She was born in Newport News, Virginia and raised in Yonkers, New York. She was left on her own as an orphan at age 14.
Her singing debut was at age 16 in 1934 at the Harlem Apollo Theatre[?], New York, in one of the earliest of its famous "Amateur Nights", which she won, adding fame to both the Apollo and herself. She was noticed by Chick Webb[?] and started singing with Webb's Orchestra in 1935, in Harlem's Savoy Ballroom. She recorded several hit songs with them, including "(If You Can't Sing It), You'll Have to Swing It", but it was her version of the nursery[?] rhyme, "A Tisket A Tasket[?]" that launched her to stardom.
When Chick Webb died in 1939, the band continued touring under the new name, "Ella Fitzgerald and Her Famous Orchestra."
She began her solo[?] career in 1941. Started as a swing singer, she encompassed bebop, scat, and performed blues, bossa nova, samba, gospel, calypso, and Christmas songs. Ella's later concerts were often enriched by some hilarious imitations of other singers: in particular, she was able to render quite perfectly Marilyn Monroe's voice and typical gestures, as well as Louis Armstrong's.
Among her best known recordings was a series produced by Norman Granz of the songbooks[?] of the great American popular composers, Harold Arlen[?], George Gershwin (with Nelson Riddle[?])'s orchestra), Irving Berlin, Cole Porter, Jerome Kern, Johnny Mercer, and Duke Ellington. With Ellington's band, Lady Ella (as she was now called by other singers) toured Europe and North America, classically opening their shows with the famous Ellington's hit "Take the 'A' train[?]", of which she was one of the few to sing - in her unique way - the little known lyrics.
She performed concerts with the most important groups and soloists. Her role effectively was the "instrumentalist of voice". Among the many partners and/or band leaders, like Oscar Peterson, Count Basie ("On the Sunny Side of the Street"), Joe Pass ("Speak love"), Dizzy Gillespie, the Tommy Flanagan[?] Trio, she also sang together with the "other voice" of jazz, Billie Holiday (1957).
Porgy and Bess is the most notable of her many recordings with jazz legend Louis Armstrong, but the couple also recorded the very popular "Ella and Louis" which was so successful that Granz's Verve records[?] asked them for the equally successful "Ella and Louis again".
Ella Fitzgerald also appeared alongside Peggy Lee as an actress and singer in Jack Webb's jazz film Pete Kelly's Blues[?].
She married twice. Her second husband was the famous bass player Ray Brown[?].
Already blinded because suffering from diabetes, she lost her legs in 1993, and a little later she died in Beverly Hills, California,, after having made some sad last TV appearances. She is interred in the Inglewood Park Cemetery in Inglewood, California.
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