album cover, as Birdsong's pregnancy began to show. After a brief retirement, Birdsong returned to the Supremes in late 1973, ironically replacing Laurence for the same reason Laurence had replaced her -- to start a family. Birdsong remained with the Supremes until she quit the act in February 1976, frustrated in her dealings with Mary Wilson and Wilson's husband Pedro Ferrer, who was serving as the group's manager. During that period, Birdsong contributed to two albums, The Supremes (1975) and High Energy. Although Birdsong was featured on several tracks of the latter album, her replacement Susaye Greene appears on the album cover and was over-dubbed on several tracks.

After leaving the Supremes, Birdsong worked as a nurse at UCLA Medical Center under her married name of Cindy Hewlett, and then went to work for Suzanne de Passe at Motown Records. In 1987, Birdsong returned to singing, and released the single "Dancing Room" on Hi-Hat Records. Other songs were demoed, but none released. These songs included "Ready For You", "Check It Out", "Talk is Cheap", and "Anatomy".

In 1983, Birdsong joined fellow former Supremes Mary Wilson and Diana Ross in a one-off reunion on the Motown 25 anniversary television special. In 2000, she reunited with the Blue Belles for the first time in thirty-three years. In 2004, Birdsong joined former Supreme Mary Wilson and Kelly Rowland to perform a medley of Supreme hits for the Motown 45 anniversary television special. Today divorced and a minister in the Los Angeles area, Birdsong has consulted with a literary agent and is considering writing her memoirs.

Persondata
NAME Birdsong, Cindy
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Birdsong, Cynthia Ann
SHORT DESCRIPTION American singer
DATE OF BIRTH December 15, 1939
PLACE OF BIRTH Mount Holly Township, New Jersey
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "Don't Block the Blessings" by Patti LaBelle, page 94


[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "Don't Block the Blessings" by Patti LaBelle, page 94