Frankie Ford
Frankie Ford was born in the New Orleans suburb of Gretna,
Louisiana in 1939. He performed in local shows beginning at the
age of five; these shows included such notable performers as
Carmen Miranda and Sophie Tucker. The adopted son of Vincent and
Anna Guzzo, he went on to have one huge national hit that is
closely identified with the early days of rock-and-roll.
While still a child Frankie entered numerous vocal competitions
and he appeared on the Ted Mack Amateur Hour in New York in 1952.
He played piano and sang for a group known as The Syncopators
while in high school. He had learned some things about playing
piano during sessions with another noted New Orleans musician,
Clarence "Frogman" Henry.
Eventually Frankie was introduced to the New Orleans distributor
for Ace Records, Joe Caronna. This resulted in Frankie's first
rcording session at Ace, where he recorded Cheatin' Woman which
went on to become a regional hit. His next record was Roberta
and, on what was originally the "B" side, the song that
would establish Frankie in the mind of the record-buying public
in the United States, Sea Cruise.
Another New Orleans group, Huey "Piano" Smith and the
Clowns, had recorded Sea Cruise with Bobby Marchan on the lead
vocal. Ace Records thought that this would be a good vehicle for
Ford, who had by this time changed his last name from Guzzo. So
Huey Smith wrote down the words to the song and gave them to
Ford, who still has that note to this day. Frankie recorded the
vocal and it was added to the music from the Clowns' tapes to
produce the final version. Sea Cruise was a massive hit across
the country early in 1959, reaching number fourteen on the charts
and helping to establish a career for nineteen-year-old Frankie
Ford. He had other minor hits on Ace, including Alimony, I Want
To Be Your Man, and Danny Boy.
Frankie Ford was and is an exciting performer. In 1960 he signed
with Imperial Records and worked with well-known New Orleans
record producer Dave Bartholomew on a cover of Joe Jones' You
Talk Too Much. Other releases on Imperial included Seventeen,
Saturday Night Fish Fry, and Let Them Talk. In 1962 Ford was
drafted into the U. S. Army and became a member of the Special
Forces, entertaining troops in different parts of Vietnam, Korea,
and the United States. Throughout the 60's, 70's and 80's he
continued to perform, and recorded for various labels such as
Doubloon, Paula, Cinnamon, ABC and Briarmeade. Along the way, he
came to be known as the "New Orleans Dynamo" as a
result of his dazzling stage performances. In 1978, he appeared
in the motion picture American Hot Wax. In 1995, he recorded
another album titled Hot & Lonely at the place where it all
started for him, Ace Records.
Today Frankie Ford is one of the headliners at the New Orleans
Jazz & Heritage Festival (Jazzfest) every year, and appears
at Casino Magic in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi and Biloxi,
Mississippi several times a year. Annually during the first
weekend in October, he closes the Gretna Heritage Festival.
Frankie maintains a pace that has him performing 180 to 200 times
a year in concerts, festivals, niteclubs and various assorted
places. And he is still releasing records -- an album entitled
Frankie Ford - A New Orleans Tradition on Avanti Records and
Ooowee, Baby! The Very Best of Frankie Ford on Westside Records
in London are among his 90's releases. A Canadian compilation,
The All Time Greatest Hits Of Frankie Ford, is also available.
His only top forty song, Sea Cruise, has never really gone away.
It has appeared in commercials for Coors Light Beer, Diet Coke,
and Sprite and it can be heard on the soundtrack of such
televison shows and films as Stewardess School, My American
Cousin, Ski Patrol, Quantum Leap, and Lifestyles of the Rich
& Famous.
Frankie Ford has been inducted into the Louisiana Hall of Fame
and continues to live in his hometown of Gretna,
Louisiana. A line from Sea Cruise is used on his license plates,
which read OOH-WEE.
The hits in the Billboard Hot 100 :
| record | position | weeks | year |
| Sea cruise | 14 | 17 weeks | 1959 |
| Alimony | 97 | 2 weeks | 1959 |
| Time after time | 75 | 6 weeks | 1960 |
| You talk too much | 87 | 4 weeks | 1960 |
| Seventeen | 72 | 5 weeks | 1961 |
![]() |