Johnny Mathis
- Music Artist
- Music Department
- Actor
He was the fourth of seven children born to Clement and Mildred Mathis.
His father performed briefly in vaudeville and exposed all of the
Mathis siblings to music. Before he entered his teens, young John
received vocal lessons from Connie Cox in exchange for performing
chores around her home. When he entered San Francisco State College he
originally had planned to become a physical education instructor. At
San Francisco State he broke classmate and basketball great
Bill Russell's high jump record.
While in college he began performing at a small local bar called The
International Settlement, where he met performers
Maya Angelou and
Joan Weldon. Later performances at a club
called The Blackhawk caught the attention of Columbia Records producer
George Avakian. When Avakian called for
Mathis to make his first recording, the young singer and then college
track star had to make a unique decision: whether to record or to
tryout for the 1956 Olympics held in Melbourne, Australia. He chose to
make his first single "Wonderful, Wonderful". To date he has recorded
over 80 albums selling millions of albums worldwide More than 60 of
his albums have been certified gold and/or platinum. "Heavenly" alone remained
on the pop charts for 295 weeks. His 1958 album "Johnny's Greatest Hits" began "Greatest Hits" tradition copied by every record company since then. This album spent an unprecedented 490 continuous weeks (almost ten years) on the Billboard Top Albums Chart, and garnered notation in the Guinness Book Of World Records. For over 6 decades Mathis
has continued to record, musically evolve, and perform at the world's most prestigious venues, earning a permanent place in American music history.