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托尼·马丁
Tony Martin, the romantic singer who appeared in movie musicals from the 1930s to the 1950s and sustained a career in records, television and nightclubs from the Depression era into the 21st century, has died. He was 98.
Martin died of natural causes on Friday evening at his West Los Angeles home, his friend and accountant Beverly Scott said on Monday.
A peer of Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra, Martin sang full voice in a warm baritone* that carried special appeal for his female audience. Among his hit recordings were "I Get Ideas," ''To Each His Own," ''Begin the Beguine" and "There's No Tomorrow."
"He's the ultimate crooner who outlasted* all is contemporaries," musician and longtime friend Gabriel Guerrero said from his Oregon home. "He has truly remained the butterscotch baritone until he was 98," Guerrero added.
Although he never became a full-fledged* movie star, he was featured in 25 films, most of them made during the heyday of the Hollywood musicals. A husky* 6 feet tall and dashingly handsome, he was often cast as the romantic lead.
He also married two movie musical superstars, Alice Faye and Cyd Charisse, and the latter union lasted 60 years, until her death in 2008.
Martin found his escape through music while growing up in San Francisco and Oakland amid a poor, close-knit Russian Jewish family, enduring taunts* and slights* from gentile classmates.
Performing on radio led to his break into the film business. His first singing role came in the 1936 "Sing Baby Sing," which starred future wife Faye and introduced the Ritz Brothers to the screen as a more frenetic version of the Marx Brothers.
Hillside Memorial Park in Culver City was handling funeral arrangements.
Madonna performs on stage as part of her MDNA tour at Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh, Scotland July 21.
MAY 31: Madonna performs on stage during her "MDNA" tour at Ramat Gan Stadium on May 31, 2012 in Tel Aviv, Israel
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