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Cleo Laine died at the age of 97. She was a British jazz singer and performed with Frank Sinatra and Ray Charles.

William Schomberg

LONDON, JULY 25, 2025: British jazz singer Cleo laine, who sang with Frank Sinatra, and was an actor on Broadway and in London's West End, died at the age of 97. The Guardian reported this on Friday, citing her children Jacqui, and Alec.

She was born in 1927 to an English mother, and a Jamaican dad, in a London suburb. At first, she worked as a librarian, hat-trimmer, and hairdresser. She was married in 1946, and gave birth to a son when she was still a teenager.

She divorced at 24, but her desire to become a singer drove her on. In 1951, she got her big break when she joined John Dankworth's band, an English saxophonist/clarinettist.

Dankworth's Band decided that her name was just too long. At the time, she believed she had been Clementine Campbell. However, a passport application revealed later that her mother used her surname Hitching in the birth certificate.

They thought that Clem's nickname was too cowboyish for her to be on a poster. The men of the Dankworth Seven band decided to give her a new stage name by drawing "Cleo", "Laine", and "Cleo" on hats.

She and Dankworth were married in 1958. Their home became a magnet to London's jazz scene: their friends included stars such as Oscar Peterson, Ella Fitzgerald and Lester Young, Dizzy Gillespie and Dizzy Gillespie.

Laine, who had been singing and acting in Britain since the 1960s toured Australia and New York in 1972. A recording of another show at Carnegie Hall won her a Grammy.

Ray Charles recorded "Porgy and Bess". She appeared in a series at London's Royal Albert Hall with Frank Sinatra, but was better known for her work as a member of Dankworth's band. Later, he became her musical advisor.

They built an auditorium on the grounds of their house near London. Princess Margaret, sister of Queen Elizabeth II and the late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late late queen Elizabeth II was a friend of theirs. The couple's two children became musicians.

Dankworth, who Laine said was "joined by the hip" to her, died in 2010. Laine announced the news of her husband's death only hours after it happened. She performed in the auditorium. (Editing by Andrew Heavens & Olivier Holmey).

(source: Reuters)