Celebrity history- Peter Allen
Singer Peter Allen was a big supporter of the Pines. He performed in many benefits and became a real part of the community.
Their recording of “My Secret” was a big hit in Australia in the early ’60s, and they set out on a tour of the Far East – a tour that would take them westward almost all the way around the world. He began performing as “Peter Allen” around the same time. In the spring of 1964, during an engagement at the Hong Kong Hilton, Mark Herron, then husband of Judy Garland and producer of her London concerts that year, was favorably impressed with the team and persuaded them to come to London as the opening act for Judy and Liza at the Palladium. Garland’s daughter, Liza Minnelli, and Peter Allen became engaged – though it was almost three years before they were married. The Allen Brothers made their American debut with Garland in December 1964 in Miami, Florida, traveled with her to Canada, and soon afterward moved to New York. The duo stayed together for a few more years, appearing in Playboy Clubs and similar venues around the United States, until Peter Allen grew disgruntled with what he viewed as their commonplace show-business world.
Attracted by the active musical and theatrical avant- garde in New York, he separated from both his wife, at Christmas 1969 (six months after Judy Garland’s death), and his partner, in the spring of 1970. (Minnelli and Allen were not officially divorced until July of 1974.)
Metromedia arranged for his collaboration with songwriter Carole Bayer Sager, which turned out to be very productive and successful; their “Jennifer” was sung by Bobby Sherman in the TV movie Getting Together and became a Top 40 hit in the fall of 1971. “We had a great friendship,” said Bayer Sager. “Peter was funny; he was vastly talented. We hung out a lot. We had a similar pace in terms of writing.” “Don’t Cry Out Loud” (recorded by Melissa Manchester), “Everything Old Is New Again,” and “I’d Rather Leave While I’m in Love” were among the most popular of their partnership.
Peter Allen returned to performing in 1973 at Reno Sweeney’s, and other singers on the New York scene began to cover songs from his albums. In 1974, he and Jeff Barry wrote “I Honestly Love You,” a sad ballad recorded by Olivia Newton-John that became a Number One hit in the United States and Canada. The single won two Grammy Awards®, one for Record of the Year, and one for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance.
Allen then signed with A&M Records, releasing his third LP, Continental American, and following it in 1976 with Taught by Experts, which proved to be his breakthrough album. It featured “The More I See You,” “Quiet Please, There’s a Lady on the Stage” (a tribute to Judy Garland written with Carole Bayer Sager), and his biggest hit ever, “I Go to Rio.” “Rio” was generally ignored until it was re-released with a sensational promotional video, showing Peter Allen cavorting about the studio, at the piano, sometimes somersaulting over it, wielding a pair of maracas. The song shot to the top of the Australian charts, reaching Number One in July 1977. It stayed on the charts for nineteen weeks and lingered for many more years on disco dance floors.hatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.
When Allen’s contract with A&M expired, he switched to Arista Records, for whom he recorded his next album, Not the Boy Next Door (1983). He continued to tour, returning to New York in September 1984 for a series of sold-out performances at Carnegie Hall that were recorded and released as Captured Live at Carnegie Hall (1985). As part of the Carnegie Hall show, he included several numbers from Legs Diamond, the Broadway musical he was writing with Harvey Fierstein, but it was four years before the show itself was produced. Opening in December 1988, it played an exceptional 72 previews, but only 64 performances. RCA issued the Original Cast Album as well as Peter Allen’s final LP release, Making Every Moment Count (1990), with Melissa Manchester and Harry Connick, Jr.
Allen’s last tour, during the summer of 1989, was with Bernadette Peters. He died of throat cancer, a complication from AIDS, in 1992, shortly after a last performance in Sydney. His ashes were scattered at sea.
Peter Allen had had a long-time partner, Gregory Connell, a fashion model from Texas who sang backup and designed sound and lighting for Allen’s shows. Their home together on the coast north of San Diego was a favorite retreat between tours. Connell died there in 1984 of an AIDS-related illness.