RICK SPRINGFIELD
G'day folks,
Richard Lewis Springthorpe is an Australian singer,
instrumentalist, songwriter, actor and author, known by his stage name
Rick Springfield.
Rick
Springfield became a teen heartthrob in the 1980s with his hit song
"Jessie's Girl" and his stint as a handsome doctor on General
Hospital.
Synopsis
Rick
Springfield was born on August 23, 1949, began playing in bands in his native
Australia at an early age. The success of his solo debut brought him to Los
Angeles, where he acted in television roles and tried to make it big in music.
While playing a handsome doctor on General Hospital, he also released an
album that included the hit "Jesse's Girl." Since then, he's
released several more albums and written two books.
Early Years
Born
Richard Lewis Springthorpe, on August 23, 1949, in Sydney, Australia, Rick
Springfield is the son of an Australian army officer. Springfield frequently
moved throughout his childhood, living in both Australia and England. While in
high school, he developed an affinity for music, began playing the guitar and
formed a band called the Jordy Boys. He went on to perform with the groups Rock
House and Zoot before launching a solo singing career with the 1971 Australian
hit "Speak to the Sky."
The Move to America
After an
auspicious solo debut in Australia, Springfield was signed by the
American-based label Capitol Records. In 1972, he moved to Los Angeles and
released the album Beginnings. Featuring many of his previous Australian
hits, including a new version of "Speak to the Sky," the album fared
well on the charts. But to Springfield's dismay, critics immediately labeled
him the next teen pop idol. In 1973, in an attempt to shed his bubblegum image,
Springfield moved to Columbia Records, where he recorded the disappointing LP Comic
Book Heroes.
General Hospital and Jesse's Girl
In the
mid-1970s, Springfield temporarily shelved his music career and concentrated on
acting, appearing on several popular television programs like The Rockford
Files, Wonder Woman, The Incredible Hulk and The
Six-Million Dollar Man.
In 1980,
he managed to secure a recording contract with RCA, and while recording with
the label, Springfield was cast as the dashing Dr. Noah Drake on the popular
daytime drama General Hospital. As his popularity skyrocketed among soap
opera fans, Springfield released the album Working Class Dogs, which
yielded the now-classic singles "I've Done Everything For You" and
"Jessie's Girl." The latter song earned him a Grammy Award and became
known as an anthem of the 1980s—a time when his feathered hair, tightly suited
body and boyish face became hallmarks of the era.
Springfield
recorded the well-received albums Success Hasn't Spoiled Me Yet (1982)
and Living in Oz (1983) before making his cinematic debut in the
romantic drama Hard to Hold (1984). While his female fans flocked to theaters,
the film received lukewarm reviews from most critics.
Later Work
Throughout
the 1990s, Springfield's work mainly consisted of made-for-TV movies, including
Dead Reckoning (1990), Silent Motive (1991), A Change of Place
(1994) and Dying to Dance (1999). Later that year, he released his first
new album in over a decade, Karma, which received generally positive
reviews.
In 2010,
Springfield saw the publication of his autobiography, Late, Late at
Night, and his first work of fiction, Magnificent Vibration was
published in 2014. Both books made it onto the New York Times bestseller
list, and Late, Late at Night was named by Rolling Stone one of
the top 25 rock memoirs of all-time.
For his decades of output and enduring popularity, Springfield received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in May 2014. Later in 2014, Springfield landed a role on the dark HBO drama True Detective, setting the actor up for yet another re-emergence.
Clancy's comment: Another Aussie who has done well.
I'm ...
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