Born in Harlem, New York to Jamaican immigrant parents, Carmen McRae first studied piano at the age of eight and was soon hooked on the jazz music so prevalent at the time, particularly the greats Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington and Billie Holiday, who she met and became friends with at 17. McRae first made her name playing at Minton's Playhouse, a famous jazz club in Harlem where she initially worked as a secretary and sang as a chorus girl. In 1944 she went on to perform with Benny Carter's big band, worked with Count Basie and made her first recording with the Mercer Ellington Band in 1946. McRae's biggest success came in the 1950s, working with Noel Coward on Mad About The Man (1957) and later recording with Sammy Davis Jr. (on Boy Meets Girl, 1957) and Dave Brubeck (on The Real Ambassadors, 1961). She also went on to collaborate with Louis Armstrong and George Shearing, while performing at festivals and jazz clubs all over the world and in 1983 recorded a Billie Holiday tribute album, For Lady Day, although it wasn't released until 1995. McRae also starred in several films, including The Square Jungle (1956), The Subterraneans (1960), Hotel (1967) and Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling (1986). Emphysema caused her retirement in 1991 and she died at 73 following a stroke in 1994.
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