Where is engelbert humperdinck pub
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I'm a very keen golfer. I go out and have a game whenever I can - I play every week and my handicap is nine. I practise for an hour, then go and play with friends. Both my homes - in LA and Leicester - are just two miles from great golf courses. In LA I play with a guy called David Smith, an ex-pro golfer, and we have a little bet on who'll win. My first hole in one was in Sydney, Australia, a few years ago and this award was given to me by friends to mark the occasion.
When Elvis came to see my show in Las Vegas in he came backstage, told me how much he loved it and we took this photo. He was an amazing guy. Most people shake hands but he embraced me and I thought that was fantastic. He didn't take himself seriously, he had a lot of humility and we became friends.
I saw him six months before he died and he was in a very bad way - pale, bloated and unhappy. He was born, like many citizens of Leicester, in India, where he was one of the ten children of a British officer and a mother who was a talented violinist and singer.
His birth name was Arnold George Dorsey. After the family returned to England, young Arnold attended schools in Leicester and took up the saxophone. He began to play in local pubs and then to sing, initially under the stage name of Gerry Dorsey. Gerry Dorsey gradually established a reputation on the UK club circuit, but his career was cut short by the onset of tuberculosis.
Absence from the limelight at that stage of a career is a disaster, because one simply disappears, and so he relaunched his career in the UK and then America, always ensuring that he maintained his roots in Leicester.
His new image was accompanied by a new name, that of Engelbert Humperdinck. His unique voice has charmed millions of fans across the globe. His power as a balladeer relates both to his presence and his voice. He gives the impression that he is singing for the individual listener, to whom both the narrative and the emotions seem to be directed. Engelbert does not sing to the collective, but to each listener individually.
He is a sensitive lyric interpreter with excellent vocal technique. And what a stage presence! During his heyday in the late s and early s, he cultivated the image of a mysterious heart-throb and donned a flamboyant wardrobe that, when coupled with his rich, silky crooning, drove female fans wild.
With his square jaw, olive skin and plump lips, not to mention sideburns so ridiculously thick and lustrous they each required a barber of their own - Humperdinck was at the height of his game in the heart-throb stakes. During his heyday, Engelbert cultivated the image of a mysterious heartthrob and donned flamboyant wardrobe that, when coupled with his rich, silky crooning, drove female fans wild. Photo: Getty Images. Just imagine a typical show. A dark, handsome, sensuous singer, crooning smoothly and effortlessly to shrieking women of a wide range of ages, an occasional subtle pelvic movement in keeping with the relaxed but purposeful singing.
His endearing sense of humour would be visible in his attempts to engage in badinage between songs — in a warm, strong voice — which would get overwhelmed by comments and statements from his audience. Sometimes, he would invite a member of the audience female to join him on the stage, while he would sing a song to her that included a kiss at the end of each line of the lyric.
The girl would be glazed-eyed, as would the rest of the screaming female audience. He seemed to take great pleasure at every moment on stage, a place where he could lose his inhibitions and no longer be the child who was once shy.
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