According to comments left on the video.. The movie was No Leave, No Love made in 1946. Sugar Chile Robinson was born in 1940 and his career effectively ended in 1952. He's been recently "rediscovered" in Detroit.

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Comment by Boo on September 11, 2009 at 7:15pm
Hey E, I like that picture. Did you take it for Sugar? LOL !!!!!!!!! Haaaaaa Haaaaaaa Haaaaaa Oooooooooo me....
GOT YA !!!!!! LOL
Comment by Edie Antoinette on September 11, 2009 at 9:23am
LOL!!!! Gene, you and Bert tryn'a kill me ...LOL!!!!
Comment by KnightD12 on September 11, 2009 at 9:15am
I don`t know a thing about Sugar Chile, but just judging from the videos Edie posted, I`d say Sugar Chile turned into "Sweet Chile".... if ya know what I mean. Ahem. And I have nothing against that. It just seems it bes that way a lot when the kids show great musical talent at such a young age.
Now I`ve got to go read about him. He might have 10 kids and 30 Grandkids. LOL
Comment by Edie Antoinette on September 11, 2009 at 8:11am
HA HA HA HA HA HA HA!!!!! I can't breathe from laughing...Bert you are AWFUL!!!!!!! LOL!!!!! Po Sugah Chile!!!!
LOLOLOL!!!!
Comment by Boo on September 11, 2009 at 1:00am
To answer your question is he cute now,welllll H to the NO and I've changed my mind I don't want to know about him LOL !!! If I change my mine I will come back and read what's posted on this page because I haven"t read it yet
Comment by Edie Antoinette on September 10, 2009 at 11:55pm
Sorry it's not in descending order..read upwards..~E

Comment by Edie Antoinette on September 10, 2009 at 11:53pm
(cont)..hers for a week at Philadelphia’s Earle Theater. During the summer, Capital released his last single, then it was over.

In August of 1954 Robinson was back, booked along with baritone saxist, Gerry Mulligan, at the Blue Note in Chicago. That was the last mention of him in the trade magazines. Fifty-three years later, in 2007, Frank ‘Sugar Chile’ Robinson is back, and is available again for concerts and festivals. This past November he appeared at the Rhythm Riot Festival in Camber, England, his first appearance in that country in over 50 years.

Comment by Edie Antoinette on September 10, 2009 at 11:52pm
BLUES, FRANK 'SUGAR CHILE' ROBINSON

Sugar ChileSugar Chile Robinson
FRANK ‘SUGAR CHILE’ ROBINSON
was born in 1938 in Detroit, Michigan, the youngest of six children. As a young child he began pounding on the family piano. By the age of two he reputedly banged out a recognizable version of Erskine Hawkins’ “Tuxedo Junction.” 

In 1945, he was discovered by pianist and bandleader, Frankie Carle, who was presiding over an amateur talent night at the Michigan Theater in Detroit. Robinson won the talent contest that night.That same year Robinson appeared on musical shows for the Armed Forces Radio Service, including playing duets with Harry “The Hipster” Gibson. He even appeared singing and playing the piano for the title song in the 1946 MGM romantic comedy film “No Leave, No Love,” which starred Van Johnson, Guy Lombardo, Keenan Wynn, and British actress Patricia Kirkwood.

Now billed as “Sugar Chile” Robinson, he became a true child prodigy, and in 1947 was asked to play at the White House for President Harry Truman. Soon to follow was a tour with the Lionel Hampton band and a chance to record for the Capitol label, in July of 1949. He was backed on this first session by bassist Leonard Bibb and drummer Zutty Singleton.

Frank 'Sugar Chile' Robinson

Robinson took his first two releases into the Billboard R&B chart in late 1949 with “Numbers Boogie” which made it to #4, and his version of Louis Jordan’s hit song “Caldonia” got as high as #14. He was now a national act, and was touring the U.S. performing in front of packed houses coast to coast, and it is claimed that his appearance at Chicago’s Regal Theater remains the biggest one-week attraction of the theaters entire history, easily beating the super stars of the day like Count Basie and Duke Ellington. He also cut eight more sides for Capitol Records, this time accompanied by Jimmy Richardson and Red Saunders. Then it was on the road with the Count Basie Band and Billie Holiday and while in Hollywood, made a celebrated musical short with the Basie Sextet and Billie Holiday, to showcase his hits.Sugar Chile


Sugar Chile

In 1951 he appeared on the Bob Hope Show, which was the final show of the year, and soon was performing in Havana, Cuba at the Tropicana. During the Christmas season of 1950, Capitol released “Christmas Boogie”/”Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” and it sold well enough for “Sugar Chile” to go on a two-month European tour in 1951, including great reviews for his performance at the London Palladium.

Back in the U.S. he was a big hit on both radio and TV all through 1951 and then, while still in his preteens, Robinson’s career was suddenly over. In the Spring of 1952, he appears with The Griffin Brot

Comment by Edie Antoinette on September 10, 2009 at 11:41pm
SUGAR CHILE ROBINSON (By Dave Penny)

Born Frankie Robinson, 28 December 1938, Detroit, Michigan

The history of 20th century entertainment has been littered with the often ultimately tragic stories of its child prodigies; from Jackie Coogan in the 1920s, Shirley Temple in the 1930s, Toni Harper in the 1940s and Frankie Lymon in the 1950s. On the whole, although precociously talented, child entertainers were usually saddled with inferior, childish material that, while perhaps cute at the time, usually resulted in the youngster being regarded as a flash-in-the-pan novelty act which grew tiresome pretty quickly. The fall from grace, when they reached adolescence, was usually brutal, and some couldn't handle the swift drop in popularity and turned to drink or drugs, while others accepted that their time in the spotlight had ended and retired more gracefully to concentrate their energies in other directions. One such was that tiny bundle of Detroit dynamite, "Sugar Chile" Robinson.

Born Frankie Robinson in Detroit on 28th December 1938, the youngest of seven children born to Clarence and Elizabeth Robinson, neither of whom were musicians, while yet a toddler "Sugar Chile" began pounding on the piano left at his house by an aunt - he reputedly hammered out a recognisable version of Erskine Hawkins' current hit "Tuxedo Junction" at the age of two and by the following year was allegedly able to copy any music he heard on the radio. His nickname was bestowed about the same time when he developed a liking for sugar cubes, which his mother gave him to mollify him when he was upset, and he became her little "Sugar Chile".

His father recalled:
"Sugar Chile was just able to walk when he started thumpin' the piano. When he was about two, a friend of mine came over one evenin'. We just sittin' around and he says to Sugar Chile, `Here's a nickel, go play me a piece on the piano.' We figured Sugar Chile would just slide his hands along the keys and then run for that money. Doggone it if that kid didn't thump out `Tuxedo Junction'…"

In the early 1940s, aged about three, Sugar Chile Robinson entered and won the under 18s talent show at Detroit's Paradise Theatre, and for the next few years he was an infrequent visitor to that famous theatre and his fame began to spread. In 1945 - still only six years old - he played guest spots at the Paradise with Lionel Hampton's band and with Frankie Carle's Orchestra; Hampton wanted to take the child on tour with his band, but the US Child Labor Laws prevented it. Nonetheless, the seeds had been sown, and after guesting with Carle's band in October, before the month was out, he had been signed to a film contract by MGM and was on his way to Hollywood. While in Tinsel Town he filmed his cameo spot in the romantic wartime comedy film No Leave, No Love starring Van Johnson, performing Louis Jordan's then current hit "Caldonia". Reviews for Sugar Chile's 90 seconds on screen were glowing, and MGM tried to persuade his father, Clarence, to countersign another contract for seven years, but the future looked bright and Clarence refused to tie his son to such a long sentence…and the same was true for the many recording contracts which came his way in the mid- to late 1940s. While in Los Angeles in November 1945, however, Frankie hooked up again with Hampton, and was featured with the bandleader and with Harry "The Hipster" Gibson on several AFRS radio transcriptions.

In March 1946 Sugar Chile performed at a star-studded bill in Washington DC for President Truman, contributing four full numbers including his speciality "Caldonia" during which he shouted out, "How'm I Doin', Mr President?" which became something of a catch-phrase. 1946 was a halcyon year for little Frankie, with star spots on syndicated radio shows and his own revue at Detroit's Downtown Theatre. Within a week of playing for President Truman, he headlined for a week at Chicago's Regal Theatre and grossed over $36,000, a record that remains
Comment by Edie Antoinette on September 10, 2009 at 11:37pm
Check out Louis Jordan's version in a video I posted in March..:
http://msoldschool.ning.com/video/caldonialouis-jordan

Black Folks know they be jammin'..even the little ones like Sugar Chile. I would have tore those little cheeks UP!

"Caldo..nia! Caldo..nia! What Make Yo Big Head So HARD!!!

*remember that in Lakawana Blues???

Remembering Q

E.FM Radio Spotlight

Quincy Jones is thoroughly entwined in the musical background of my young adulthood. A genius of unique quality. I have been posting blogs and music throughout the years and decided to embark on the arduous but satisfying task of gathering some of it to remember the excellent legacy that he left.
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