Sylvia Syms (singer)

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This article is about the American singer. For the British actress with the same name, see Sylvia Syms.

Sylvia Syms (December 2, 1917 - May 10, 1992) was a jazz singer.

She was born Sylvia Blagman in Brooklyn, New York. As a child, she had polio. As a teenager, she went to jazz-oriented nightclubs on New York's 52nd Street, and received informal training from Billie Holiday. In 1941 she made her debut at a club called Billy's Stable.

In 1948, performing at the Cinderella Club in Greenwich Village, she was seen by Mae West, who gave her a part in a show she was doing. Among others who observed her in night clubs was Frank Sinatra who considered her the "world's greatest saloon singer." Sinatra subsequently conducted her 1982 album Syms by Sinatra.

She was signed to a record company by Decca Records, having her major success with a recording of "I Could Have Danced All Night" in 1956.

She died in New York City from natural causes, aged 74.

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