Fran Jeffries
Fran Jeffries | |
---|---|
Born |
Frances Ann Makris May 18, 1937 San Jose, California, U.S. |
Years active | 1958-2000 |
Spouse(s) |
Dick Haymes (1958-1965; divorced); 1 child Richard Quine (1965-1969; divorced) Steven Schaeffer (1971-1973; divorced) |
Children | Stephanie Haymes Roven (b. 1959)[1] |
Parent(s) | Esther A. Gauthier and Steven G. Makris |
Francis Makris "Fran" Jeffries (born May 18, 1937) is an American singer, dancer, actress, and model.
Career
She appeared in the 1963 film The Pink Panther, in which she sang "Meglio Stasera (It Had Better Be Tonight)" while dancing provocatively around a fireplace.[2] She sang the opening song "Shadows of Paris" in the first sequel, A Shot in the Dark, although she was uncredited. Her figure was highlighted, albeit briefly, in a minor role in Sex and the Single Girl. She sang on The Tom Jones Show in 1969 with the host, doing a duet of "You've Got What it Takes" as well as "The Smokey Robinson Show" from the following year, in which she did solo numbers as well as an duet with Smokey Robinson and Stevie Wonder and the rest of the cast. She was featured in Playboy several years later in 1971 at the age of 33 in a pictorial entitled "Frantastic!" In 1982 she posed a second time for Playboy at the age of 45. This second pictorial was titled "Still Frantastic!".[3]
Personal life
Fran Jeffries was born Frances Ann Makris to Esther A. (née Gauthier) and Steven G. Makris, a Greek-immigrant barbershop owner.
Filmography
- The Buccaneer (1958) as Cariba - Mawbee Girl
- The Pink Panther (1963) as Greek "cousin"
- Sex and the Single Girl (1964) as Gretchen
- Harum Scarum (1965) as Aishah
- A Talent for Loving (1969) as Maria
Discography
"Sex and the Single Girl" was released on MGM in 1964 as a single and an LP. In 1966, Jeffries recorded an album for Monument Records entitled This Is Fran Jeffries, which was a collection of standards and popular songs, produced by Fred Foster with arrangements by Dick Grove and Bill Justis, including a rendition of Lennon–McCartney's "Yesterday". Other recordings include an LP on Warwick (Fran: Can Really Hang You Up The Most). In 2000, she released a recording All the Love, again a collection of standards.
Song recordings:
- "Sex and the Single Girl"
- "Yesterday"
- "Springtime (Can Really Hang You Up the Most)"
- "All the Love"
- "Gone Now"
- "My Lonely Corner"
- "Life Goes On"
- "Honey and Wine"
- "Ain't Misbehavin'"
Songs for movies:
- "Meglio Stasera"
- "Sex and the Single Girl"
- "The Anniversary Song"
- "Shadows Of Paris"